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Morocco-France Electric Logistics Corridor Launches to Decarbonize Cross-Continental Freight

By MGN EditorialApril 8, 2026 at 01:02 PM

Gotion, Green Power Morocco, and Chery Heavy Trucks have signed an agreement to develop a heavy-duty electric logistics corridor between Morocco and France, establishing a new model for low-carbon cross-continental freight operations.

A landmark agreement announced April 7, 2026, marks a significant step toward sustainable heavy-duty transport across Europe and Africa. Gotion, Green Power Morocco (GPM), and Chery Heavy Trucks have jointly launched the Europe-Africa Electric Logistics Corridor, with operations centered in Morocco and extending into France. The initiative represents a coordinated effort to address decarbonization in long-haul freight logistics—traditionally one of the maritime and transport sector's most carbon-intensive operations. By establishing a dedicated electric logistics pathway, the partners aim to demonstrate the technical and commercial viability of zero-emission heavy-duty vehicles operating across international borders and diverse terrain. **Strategic Positioning** Morocco's geographic position as a gateway between Africa and Europe makes it a natural hub for cross-continental logistics. The corridor leverages this advantage while building capacity in both electric vehicle infrastructure and fleet deployment. Green Power Morocco's involvement underscores the country's commitment to renewable energy integration, while Chery Heavy Trucks brings manufacturing expertise in commercial vehicle platforms. Gotion's participation signals growing investment from major battery and energy firms in European-African trade corridors. The company's involvement suggests the project will emphasize battery technology, charging infrastructure, and supply chain integration—critical components for sustained heavy-duty EV operations. **Industry Implications** The corridor model addresses several barriers to EV adoption in freight logistics: charging infrastructure gaps, long-haul operational reliability, and cross-border standardization. By creating a dedicated corridor with pre-planned charging stations and operational protocols, the partners reduce uncertainty for fleet operators considering the transition to electric heavy-duty vehicles. For the maritime and logistics sector, this development carries broader significance. International freight—whether by road, sea, or multimodal networks—accounts for a substantial share of global emissions. Demonstrating viability of electrified cross-continental routes could catalyze similar initiatives linking ports, distribution hubs, and final-mile delivery networks. **Next Steps** The announcement signals early-stage partnership formalization; full operational details, timeline for infrastructure deployment, and fleet deployment schedules remain to be disclosed. Industry observers will watch for progress on charging network installation, regulatory alignment across Morocco and France, and eventual performance data from live operations. The Europe-Africa Electric Logistics Corridor represents one of several emerging initiatives positioning freight electrification as both an environmental imperative and a commercial opportunity in the 2025-2030 period.
#electric vehicles#logistics#decarbonization#Morocco#France#heavy-duty freight#sustainability#infrastructure

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