Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Lebanon unveils plans to rebuild shattered Beirut port

Beirut port blast 2020 Pexels/Jo Kassis
The aftermath of the massive blast at the port of Beirut in 2020. Plans to rebuild the port have finally been revealed
  • Four years since giant explosion
  • Little progress to repair damage
  • France sponsors proposal to rebuild

Lebanese companies will lead the multi-million-dollar funding for the rehabilitation of Beirut’s port, which will be based mainly on the revenues that the port has been collecting.

Ali Hamieh, the country’s caretaker minister of public works and transport, announced the news on Wednesday.

The port was partially destroyed in August 2020 when the detonation of 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate caused one of the biggest non-nuclear explosions in history, killing at least 219 people and injuring thousands more. 

Since then, there has been little progress towards rehabilitating the damaged port and returning its operations to full capacity.



Last year, the port registered half the amount of cargo (measured by 20-foot-long container equivalent units) it dealt with in 2019.

Hamieh, speaking at an event held at the port in coordination with the French Embassy and presided over by Lebanon’s caretaker prime minister, Najib Mikati, stressed that it was “the responsibility of the Lebanese alone to advance their country and its public facilities”.

The event was held to unveil a French-sponsored proposal to rebuild the port. Mikati said the government would implement the plan “as soon as possible, whether through external contributions that we look forward to providing, or from the port’s revenues”.

The proposal, which was put together by the French engineering firms Artelia and Egis, outlines three priorities for the port.

These are repairing the damaged quays and clearing away debris from the blast; improving traffic flows within the port, based on a new traffic plan; and solarising the port’s energy consumption, after consultation with the French state-owned energy firm EDF.

The port’s general director, Omar Itani, said the plans would cost between $60 million and $80 million to implement.

Itani said that the port’s annual revenues had bounced back to $150 million in 2023, having plummeted since 2020. Previously, revenue at the port was more than $200 million a year. 

The press conference did not announce which companies would be considered for the project.

The plans also avoided the contentious issue of the damaged grain silos at the blast site. Civil society activists have campaigned for the silos to be turned into a memorial to commemorate the explosion.

Latest articles

An extension of Diriyah's Bujairi Terrace, a popular nightspot, will open in November

Diriyah giga-project to open first hotel in November

Diriyah, one of Saudi Arabia’s leading giga-projects, will finally open its first hotel in November along with other attractions and sites, its CEO said this week.  “This November we’ll open another few kilometres of parks, we’ll open our first Bab Samhan hotel, we’ll open our first museum which is the Diriyah Art Futures Museum, we’ll […]

King Abdulaziz International Airport: the number of international flights increased but there were less than 27.4 million international visitors to the kingdom last year

Passenger numbers rise 26% in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia said this week that its total number of air passengers rose 26 percent to 112 million in 2023. This includes a 46 percent rise in the total number of international travellers to 61 million.  The number means the kingdom’s airports are approaching full capacity, which is 116 million passengers a year, including 45 […]

Oil workers in Venezuela, a founder member of Opec. The IEA predicts slower demand growth

IEA and Opec move further apart on global oil demand

The division between the International Energy Agency and oil producers’ group Opec has deepened as the Paris-based energy watchdog once again curtailed its oil demand outlook for 2024, amid softer macro sentiment. In its monthly report, the IEA forecast on Wednesday that world fuel demand will grow by 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) this […]

The funds stolen from cryptocurrency exchange Rain were converted into Bitcoin and Ethereum to disguise their origin

Crypto exchange Rain suffers $15m hack

Rain, a cryptocurrency exchange regulated in both the UAE and Bahrain, has confirmed a serious hack resulting in losses reportedly nearing $15 million.  The exchange said in a statement on its website on Tuesday that customer funds remain secure despite the incident.  The security breach occurred on April 29 and was first detected by blockchain […]