• The plan includes continued enhancement of the quality of services provided to citizens, while ensuring high levels of safety and security
• Encouraging private investment in the transport sector and its associated services
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation, presented the targets of the transport sector within the draft 2025/2026 Economic and Social Development Plan, part of the medium-term strategy (2025/2026 – 2028/2029), during today’s session of the House of Representatives, chaired by H.E. Dr. Hanafy El Gebaly and attended by honorable members of Parliament.
During the session, H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat emphasized the critical importance of transportation services as a key link in supply chains—both domestically and internationally. She stated that transport is a significant cost factor and a vital component of competitive advantage. In alignment with Egypt’s Sustainable Development Goals “Vision 2030”, the 2025/2026 plan aims to continue enhancing the effectiveness of the transport sector, a backbone for connecting production hubs with import/export outlets and logistics centers with distribution and consumption markets across the country.
She highlighted strategic directions for infrastructure development and readiness of transportation networks, including expanding the multimodal transport system to ensure balance and integration across transport modes, thus promoting efficient use of each. The plan also includes extending the national transport and utility networks to cover all regions, especially new urban development areas; upgrading railway services and increasing their contribution to freight and passenger movement, given their cost-efficiency compared to road transport.
Additionally, the plan aims to boost river transport capabilities to leverage its potential as a low-cost service, especially with the multiple river paths and branches. Continued efforts will enhance the efficiency of existing seaports and support the establishment of new specialized ports to stimulate international maritime activity and inbound tourism. Moreover, the plan includes activating new dry ports in 6th of October City and those under construction in 10th of Ramadan City, to enhance logistics services and streamline cargo movement.
The minister also noted the ongoing shift toward electric transportation (electric buses, cars, metro, monorail, and light rail transit) to reduce pollution from traditional transport. These efforts run parallel with continuous service quality improvements and maintaining high safety and security standards across all transport components, while encouraging private sector investment in transport and related services. Further, the plan supports local manufacturing of transport components, such as vehicle and railway car parts.
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat reviewed key transport sector projects, including road, railway, electric rail, inland waterways, seaports, dry ports, specialized ports, logistics centers, and air port services. Notable projects include the completion of the Greater Cairo Ring Road development (110 km), expansion of the Suez/Ain Sokhna Road (60 km), dualization of the Assiut/Sohag/Red Sea Road (180 km), dualization of the 6th October/Oases Road (270 km), and development of the Wadi El Natrun/Alamein Road (135 km). For inter-governorate roads, 32 projects are targeted, with 13 expected to be completed during the year.
The remaining 19 projects, totaling 1,350 km, include upgrading the Cairo/Alexandria Agricultural Road (180 km), Benha/Mansoura Road (73 km), and dualizing the eastern Nag Hammadi/Sohag Agricultural Road (45 km). Other priorities include enhancing the International Coastal Road (514 km) and initiating the East Oweinat/Al Kufra Road (375 km). Regarding bridges, 11 projects are set for completion, including four Nile crossings (Darawi in Aswan, Dairut in Assiut, Al-Fashn in Beni Suef, and a new bridge near the Aswan Dam), and seven other axes in Qena, Sohag, Assiut, Giza, and central Delta. For highway bridges, the plan includes completion of the Al-Ayyat/Beni Suef bridge and eight bridges on the Cairo/Alexandria Agricultural Road.
In dry and land port development, H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat highlighted a comprehensive plan to build 32 dry ports and logistics centers nationwide. This includes implementing risk management systems for cross-border trade, pre-registration of trucks, and upgrading the Salloum land port—doubling its size and equipping it with state-of-the-art cargo screening tools. For FY 2025/2026, 10 projects will focus on facilitating land and dry port operations, including Salloum, Taba, Arqeen, Al-Awja, Qustul, Rafah, Ras Hadarba, and the newly planned Al-Kufra land port. These are complemented by efforts to connect ports with a centralized monitoring system and ongoing studies on dry ports and logistics hubs.
For seaports, key goals for Red Sea ports include constructing the southern quay at Suez Port, launching the Grand Safaga Port project, and building a 500-meter quay with a yacht marina in Taba. On the Mediterranean, Alexandria Port development continues with projects like a new breakwater, and procurement of three tugboats. Similarly, Damietta Port developments include dredging of navigation channels and turning basins, along with acquiring four tugboats.
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat concluded by outlining key transport sector performance indicators targeted for FY 2025/2026:
• Metro and electric rail daily passenger capacity: 8 million passengers
• Railway daily passenger capacity: 1.4 million passengers
• Annual rail freight capacity: 11 million tons
• River transport freight capacity: 8 million tons
• Seaport cargo handling capacity: 292 million tons
• Length of seaport quays: approx. 70 km
• Number of bridges and tunnels: over 2,500
• Electrified railway signals: 75% of all signals, covering 1,500 km