The Walvis Bay Corridors are a network of strategic, high-quality road and rail routes connecting the Port of Walvis Bay in Namibia to landlocked SADC (Southern African Development Community) nations. Established in 2000 through the Walvis Bay Corridor Group (WBCG), a public-private partnership, these routes promote a faster, safer, and more efficient alternative to traditional, congested regional ports. Key corridors include the Trans-Kalahari (Botswana/South Africa), Walvis Bay-Ndola-Lubumbashi Development Corridor (Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, DRC), Trans-Cunene (Angola), and Trans-Oranje (South Africa). The Port of Walvis Bay provides a deep-sea, congestion-free alternative, saving up to five days of transit time for shipments moving between SADC, Europe, and the Americas.