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PLASTIC PIPE MARKET IN MOROCCO: PRODUCTION, DISTRIBUTION, CONSUMPTION, AND CONTACT INFORMATION FOR MAJOR PLAYERS

Markets - Products - Companies
rMIX: Il Portale del Riciclo nell'Economia Circolare - Plastic pipe market in Morocco: production, distribution, consumption, and contact information for major players
Summary

- Why the Moroccan plastic pipe market is strategic today

- The real drivers of demand: water, irrigation, irrigation and construction

- How is the industrial production of plastic pipes organized in Morocco?

- Where is the Moroccan pipeline industry geographically concentrated?

- The role of technical distribution and regional commercial networks

- Which product families dominate the Moroccan market?

- Standards, certifications and competitive factors for choosing a supplier

- Leading Moroccan plastic pipe manufacturers with complete contact details

- Main operators in distribution and technical supply in Morocco

- Moroccan Plastic Pipe Market Outlook 2026

Professional analysis of the Moroccan market for PVC, HDPE and double-wall pipes across water infrastructure, irrigation, construction and technical networks


Author: Marco Arezio. Expert in the circular economy, polymer recycling and industrial plastics processing. Founder of the rMIX platform, dedicated to enhancing recycled materials and developing sustainable supply chains.

Date: April 13, 2026

Reading time: 14 minutes


Why the Moroccan plastic pipe market is strategic today

The plastic pipe market in Morocco is not interesting only because there is a consolidated local manufacturing base. It is especially interesting because it lies at the intersection of four structural pressures: water stress, the need to expand and modernize water supply and sanitation networks, the modernization of agricultural irrigation, and the growth of civil and technical works linked to construction, energy and services. In other words, this is not a peripheral or merely commercial market: it is an industrial supply chain operating within the country’s national water policy and within its infrastructure investment cycle.

This central role clearly emerges from the National Drinking Water Supply and Irrigation Program 2020–2027, which has been repeatedly referenced in Moroccan institutional communications. The authorities have linked very significant investments to this program, estimated at 143 billion dirhams for the 2020–2027 period, precisely to address water stress, secure supply and at the same time support agricultural uses. When a country directs resources of this scale toward drinking water, inter-basin transfers, desalination and irrigation, demand for PVC, HDPE and structured pipes is not occasional: it becomes a stable component of industrial and territorial policy.

Added to this is the fact that Morocco is not only planning, but also carrying out concrete works. The interconnection between the Oued El Makhazine and Dar Khrofa basins has been presented as a 100 million m³ intervention with a total cost of 820 million dirhams, while desalination policies are accelerating both for drinking water and for water intended for industrial and agricultural uses. For the plastic pipe sector, this means continuity of orders, demand for different diameters and classes, growing attention to hydraulic tightness and durability, and demand spread across pressure networks, gravity networks, drainage and the protection of technical infrastructure.

The real demand drivers: drinking water, irrigation, sanitation and construction

The first true driver of Moroccan consumption is drinking water. Supply, distribution, transfer and interconnection networks between different sources absorb large quantities of HDPE PE100 and PVC-U pipes, depending on operating pressures, technical specifications and project logistics. The catalogues of the main local manufacturers systematically revolve around drinking water supply, sanitation and pressure fluids, a sign that the heart of the market remains infrastructural rather than marginal.

The second driver is irrigation. In 2025, the Moroccan Ministry of Agriculture reiterated that irrigation efficiency is a decisive pillar of the Génération Green 2020–2030 strategy and that the goal is to raise drip irrigation from the current 54% coverage of equipped land to more than 70% by 2030. This shift does not concern only drip lines or micro-irrigation: it generates continuous demand for PE and PVC pipes and accessory components for main lines, secondary lines, supply lines, filtration and integrated agricultural systems.

The third driver is sanitation, meaning the collection and conveyance of wastewater and stormwater. Two main supply chains open up here: on one side PVC pipes for traditional networks, and on the other double-wall solutions in HDPE or PP for buried gravity networks, drainage and collectors with greater ring stiffness requirements. The widespread presence in Moroccan product portfolios of ranges compliant with NM EN 13476-3 shows that this segment is not a niche one, but is now firmly integrated into local industrial supply.

