About Sudan’s port network
Sudan operates a network of 1 cargo and freight ports indexed by PortWatch, distributed across the country’s coastline and inland waterways. By facility type the directory currently records 1 container. Together these ports form the maritime entry-and-exit infrastructure that supports Sudan’s import and export economy — connecting domestic factories, farms and mines to global liner networks, tanker trade routes, and regional feeder systems.
Each port profile linked above is indexed under its UN/LOCODE — the five-character country-and-port identifier maintained by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. The first two characters of every code on this page are SD, the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 designator for Sudan, while the trailing three characters resolve to a specific harbour or terminal. UN/LOCODEs are the lingua franca of international shipping documentation; they appear on every bill of lading, sea waybill, container terminal pre-advice, customs filing and EDI booking that names a port within Sudan.
The vessel mix you see at Sudan’s ports is a function of national industry, geography, and global trade routing. Container-heavy ports tend to be either origin or destination gateways for high-value manufactured goods, or regional transhipment hubs sitting on a major liner-service rotation; bulk-heavy ports usually sit close to extractive industries (iron ore, coal, bauxite), large-scale agriculture (grain, soybeans, fertilisers), or heavy industry that depends on inbound raw materials. Tanker-heavy ports indicate either domestic energy production with significant export tonnage, or refining and petrochemical capacity that brings crude in and ships product out.
For a deeper view of any single facility â the vessels currently moored there, recent arrivals and departures, and full geographic and identification metadata â open the port’s individual page. For a vessel-type-by-vessel-type breakdown of cargo activity within Sudan, follow any of the type links in the breakdown panel above. PortWatch maintains separate intersection pages for each combination of country and vessel type so that researchers can drill cleanly from a national overview down to a single segment of cargo traffic without losing the aggregate context.