Shipping goods to Africa increasingly requires more than accurate logistics planning. For many destinations, exporters and freight forwarders must comply with Advance Cargo Information (ACI) requirements, also referred to as CTN, ECTN, BESC, BSC, FERI and BIETC. While terminology varies, the objective is consistent – enabling authorities to receive shipment information in advance, strengthen risk management and support more efficient and compliant customs clearance.
ACI is a document-based pre clearance requirement that provides import authorities with shipment details, including origin, destination, cargo description and party information, well before the goods reach the port of discharge. When managed correctly, ACI supports trade facilitation and clearance efficiency. When mismanaged, it can trigger avoidable disruptions such as document rework, penalties, demurrage and cargo holds or rejection at destination.
A shared challenge across African trade corridors
Although ACI requirements apply to more than 25 African countries, there is no harmonized process. Each country, and often each port, applies its own rules, formats, timelines and validation criteria. This creates challenges for even the most experienced exporters as they navigate subtle but critical differences between neighboring markets.
Responsibility for ACI registration typically sits with the exporter or the appointed freight forwarder in the country of shipment. Documentation must be submitted and validated early in the shipping process, usually immediately after loading (and sometimes earlier), and always before the vessel's arrival at destination. Errors or inconsistencies across core documents, such as the bill of lading, commercial invoice or packing list, remain among the most frequent causes of clearance delays.
Why choosing an ACI partner prevents disruption
For exporters, the challenge is rarely logistics but instead the operational risk associated with documentary compliance. The key concern is simple but critical: who is accountable when cargo is held due to a documentation issue?
Because ACI is often checked at destination against multiple shipment documents, even small inconsistencies (such as mismatches in consignee details, weights, HS description, freight terms or container data) can result in:
- Last minute amendments and re-issuance requests
- Delayed clearance and additional port storage time
- Penalties or non compliance fees
- Cargo holds until discrepancies are resolved
This is why exporters increasingly prioritize a solution that reduces uncertainty and delivers predictable compliance outcomes.
Proactive documentary compliance at scale
To address these challenges, our ACI Registration Service provides an independent documentary compliance solution focused on verification, consistency and predictability. We act as a proactive and reliable partner, supporting exporters from the early stages of the shipment process to ensure the ACI is submitted correctly and on time, before authorities detect discrepancies.
Rather than merely filing ACI data, we review shipment documentation for internal coherence and alignment with destination specific requirements before submission to local platforms or authorities. This helps identify issues early, reducing rework and minimizing clearance uncertainty.
Leveraging a global network combined with local expertise across Africa, we support exporters and freight forwarders with:
- Organizing and validating required documents to ensure they meet submission requirements
- Interpreting ACI rules, formats, timelines, and validation logic beyond country names and acronyms
- Coordinating ACI with related documentary requirements (including certificate of conformity (CoC) where applicable) to simplify compliance and reduce coordination effort
- Acting as a single, accountable partner for documentary compliance
- Ensuring strict protection of sensitive trade data and party identities
Enabling predictable clearance in complex environments
ACI does not involve physical inspection or validation of the underlying commercial transaction. However, documentary accuracy is often decisive at the clearance stage. By focusing on consistency and completeness of data before authorities review the file, we help exporters reduce avoidable disruption and protect shipment schedules.
In a trade environment where compliance requirements continue to expand and diversify, services that combine global reach, procedural clarity and local regulatory understanding play an increasingly important role. For exporters shipping to Africa, ACI is no longer just another document – it is a critical checkpoint in the end to end trade process. Ensuring it is managed correctly and accountably can make the difference between disruption and smooth delivery. Engaging early with a trusted compliance partner helps bring predictability to an increasingly complex trade environment.
Contact us to confirm the applicable ACI scheme for your destination and the recommended submission timeline based on your shipment details.
SGS India
Sandeep Patankar
tel: +91 8980022044
SGS China
Bobo Wang
tel: +86 21 61402666-6746
SGS Turkey
Berkan Oz
tel: +90 530 954 72 87
Learn more about the Advance Cargo Information.
This article can also be found in our PCA Newsletter (Q2/2026), which keeps you up to date with developments in technical barriers to trade and product conformity assessment.
Read more PCA articles (Q2/2026)
- Your Path to BIS Compliance and Market Entry in India
- Central African Republic PVoC Program Renewed for Five Years
- A Decade of PVoC Partnership, Trust and Commitment to Gabon
You can read more articles in our previous editions in the PCA Newsletter Library.
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