The fourth driver is the construction and public works sector. Business surveys cited by the HCP in 2025 pointed to increased activity in construction, with the sector’s capacity utilization rate at 72% in the first quarter of 2025 and overall positive expectations for the following quarter. Not all of this automatically translates into plastic pipe consumption, but a significant share does: discharge systems, drainage, buried pipelines, technical networks, cable protection and service installations closely follow the trend of civil engineering and specialized construction.

How industrial production of plastic pipes is organized in Morocco

Moroccan plastic pipe production is more structured than one might think when looking at the country from the outside. There is an industrial base covering at least three fundamental families: PVC-U pressure and sanitation, HDPE/PE100 pressure pipes, and double-wall pipes for sanitation, drainage and technical networks. To these are added families dedicated to irrigation, cable protection, telecommunication ducts and building applications.

This is not a supply chain made up only of small workshops or distributors importing material. Some operators report large production sites, quality laboratories, certified product ranges and a presence in public markets or major projects. Alma operates from Had Soualem on a 100,000 m² site and works with HDPE, PVC, sanitation and dry networks; INES reports activity since 1980, 650 employees and exports to 24 countries; DIMATIT has been active in the hydraulic sector since 1941 and offers a very broad range including PVC, HDPE and double-wall PP; SICDA, linked to CMGP Group, covers the pressure, sanitation, irrigation and telecom segments.

The market structure therefore shows an interesting balance: on one side large groups or long-established operators with broad catalogues, and on the other more focused manufacturers serving specific segments or territories, such as 6PO Industrie, Adeauplast, Plastima, SPLAST, SMECEPLAST and Gemaplast. This makes the Moroccan market competitive enough to offer alternatives, yet sufficiently concentrated to bring out a defined number of reliable industrial names.

Where the Moroccan pipe industry is geographically concentrated

From a territorial point of view, the center of gravity of the market is clearly located along the Casablanca–Mohammedia–Nouaceur–Berrechid–Had Soualem–Mediouna–Tit Mellil axis, that is, within the large industrial area of Casablanca-Settat. This is where Alma, INES, SICDA, CMGP, DIMATIT, Plastima, SPLAST and SMECEPLAST are located, in addition to numerous commercial headquarters, logistics platforms and production sites. This concentration is not accidental: it places production close to the main logistics nodes, infrastructure job sites, the largest urban basin and the decision-making centers of major clients.

There are also complementary hubs. Skhirat hosts Adeauplast, with branches also in Marrakech and Agadir; Marrakech hosts Gemaplast and a CMGP-CAS commercial branch; Aït Melloul/Agadir appears as an important point of commercial presence in the CMGP-CAS and Adeauplast networks. For this reason, the Moroccan plastic pipe market should not be read as a collection of isolated factories: it is an industrial network with one dominant center and regional branches consistent with the main consumption basins.

The role of technical distribution and regional commercial networks

In the Moroccan plastic pipe sector, distribution does not coincide only with the traditional wholesaler. There are at least three models. The first is direct sales from the manufacturer to the public client or contractor. The second is the commercial headquarters linked to the production site, typical of many Moroccan companies in the sector. The third is the network of branches or regional platforms that makes it possible to serve the agricultural, construction and infrastructure markets outside the Casablanca core.

This can be clearly seen in companies’ public data. 6PO Industrie states that it has earned the trust of national public bodies in the water sector; INES lists among its national partners names such as ONEE, Amendis, Redal and various régies; SICDA publishes news relating to awards such as the framework contract with AMENDIS Tétouan and contracts for pressure polyethylene; CMGP-CAS presents a real network of commercial branches in cities such as Casablanca, Aït Melloul, Beni Mellal, Marrakech, Berkane, Meknès, El Jadida, Kénitra, Larache and Errachidia. All this confirms that the market does not move only through import-export or simple warehousing, but through deeply rooted technical and territorial relationships.

Which product families dominate the Moroccan market

The most important product families are five. The first is HDPE/PE100 pressure pipes for drinking water, irrigation, industrial water and in some cases gas or special uses. This is the family that benefits most from the push in water investments and from the need for resistant, weldable systems suitable for different nominal pressures. The standards most frequently recurring in this segment are NM EN 12201-2 and related standards.

