Benhima joined Office Cherifien des Phosphates (OCP), Moroccan state-ownedphosphate world leader, as a junior field engineer in Khouribga.
After the first 6 years he spent there, he became Mining Facilities Manager.
He was appointed in 1990 CEO of Casablanca-based Société Marocaine d'Oxygène et d'Acétylène, Moroccan subsidiary of Air Liquide group, world leader in industrial gases. On 19 March 1994, he was appointed CEO of
Office National de l'Electricité (ONE), Morocco's national power authority.[1]
He has notably tackled the issue of insufficient access to electricity in rural communities.
The global rural electrification program's objective was to generalize access before 2010.
His successor Ahmed Nakkouch pushed further the initiative: the program is due to reach its target in 2007. During his CEO mandate, he has been a member of the transition government led by Dr. Abdellatif Filali (between August 1997 and March 1998) in preparation of the Alternance, the Socialist Union of Popular Forces and socialist Abderrahmane Youssoufi coming to power.
Benhima was then Minister of Transport, Energy, Tourism, Mining and Merchant Navy.
From July 2001 to 26 March 2003,[citation needed] Mr Benhima assumed the office of Governor of the Wilaya of Great Casablanca.
He was appointed Director of the Agency for the Promotion and the Economic and Social Development of the Northern Prefectures and Provinces of the Moroccan Kingdom (APDN) in March 2004.
RAM Appointment
He was appointed to the position of Royal Air Maroc's CEO by King Mohammed VI on 15 February 2006.[2][3] In 2016 and after a decision of King Mohammed VI in the Council of Ministers, Benhima was replaced by Hmido Adou, who served as president of the Moroccan National Office of Tourism until 2013.[4]
In 1999, Hassan II assigned to Benhima the promotion of the Moroccan bid to host the 2006 FIFA World Cup, and was also assigned the same role in the 2010 FIFA World Cup.