DHL to invest $575 million in the Middle East
German parcel company DHL will invest $575 million in the Middle East over the next five years, with a heavy focus on Saudi Arabia and the UAE, as it plans to use Gulf hubs as a gateway for a push into Africa.
Investments across all four of DHL’s divisions – DHL Express, DHL Global Forwarding, DHL Supply Chain, and DHL eCommerce – will “significantly strengthen the region’s logistics backbone,” DHL said in a statement.
The delivery giant sees health-care services in Africa and the Middle East as a major growth opportunity and is targeting time-critical shipments of vaccines, stem-cells and cryogenics, DHL’s Head of Life Sciences MEA Annette Naude told Bloomberg. The move will capitalize on Chinese investment in the region.
“We see America has come in and cut costs, but we do see other countries coming to the forefront and filling those gaps,” Naude said. “I went to China and met with a number of investors who are going to make investments on the African continent. Chinese investment in the region is really big.”
Demand for pharmaceuticals in Africa is rising, with revenues expected to reach $33.8 billion by 2030. Drugs and medical devices require specialized supply chains with reliable ultra-cold refrigeration and end-to-end tracking, which can be a major challenge in many parts of the continent.
Advanced insulin from China is among the sought-after medications by African governments, as emerging lifestyle diseases rise in priority next to established healthcare challenges such as malaria.