The second family is PVC-U pressure pipes for water and irrigation networks. The third is PVC sanitation and drainage pipes, still very common because of their cost-effectiveness, ease of installation and standardization. The fourth is double-wall structured pipes, in HDPE or PP, intended for gravity networks, drainage and collectors. The fifth is ducts and conduits for telecommunications, electrical applications and cable protection, which in a country committed to infrastructure expansion remains an important and technically less trivial segment than it may seem.

Standards, certifications and competitive factors in choosing a supplier

In the Moroccan market, price matters, but it is not enough. Professional buyers must evaluate at least five elements: regulatory compliance, product range breadth, logistics availability, technical support and proximity to job sites or end customers. The standards most frequently found in product sheets are NM EN 12201-2 for HDPE pressure pipes, NM ISO 1452-2 or equivalent references for PVC pressure pipes, and NM EN 13476-3 for structured-wall and double-wall systems for sanitation.

What also matters is the ability to serve the market with a complete industrial logic. A manufacturer that only has a commercial contact point but does not clearly show its range, applications and technical organization does not offer the same level of reliability as an operator that presents its production site, served segments, certifications and contact channels.

For this reason, in the following dossier I have given priority to operators with clearly documented industrial or commercial presence and with officially published contact details.

Main Moroccan plastic pipe manufacturers with complete contact details

Alma operates in the design and production of HDPE PE100 and PVC pipes for drinking water supply, sanitation, wastewater treatment and dry utility networks. It also produces double-wall corrugated HDPE pipes for buried gravity networks compliant with NM EN 13476-3. Head office and plant: Z.I. Had Soualem, Douar Laasilat, Commune of Sahel Ouled Hriz-Cercle de Berrechid, 26400 Morocco. Phones: +212 661 78 25 80; +212 611 01 06 53. Email: contact@alma.ma; reception@alma.ma; export@alma.ma.

INES S.A. is one of the strongest names in Moroccan piping. Founded in 1980, it manufactures and markets solutions for drinking water, sanitation, dry networks, building and irrigation; in the sanitation HDPE range it offers SANIMAX double-wall systems for gravity networks. Registered office: Bd Chefchaouni km 11.5, Aïn Sebaâ, 20590 Casablanca, Morocco. Tel: +212 (0) 522 66 67 68. Fax: +212 (0) 522 66 67 67. Email: ines@ines.ma. Commercial headquarters: Hay Mohammadi, Rue Ali Yaâta, Casablanca. Tel: +212 (0) 522 34 99 00. Fax: +212 (0) 522 35 33 99. Email: marketing-btp@ines.ma. Production site: Commune Chellalate, Sidi Bernoussi, Casablanca.

DIMATIT, a company of the YNNA Holding group, has been active in the hydraulic sector since 1941 and markets pipes and accessories in PVC, HDPE, PP and GRP. For the plastics segment it is particularly relevant in HDPE pressure pipes, PVC pressure pipes, PVC sanitation pipes and double-wall PP for gravity networks. Address: Route côtière N°111, 28800 Mohammedia, Morocco. Phones: +212 05 23 30 41 94/95. Fax: +212 05 23 30 41 97. Email: dimatit@dimatit.com. Hours: Monday–Friday 08:00–17:15, Saturday 08:00–12:00.

SICDA, the industrial subsidiary of CMGP Group, produces pipes and pipelines intended for agriculture, liquid sanitation, drinking water supply, building and telecom. Its range includes PVC pressure pipes, PVC sanitation pipes, HDPE pressure pipes, double-wall HDPE pipes, irrigation pipes and telecom pipes. Commercial headquarters: Parc Industriel Sapino, 102–105 Nouaceur 20240, Casablanca, Morocco. Tel: +212 05 22 32 49 21. Fax: +212 05 22 49 56 62. Email: clients@sicda.ma, Plant & Warehouse: Route de Marrakech, Zone Industrielle Lots N°48–52, Berrechid, Morocco. Tel: +212 05 22 32 49 21. Fax: +212 05 22 32 49 12.

