Home Industry Logistics Turkey’s Yilport plans to invest $1.6bn in El Salvador ports The new agreement will establish what is known as a “mixed-economy corporation,” which is not subject to the legal limit by Reuters August 13, 2024 Image credit: Horacio Villalobos/ Corbis via Getty Images Turkish holding company Yilport will invest an estimated $1.62bn to expand two ports in El Salvador and operate them jointly with the local port authority, the government of the Central American country said. Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele, in a post on X on Sunday evening, said the investment was part of his broader economic revitalisation plan. Yilport, which also operates ports in Guatemala, Ecuador, Peru and Europe, is set to invest to triple capacity at Acajutla, El Salvador’s biggest port. It will also invest in overhauling La Union, a port in the east of the country that has been closed since construction finished in 2008. Dredging work is needed before the port can open, to allow larger, heavier ships to enter, according to Bukele’s post. Yilport and El Salvador’s Autonomous Port Executive Commission (CEPA) will jointly operate the two ports under a 50-year concession for each, according to Bukele. Acajutla has moved more than 3.1 million metric tonnes of cargo so far this year, according to official data. Earlier this year, Yilport announced a “pre-agreement” to hold concessions in the two ports for 100 years, though Salvadoran law only allows joint concessions for up to 40 years. The new agreement will establish what is known as a “mixed-economy corporation,” which is not subject to the legal limit. Read: DP World acquires 58% equity stake in Turkey’s Evyap Port Tags Economy El Salvador Logistics Turkey Yilport You might also like Financial gap to meet SDGs in MEASA hits $5tn annually: NYUAD Mubadala to sale Brazil’s Porto Sudeste, Mina Gerais iron-ore mines AD Ports Group marks Q3 performance with net profit of Dhs445m AD Ports Group, Pakistan ink MoUs to enhance transport, logistics sectors