EN April 21, 2026

Practical Guide to Incoterms 2020 Changes: What Turkish Exporters and African Importers Must Know

SenTurGo Posted on April 21, 2026
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Incoterms 2020 — What Actually Changed and How It Hits the Turkey-Senegal Corridor

The International Chamber of Commerce released Incoterms 2020 on 10 September 2019, effective 1 January 2020, replacing the 2010 edition. Five years in, the 2010 version is still routinely mis-quoted in Turkey-Senegal contracts — and every mistake has a price tag. This guide maps the four practical changes, shows which rule to pick by shipping lane (Istanbul-Dakar direct vs transshipment), and lists the exact clauses to paste into your next PO.

The Four Material Changes in Incoterms 2020

  1. DAT becomes DPU (Delivered at Place Unloaded) — the rule is no longer restricted to terminals; any agreed destination works. For a Turkish exporter delivering to an importer’s warehouse in Pikine or Diamniadio, DPU is the cleanest rule.
  2. FCA now allows an “on-board” Bill of Lading — previously impossible. The 2020 rule lets the buyer instruct the carrier to issue an on-board B/L to the seller, solving the classic letter-of-credit problem with FCA (banks want to see “shipped on board”).
  3. Different insurance levels: CIF stays at ICC (C), CIP moves up to ICC (A). ICC (A) is all-risks; ICC (C) is a restricted named-perils cover (fire, sinking, collision). For high-value containerised Turkish goods, CIP with ICC (A) is the safe choice.
  4. Seller/buyer own transport explicitly allowed in FCA, DAP, DPU, DDP — the 2010 version assumed a third-party carrier. Relevant for Turkish suppliers using their own trucks to the Port of Izmir or Mersin.

The 11 Incoterms 2020 Rules at a Glance

Rule Mode Who pays main freight Who insures Risk transfer
EXW (Ex Works) All Buyer Buyer Seller’s premises
FCA (Free Carrier) All Buyer Buyer Named place
CPT (Carriage Paid To) All Seller Buyer First carrier
CIP (Carriage and Insurance Paid) All Seller Seller – ICC (A) First carrier
DAP (Delivered at Place) All Seller Seller Arrival at destination
DPU (Delivered at Place Unloaded) All Seller Seller After unloading
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) All Seller Seller Import cleared
FAS (Free Alongside Ship) Sea only Buyer Buyer Alongside vessel
FOB (Free on Board) Sea only Buyer Buyer On board
CFR (Cost and Freight) Sea only Seller Buyer On board
CIF (Cost, Insurance and Freight) Sea only Seller Seller – ICC (C) On board

Which Rule to Pick on the Turkey-Senegal Lane

  • Full container, first-time buyer, sea via CMA CGM / Maersk Istanbul-DakarCIF Dakar. Turkish supplier arranges freight and basic insurance. Add an “upgrade to ICC (A)” clause if cargo value exceeds USD 30,000.
  • Experienced importer with Dakar freight forwarder (Bolloré/AGL, SAGA, Necotrans)FCA Istanbul or FOB Mersin. Lets you consolidate with other Turkish suppliers in the same container and negotiate better freight rates directly.
  • Air freight pharma, electronics, jewellery via Turkish Cargo (IST-DKR 4x weekly)CIP Dakar airport with ICC (A).
  • Importer wants zero hassle, full landed quoteDPU Dakar warehouse or DDP Dakar. Be explicit: most Turkish exporters do not know Senegalese customs — so DDP contracts often go wrong. Only accept DDP if supplier partners with a Senegalese licensed broker.
  • Never pick EXW for international shipments — it leaves the Turkish exporter with zero export clearance responsibility, a frequent source of documentation failures.

Freight Rates to Benchmark (2026, Istanbul/Mersin → Dakar, 40-ft HC)

  • CMA CGM (transbordement Méditerranée + transshipment): USD 2,400–3,100 + BAF
  • Maersk via Algeciras: USD 2,100–2,700
  • MSC via Tanger Med: USD 2,000–2,600
  • Turkish Cargo IST-DKR airfreight: USD 3.80–5.50/kg
  • Add THC Dakar ~USD 120/TEU, COSEC fee 0.4% CIF

Clause You Should Paste Into Every Contract

“Delivery shall be made CIP Dakar, Incoterms 2020, with marine cargo insurance on Institute Cargo Clauses (A) for 110% of CIF value, issued by a Turkish underwriter rated A- or better (e.g., Anadolu Sigorta, Türkiye Sigorta, AXA Sigorta). Proof of insurance shall be presented as a condition of payment release.”

Five Mistakes That Cost Real Money on the Corridor

  1. Writing “CIF Dakar port, Incoterms” without specifying the year — defaults to whichever edition favours the disputing party’s lawyer
  2. Using CIF for a container shipment but invoicing under FOB-style risk allocation in the accompanying L/C
  3. DDP contracts where the Turkish supplier cannot actually act as importer of record in Senegal (requires NINEA, VAT registration)
  4. Silent-shift Incoterms: using CIF but paying freight separately — creates audit traps for COTECNA value verification
  5. Not aligning Incoterm with insurance: CIF pays for ICC (C) — if your bank L/C demands ICC (A), mismatch means refusal

Bottom Line

For 80% of Turkey-Senegal shipments, CIP Dakar with ICC (A) insurance is the optimal Incoterms 2020 rule: it gives the importer full-risk cover without handing the Turkish supplier responsibility for Senegalese customs. Write the year, the place, and the insurance cover level explicitly into every PO — and train your bank’s documentary credit team to verify the match before releasing funds.

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