Adeauplast describes itself as one of Morocco’s leaders in the manufacture and marketing of PVC pipes and LDPE/HDPE pipes, with applications for drinking water, water conveyance, irrigation and other technical uses. Head office and plant: Km 4.5, Route de Bouznika, Ouled Othmane, Skhirat, Morocco. Phones: +212 537 742 322; +212 661 059 212. Fax: +212 537 74 22 95. Email: contact@adeauplast.com.

Marrakech branch: Route de Safi, Km 10.5, Quartier industriel Harbil-Marrakech; Tel +212 524 20 50 12. Agadir branch: Bloc 2, 114, Route de Taroudant, Azrou, Ait Melloul-Agadir; Tel +212 661 40 54 20.

6PO Industrie specializes in the extrusion of PVC, HDPE and LDPE pipes for drinking water distribution, sanitation, irrigation, drainage and telecommunications. In its HDPE range it also offers double-wall pipes compliant with NM EN 13476-3. Address: Zone industrielle Ain Atiq, Témara, Morocco. Phones: 05 37 74 96 71; 05 37 74 96 20. Email: 6poind@gmail.com. Hours: Monday–Friday 08:30–17:00, Saturday 08:30–12:30.

Plastima Canalisations covers water, sanitation, irrigation, telecommunications, ducting, drainage and gas. The range includes HDPE pressure pipe, PVC pressure pipe, double-wall HDPE duct and other technical families. Head office: 1 Rue Al Maadane, ex rue L, Route Côtière, N°111, Km 11, Aïn Sebaâ 20 600, Casablanca, Morocco. Phones: +212 05 22 35 59 14; +212 05 22 34 44 46; +212 05 22 34 22 36. Email: plastima@plastima.com. Plant: Route Secondaire 3002, Commune Chellalat, Mohammedia, Morocco. Phones: +212 05 22 66 28 88; +212 05 22 34 22 36.

SPLAST is headquartered in Mediouna, in the Casablanca area, and works with PVC, HDPE pipes and associated products for drinking water, building and other uses. Registered office: Zone Lahlalate Elmajjatia Oulad Taleb, Mediouna, Casablanca 29490, Morocco. Phones: +212 522 51 91 45 / 46 / 47. Fax: +212 522 51 91 48. Email: contact@splast.ma. Hours: Monday–Friday 08:00–18:00, Saturday 08:00–12:00.

SMECEPLAST focuses on the manufacture of LDPE/HDPE and PVC pipes, with a range for pressurized drinking water, irrigation and cable and fiber-optic protection. Address: Lot N°82, Zone Industrielle, Tit Mellil, Casablanca, Morocco. Phone: +212 5 22 51 03 76. Fax: +212 5 22 51 13 22. Email: contact@smeceplast.com; smeceplast@gmail.com.

Gemaplast S.A.R.L. produces PVC-U and HDPE pipelines for sanitation infrastructure, pressurized conveyance, electrification and irrigation. Its range includes double-wall corrugated HDPE pipe, blue-line HDPE pipe and PVC-U pipes. Head office: N°33, Résidence Kawter, Avenue Allal El Fassi, Marrakech, Morocco. Plant and commercial office: Douar Ait Ouazzou, Commune de Harbil, Marrakech. Phones: +212 5 24 35 62 70; +212 5 24 01 31 72. Email: adv@gemaplast.ma. Hours: Monday–Saturday 08:30–18:30.

Main distribution and technical supply operators in Morocco

CMGP-CAS is one of the most relevant commercial operators for irrigation, water infrastructure and agricultural supplies. Although it is not only a pipe distributor, it is an important channel for the distribution of HDPE, PVC and technical accessories across Moroccan territory. General contact: Parc Industriel Sapino 102–105, Nouaceur, Casablanca. Phone: +212 (0)5 22 49 56 10. Email: contact@cmgp-cas.com. Second site indicated on the website: Zone industrielle, route de Biougra, Aït Melloul, Agadir; Tel +212 (0)5 28 24 74 10. Documented commercial branches: Casablanca, Aït Melloul, Beni Mellal, Marrakech, Berkane, Meknès, El Jadida, Kénitra, Larache and Errachidia. Casablanca branch: 135, Rue Lieutenant Mahroud Mohamed, Casablanca 20310; Tel 0522 24 91 15 / 0522 40 03 98; Fax 0522 40 09 82; Email casablanca@cmgp-cas.com. Marrakech branch: Av. Abdellah Ben Yassine ang. rue AlArak, Marrakech 40000; Tel 05 24 49 82 18 / 19; Fax 05 24 49 82 13; Email Marrakech@cmgp-cas.com

