Stop feeling powerless. Never Lose Sight of Your Shipment in Dakar

Exporter-Mandated Representation Inside the Port of Dakar. Retain complete visibility from Arrival to Port Exit.

From shipment to payment, nothing moves without your confirmation. Your leverage and authority remain fully in your hands. Port Flow Senegal preserves your commercial authority from shipment to confirmed payment. PFS protects your leverage throughout.
Stop Depending Solely on Your Buyer for Information

Exporter-Aligned, Reporting Directly to You. No information asymmetry. No reliance on buyer narratives.

Held under your exclusive mandate in our secure Dakar vault, your documents remain fully under your control. Release happens only after payment confirmation: 2 hours, not days. No discretion. No deviation.
Avoid Unexpected Costs. Protect Your Margin from Port Delays.

Demurrage Exposure, Delays, and Clearance Charges Monitored and Escalated Early. No last-minute surprises.

PFS follows your written instructions exclusively. No negotiation with buyers. No interpretation of what you "might have meant." No discretionary release. From your desk anywhere in the world, you remain in complete control until you decide otherwise.
Stop feeling powerless the moment your container leaves.

Exporting to Senegal Should Not Mean Losing Operational Control.

In most transactions, post-arrival control shifts to the buyer’s local clearing chain. Information becomes indirect, updates are filtered, inspection outcomes are not independently verified. 

When issues arise, delays can extend without timely intervention, exposing your shipment to prolonged port stay, and additional charges.

Your goods are on the ground. Your payment is still in the future. That gap is where exporters lose millions.

The Structural Flaws Exporters Face:

  • The Leverage Gap
  • Disappearing Buyer Tactic
  • Information Asymmetry
  • Payment Confirmation Lag
  • Demurrage Exposure
  • Post-Arbitrage Opportunity
Defined Ground Execution. Not Informal Follow-Up.

Structured oversight at every operational milestone inside the port environment.

Pre-Arrival Validation

Commercial and shipping documents reviewed for classification consistency and clearance exposure before discharge, reducing avoidable reassessment risk and delay.

Vessel Arrival Monitoring

Discharge status and container positioning confirmed, with immediate reporting of irregularities that could extend port stay or handling charges.

Inspection Oversight

Physical inspection stages monitored and findings documented to prevent unmanaged reclassification, dispute escalation, and unnecessary storage or demurrage accumulation.

Customs Interface Monitoring

Declaration progress and duty assessment tracked to identify clearance obstacles before they translate into prolonged detention or additional cost layers.

Release Confirmation

Verification that all formal release conditions are satisfied to avoid premature exit attempts.

Warehouse Handover Verification

Documented confirmation of delivery to the declared warehouse location, ensuring closure of port-related financial exposure.

Independent of the Buyer’s Local Network.

You retain operational oversight without disrupting the commercial relationship.

In most transactions, post-arrival handling is managed entirely through the buyer’s appointed clearing chain.

At PFS , we operate separately under your direct mandate, providing independent monitoring of inspection, declaration, and release stages.

We do not replace the buyer’s agents or interfere with contractual arrangements. Our role is to observe, verify, document outcomes, and escalate when irregularities or delays arise.

This preserves your visibility and leverage while maintaining the existing commercial structure.

From your desk anywhere in the world, you remain in complete control.

Your Cargo Ships. Your Leverage Stays. Your Control Stays.

PFS Structured Arrival-to-Release Model

Predictable oversight at every stage, so your shipment never loses momentum.

Our 10-day operational timeline ensures your cargo moves under structured supervision from pre-arrival to warehouse delivery.

Every critical stage is monitored, documented, and escalated if delays or risks arise, so you remain in full control and your capital is protected.

01

Day 0 : Pre-Arrival Validation

Verification of all shipping documents, classification, and regulatory compliance before vessel departure.

02

Days 1–2 : Vessel Arrival & Discharge Confirmation

Real-time monitoring of unloading, container positioning, and immediate reporting of irregularities.

03

Days 3–4 : Inspection Oversight

On-site monitoring of inspection stages, with discrepancies documented and corrective action triggered when needed.

04

Days 5–6 : Customs Interface & Clearance Monitoring

Declaration and duty assessments tracked to prevent delays and avoid unnecessary port charges.

05

Days 7–8 : Release Confirmation

Verification that all release conditions are satisfied and cargo exits port custody as intended.

06

Days 9–10 : Warehouse Handover Verification

Documented confirmation of delivery to the declared warehouse location, closing all operational and financial exposure.

OUR INTERVENTION PROTOCOL

When Irregularities Occur, PFS Acts in Sequence.

