In July 2025, Nigeria broke the foreign monopoly in container maritime transport with the launch of Clarion Shipping West Africa (cswa), the first liner company entirely owned with Nigerian capital. It is a modest debut, with just one vessel named Ocean Dragon, a small containership with a capacity of 349 teu and eighty reefer plugs. These dimensions classify it as a feeder vessel, even though its first voyage under the new flag was an intercontinental route from Qingdao to Lagos.
After a 60-day journey from Qingdao, which included a mechanical breakdown in Malaysia that was later resolved, the ship docked on 2 July 2025 at the Five Star terminal on Tin Can Island, carrying more than 350 teu. Upon arrival at Tin Can Island Port, investors, authorities and analysts highlighted the potential impact of the new line: lower logistics costs, faster connections between Nigerian ports, a boost to local maritime employment and support for the African Continental Free Trade Area (afcfta).
Clarion was founded in 2006 as a family-owned business specialising in logistics, particularly off-dock terminals, warehousing and shipping agency services at the port of Lagos. In 2024, the company’s leadership, headed by vice president Bernadine Eloka, began a due diligence process to acquire a second-hand feeder vessel of around 6,100 dwt, suitable for Nigeria’s coastal waters. The choice fell on a containership built in China in 2014, 99 metres long, renamed Ocean Dragon. The crew comprises sixteen seafarers, mostly Nigerian.
The ship will serve two domestic routes, both originating in Lagos. The first is a twelve-hour connection to Lekki port, offering an alternative to increasingly congested road haulage. The second is a 48-hour rotation linking Lagos to Onne/Port Harcourt and Calabar, again offering an alternative to road transport. Clarion Shipping West Africa is also planning an international service called the Gulf of Guinea Shuttle, connecting Cotonou, Lomé, Tema and Freetown, with plans to extend the route to Abidjan and Egypt Med Hub by the end of 2026.
The Nigerian company is already planning a second vessel with a capacity of around 1,100 teu to operate a direct pendulum service between Lagos and Qingdao. Over the longer term, between 2028 and 2030, Clarion Shipping West Africa aims to establish slot-charter agreements with Asian carriers to build a fleet of four or five ships, either owned or on time-charter, and possibly join a West Africa–Mediterranean feeder consortium to serve Dakar and Tanger-Med.
Clarion Shipping West Africa is the first fully Nigerian-owned container shipping line, though not the country’s first container carrier. That title goes to African Container Express Limited, established in 1965 by the three main shipping lines operating in Nigeria at the time: Elder Dempster, Palm Line and Nigerian National Shipping Line. The first was a British company that operated from 1932 to 2000 and had its roots in Elder Dempster Shipping Limited, founded in 1899. The second was also founded in Britain and operated from 1949 to 1986. The third was Nigeria’s state-owned carrier, active from 1959 to 1995.









































































