26 March 2026

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Senegal

4 articles

Senegal is a west africa market in Africa and a coastal market with gateways that link domestic transport networks to international trade routes. With a population of about 13.5M and an economy of roughly $39.7B, Senegal offers a useful lens on infrastructure demand, logistics performance and project delivery.

Key gateways such as Dakar and Blaise Diagne International Airport help shape freight flows, passenger mobility and supply-chain reliability. This country profile is designed as an import-ready editorial starter for Highways.Today, giving you a consistent base layer for market pages, dashboards and future news linkage.

Senegal Infrastructure Dashboard

Capital: Dakar Timezone: UTC Coordinates: 14.0000,-14.0000 Map
Population 13.5M
GDP ~$39.7B
Major Ports Dakar
Major Airports Blaise Diagne International Airport, Léopold Sédar Senghor International Airport, Cap Skirring Airport
Construction Market Est. $3.2B annual market
Major Exports Agricultural goods, minerals, energy products and light manufactures

Infrastructure Strategy

National infrastructure strategy typically prioritises stronger connectivity, more reliable utilities and better project delivery across transport, energy and urban systems. For this market, strategy is especially tied to efficient freight movement, urban congestion relief and links between production centres and gateways.

Transport Priorities

Transport priorities include maintaining and expanding strategic road corridors, modernising key airports and aviation support assets, improving port access, terminal efficiency and last-mile logistics, and targeted rail or BRT investment where it can unlock freight and urban mobility gains.

Investment Focus

Investment is concentrated around highways, logistics corridors, urban mobility and multimodal freight connections; power, water, roads and port-adjacent industrial development.

Infrastructure Investment & Finance

Funding usually combines national budgets, state-owned entities and private capital where bankable projects exist. Multilateral lenders, export credit agencies and blended finance structures often play an important role in de-risking projects.

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