Nigeria has held onto its pole position for hotel development in west Africa despite a slight reduction on last year, according to a regional focus by the influential annual hotel
pipeline survey from Lagos-based W Hospitality Group.
Details of the survey, which covers the whole of Africa, will be one of the key discussions at the Africa Hotel Investment Forum, which the Kenyan government has announced will return to Nairobi, in October this year.
Nigeria, the giant of Africa, has the largest pipeline in west Africa (and the second largest on the continent), with the concentration being in Lagos and Abuja, the commercial and political capitals, respectively.
There is, however, an increasing number of deals being signed in other cities, such as Enugu, Port Harcourt, Onitsha and Benin City.
The pace of deal making in Nigeria has noticeably slowed down, with only six deals signed in 2017 compared to ten in both 2015 and 2016, a reflection of the economic situation in the country.
Hotel pipeline development in terms of total planned rooms for Nigeria is down 5.1 per cent on last year, but it still has 4,146 rooms under construction, out of a total of 9,603 in 57 hotels.
Impressive strides have been made by Cote d’Ivoire, moving into the top five west African countries with ten new hotels in the pipeline, a 205.7 per cent increase on last year – 549 of the total 1,830 rooms are on site.
All the planned hotels are in Abidjan, driven by multiple deals signed by AccorHotels and by Marriott.
This reflects the confidence in the country as the return to democracy, after several years of civil war, have brought economic and political stability, with the IMF forecasting GDP growth of 7.4 per cent this year, one of the highest on the continent.
Cape Verde is sustaining growth with 2,710 rooms now on site, up 15.3 per cent on last year.
Sao Vincente accounts for 28 per cent of the country’s pipeline.
Other developments are in Boa Vista, Mindelo, Praia, Sal and Santiago.
Senegal, with 17 hotels in the pipeline is another strong performer, up 16.2 per cent per cent on last year in terms of rooms – 80 per cent are in Dakar.
The remainder are in Cap Skirring and Mbour.
Marriott still heads the chains in the region – 26 planned hotels with 5,354 rooms, up 25 per cent on last year.
Louvre are also moving up – seven hotels with 807 rooms, an 83 per cent increase.
In total, the chains show a ten per cent increase on 2017 with 22,680 pipeline rooms in West Africa.
Africa Hotel Investment Forum
AHIF, which is supported by the Kenyan ministry of tourism and wildlife, is attended by leading international hotel investors, business leaders and politicians.
It has a proven track-record of driving investment into tourism projects, infrastructure and hotel development across Africa.
Matthew Weihs, managing director of AHIF organiser Bench Events, said: “This is the latest in a series of regional reports from W Hospitality Group.
“It, and other analyses from numerous expert advisers to the industry, will be part of the core content that makes AHIF such an important event with unrivalled networking opportunities.”
In the first week of October, Kenya will show itself off to the world with an unprecedented week of tourism promotion.
As well as hosting AHIF, it will stage a number of events including the Magical Kenya Tourism Expo, the largest travel trade show in east Africa, and it will announce a package of measures to incentivise investment.