CODETRAM is a technical supplier with availability of HDPE and PVC pipes for industry, construction and hydraulics, with stock in Casablanca and a positioning more as a specialist distributor than as a manufacturer. Address: 66 Rue N°15 Khalil III, Quartier Industriel Hay Mohammadi, Casablanca, Morocco. Phone: +212 522 60 62 67. Email: contact@codetram.com

SMSFI operates as a supplier of industrial products and solutions in Morocco, with a line dedicated to piping, drinking water, irrigation and various industrial uses. Address: Bd Chefchaouni, Immeuble 217, étage 4, Casablanca, Morocco. Phone: +212 715 082 363. Email: sales@smsfi.ma; smsfi@smsfi.ma; smsfi@outlook.fr.

Prospects for the Moroccan plastic pipe market in 2026

The outlook for 2026 remains favorable. Not because the market is simple, but because the fundamentals are strong. Morocco will continue to invest in water, sanitation, desalination, inter-basin transfers and irrigation modernization. At the same time, the construction and public works sector maintains a trajectory that supports pipelines for building, civil engineering and technical networks. In this context, demand will tend to reward those who combine three qualities: technical compliance, logistical capacity and territorial presence.

For a foreign buyer, the Moroccan plastic pipe market offers a specific advantage: the possibility of working with manufacturers and distributors already accustomed to serving public clients, utilities, contractors and agricultural operators, with a range covering PVC, HDPE and double-wall systems without always having to rely on distant imports. For a publisher or industrial observer, on the other hand, the Moroccan case is interesting because it shows how the plastics supply chain for infrastructure can become a lever of national resilience when linked to water policy.

FAQ

Does Morocco produce plastic pipes locally, or does it mainly depend on imports?

Morocco has a clearly visible local production base, with operators manufacturing PVC, HDPE pipes and, in several cases, double-wall systems for sanitation and drainage. The presence of production sites in Had Soualem, Casablanca, Mohammedia, Berrechid, Mediouna, Tit Mellil, Skhirat and Marrakech confirms that the country is not only an outlet market, but also a regional manufacturing hub.

Which consumption segments are strongest for plastic pipes in Morocco?

The strongest segments are drinking water, sanitation, irrigation and technical networks linked to construction, telecommunications and electrification. This reading derives both from national water and irrigation programs and from the product ranges declared by Morocco’s main industrial operators.

Where are the main Moroccan plastic pipe manufacturers located?

The highest concentration is in the Casablanca-Settat region, between Casablanca, Nouaceur, Berrechid, Mohammedia, Had Soualem, Mediouna and Tit Mellil. There are also complementary hubs in Skhirat, Marrakech and Agadir/Aït Melloul.

Which standards recur most often in Moroccan plastic piping?

For HDPE pressure pipes, the most common standard is NM EN 12201-2; for PVC pressure pipes, NM ISO 1452-2 or equivalent references; for double-wall systems, the most common standard is NM EN 13476-3. These are central technical references in selecting a reliable supplier.

Which operators are the most interesting to contact for professional sourcing?

On the manufacturing side, the most structured and best-documented names are Alma, INES, DIMATIT, SICDA, Adeauplast, 6PO Industrie, Plastima, SPLAST, SMECEPLAST and Gemaplast. On the distribution and commercial side, the most useful contacts are CMGP-CAS, CODETRAM and SMSFI.


Sources

For this analysis, primary institutional and industrial sources were used: Maroc.ma, Haut-Commissariat au Plan, Ministère de l’Agriculture du Maroc, and the official websites of Alma, INES, DIMATIT, SICDA, CMGP-CAS, Adeauplast, 6PO Industrie, Plastima Canalisations, SPLAST, SMECEPLAST, Gemaplast, CODETRAM and SMSFI.


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