Step 1: Immediate On-Site Verification

We establish the factual position directly at the port: inspection findings, classification basis, documentation status, and container hold conditions. No reliance on informal updates.
01

Step 2: Exposure Assessment

We evaluate potential implications: clearance delay duration, demurrage or storage risk, reassessment impact, and operational bottlenecks.
02

Step 3: Controlled Engagement

We engage the relevant clearing agents, inspectors, or customs officers to clarify the issue, request formal explanation where required, and prevent unmanaged escalation.
03

Step 4: Escalation Where Necessary

If resolution does not progress within acceptable timelines, we escalate through appropriate supervisory or administrative channels.
04

Step 5: Structured Reporting to Exporter

You receive documented updates outlining issue status, financial exposure risk, and recommended decision points.
05

Step 6: Clearance & Release Recovery

We monitor corrective actions through to confirmed release and warehouse delivery to ensure the disruption is fully closed.
06
Designed for SME Industrial and Technical Exporters

For exporters whose shipments risk delays, inspection disputes, or clearance issue: protecting your cargo, your capital, and your operational control.

This mandate is built for SMEs who need independent, on-the-ground oversight to prevent operational paralysis, demurrage costs, and blocked shipments, without maintaining a permanent local presence in Senegal.

Typical cargo profiles include:

  • Industrial machinery and production equipment : Equipment for production lines where port delays or documentation gaps can halt operations.
  • Electrical and technical systems : High-value assemblies vulnerable to inspection disputes or misclassification.
  • Automotive components and mechanical assemblies : Engines, transmissions, and mechanical parts requiring strict operational supervision.
  • Construction materials and engineered metals : Steel, cement, or technical materials at risk of demurrage, congestion, or administrative delays.
  • Agricultural and mining equipment : Machinery where mismanagement or port stagnation threatens timely deployment.
  • Manufactured goods with complex documentation or customs classification oversight : Goods requiring multi-layered certification checks to avoid costly clearance delays.
Operational Control Requires Physical Oversight

Remote Protection Does Not Stop Port-Level Risk

Export insurance compensates after loss.

Banks secure payment instruments.

Consultants advise from outside the port perimeter.

None of them can step inside an inspection zone.

None of them can challenge a classification in real time.

None of them can prevent demurrage from accumulating while cargo sits idle.

When clearance stalls or disputes arise, resolution requires direct engagement inside the port environment, including supervisory-level customs interaction where necessary.

Port risk is operational. It unfolds physically and must be addressed physically.

This is not advisory commentary.
It is structured intervention where the exposure occurs.

When cargo enters port, control either exists on the ground, or it does not.

Defined Mandate. Defined Responsibility

Before operations begin, responsibilities, reporting standards, and intervention boundaries are formally defined.

Every PFS engagement is governed by a formal contractual framework that defines scope, reporting standards, authority boundaries, and liability parameters before operations begin.

There are no informal arrangements.

Core structural safeguards include:

  • Master Services Agreement governing engagement terms
  • Written Control Mandate outlining intervention authority
  • Structured reporting within agreed time parameters
  • Shipment-specific Statement of Work defining operational scope
  • Professional indemnity coverage aligned to operational exposure
How Engagement Works

Structured onboarding. Immediate operational readiness.

 

PFS operates on a forward-engagement model.

Operational control is established before vessel arrival.

Step 1

Initial Shipment Review & Qualification

Before arrival, PFS reviews Exporters shipment details, and expected arrival timeline, to assess regulatory exposure in Senegal. We categorise inspection probability, identify documentation inconsistencies, and flag clearance vulnerabilities early, not when delays have already begun.
Step 2

Engagement Framework Activation

PFS formalises the mandate through a Master Services Agreement or shipment-specific engagement defining scope, authority level, and reporting obligations. Monitoring parameters, intervention rights, escalation protocols, and service timelines are clearly established before cargo arrival.
Step 3

Pre-Arrival Compliance & Exposure Audit

Before arrival, PFS identifies regulatory triggers or inconsistencies that could cause delay and recommend corrective action before the cargo reaches port. Your shipment enters the clearance environment prepared and aligned, reducing avoidable friction and exposure.
Step 4

Port-Level Monitoring

Upon vessel arrival, PFS tracks container movement within the terminal, and monitors inspection scheduling. We issue structured updates according to the agreed reporting timeline. You maintain factual, independent visibility throughout clearance rather than relying solely on consignee updates.
Step 5

Port-Level Intervention

When irregularities, holds, or procedural deviations arise, PFS conducts on-site verification and engages port or customs authorities within the defined legal mandate. During inspections, we maintain physical presence to ensure procedural integrity, escalate formally where justified, and issue incident reporting.
Step 6

Release Certification & Post-Shipment Record

Upon customs release, PFS verifies cargo clearance, issuing a timeline from vessel arrival to final release. Any inspection events, delays, or procedural anomalies are formally documented. Each shipment concludes with a recorded operational file, strengthening your internal risk intelligence for future consignments.