10 Maritime Compliance Costs Owners Still Underestimate in 2026

A growing number of owners are still budgeting for compliance as if the main expense is the headline rule itself, when the real drain is usually the stack of second-order costs that follows behind...
12 Questions Before You Rip Out a Legacy Fleet System

Replacing a legacy fleet management system is rarely just a software purchase. In maritime operations it is usually a data migration project, a process redesign project, a change-management project, and sometimes a cyber-risk project...
HMM Namu Blast Near Hormuz Puts Dubai Tow, Cargo Risk, and Gulf Transit Safety in Focus

The South Korean shipping group HMM said its Panama-flagged bulk carrier HMM Namu suffered an explosion and fire while stranded in or near the Strait of Hormuz traffic zone, and that the vessel is...
Cruise Cabin Design Shifts That Could Quietly Lift Revenue per Berth

Cruise cabin design is increasingly becoming a revenue architecture decision, not just an interior-design decision. The most commercially interesting moves now are the ones that either widen the addressable guest mix, reduce friction in...
DOF Locks In a $2 Billion Brazil Growth Wave With Four Long-Term Petrobras Vessels

DOF has secured four 12-year charter and services contracts in Brazil for newbuild ROV support vessels tied to Petrobras’ deepwater subsea inspection, maintenance and repair work, with contract starts expected from 2030. The company...
A CMA CGM Container Ship Was Hit in the Strait, With Crew Injured

The latest maritime signal is blunt: even as a few selective Hormuz crossings resume, container-shipping risk remains severe enough to injure crews and damage vessels. CMA CGM said its ship San Antonio was attacked...
Strait of Hormuz: Fresh Attacks and Policy Swings Keep Maritime Risk Elevated

As of May 6, 2026, the Strait of Hormuz remains open only in a narrow and unstable sense, with new attacks on merchant shipping, selective protected transits, active evasive behavior by LNG carriers, and...
10 Frigate and Corvette Design Choices Buyers Are Reopening in 2026

In 2026, frigate and corvette buyers are rethinking design logic less because the classic missions disappeared and more because the trade space got tighter. Official program signals point in the same direction. Australia’s new...
10 Shipping Data Gaps to Fix Before Buying Another AI Tool

Shipping companies do not usually have an AI shortage first. They have a data-quality, data-governance, and interoperability shortage first. Lloyd’s Register and OneOcean said in March 2026 that the problem for many owners and...
10 Hidden Costs in Alternative Fuel Ready Ship Designs Owners Miss Early

Alternative-fuel-ready design can look cheaper than a fully committed dual-fuel decision, but the hidden costs often start long before the first tonne of green fuel is burned. Owners are usually not just paying for...
Hormuz Shipping Crisis Deepens as New Attacks and Escort Moves Reshape Maritime Risk

Over the last 24 hours, the Strait of Hormuz moved into a more volatile phase for shipping as U.S. forces said they destroyed six Iranian small attack boats threatening commercial traffic, Washington pressed ahead...
North Atlantic Shipping Enters a Tougher Clean-Air Regime After Landmark IMO Vote

The IMO has now formally adopted a new North-East Atlantic Emission Control Area, creating the largest ECA yet approved under MARPOL Annex VI and extending stricter air-pollution rules across a very broad section of...
9 Cruise Safety Systems That Look More Important After the Latest Passenger Incidents

Recent cruise incidents have reinforced a simple point: response matters, but earlier detection matters even more. In the last year alone, a girl and her father were rescued after going overboard from Disney Dream...
Gulf Shipping Risk Is Now Spilling Into Nearby Port Infrastructure and Regional Trade Confidence

The latest shift is that Gulf maritime risk is no longer confined to ships trying to transit Hormuz. It is now reaching into nearby port infrastructure and the wider commercial confidence surrounding Gulf trade....
Sweden Seizes Sanctioned Shadow Tanker in Baltic Crackdown Near Trelleborg

Swedish authorities have boarded and seized the tanker Jin Hui in Swedish territorial waters south of Trelleborg after the Coast Guard said the vessel was sailing under a suspected false flag and did not...
AUKUS Beyond the Boats

AUKUS is still publicly associated first with nuclear submarines, but official statements and recent Pillar II activity show a much wider industrial picture taking shape. The three partners have repeatedly framed Pillar II around...
Maritime Insurance Shifts Owners Should Watch as Geopolitical Risk Raises Vessel Exposure

Marine insurance is still available in many high-risk corridors, but the way it is being offered, priced, reviewed, and contractually recovered is changing fast. That is the real shift owners need to watch. In...
Autonomous Shipping Technologies That Could Beat Fully Uncrewed Ships to ROI

Fully uncrewed deep-sea ships still sit behind a longer regulatory and assurance curve than a lot of maritime autonomy marketing suggests. IMO’s current roadmap says the non-mandatory MASS Code was targeted for finalization and...
IMO Net-Zero Rules Stay Alive, but the Adoption Path Is Still Unsteady

The IMO Net-Zero Framework remains on the table, but its path to formal adoption is still unsettled after another contentious round of talks in London. The framework, first approved at MEPC 83 in April...
Black Sea Strikes, Shadow Fleet Pressure, and Port Risk Are Rewriting Maritime Trade Again

The latest Russia-Ukraine maritime picture is being shaped by three developments at once. First, Russian attacks are still hitting Ukraine’s export system around Odesa and the Danube, including recent damage to port infrastructure and...
The Market Is Still Trading Prolonged Gulf Disruption, Not Normalization

The clearest signal in the latest market action is that traders and operators still do not believe Gulf shipping is returning to normal any time soon. A tanker was hit by unknown projectiles north...
8 Cruise Segments Most Likely to Spend Big on Battery Hybrid Technology

Battery-hybrid technology is not likely to spread evenly across cruise. The strongest buyers are usually the operators whose ships spend meaningful time in environmentally sensitive areas, close to shore, inside emission-sensitive ports, or on...
U.S. Escort Plan Opens a New Phase in the Hormuz Shipping Crisis

The latest development in the Strait of Hormuz is a U.S. decision to begin guiding stranded commercial ships out of the Gulf, with President Donald Trump saying the operation will start Monday morning as...
10 Naval Technologies the Drone War Era Is Pulling Forward Faster Than Expected

The drone war era is compressing naval timelines because it punishes slow adaptation and rewards systems that can detect, classify, launch, jam, deceive, network, and strike faster than traditional upgrade cycles were built to...
Hormuz Is Creating a Floating Storage Squeeze: The Impacts that Owners Should Watch Next

The Hormuz story is no longer only about blocked transits. It is increasingly about what happens when crude keeps getting loaded, ships cannot discharge normally, and tankers start functioning as temporary storage instead of...
9 Maritime Tech Segments IMO’s Digital Push Could Lift First

IMO’s March 2026 digitalization move matters because it pushes the conversation beyond general “smart shipping” language and toward interoperability, standardization, data-sharing, data governance, and digital trust across organizations and jurisdictions. The official IMO briefing...
LNG Shipping Demand Is Splitting Into Two Markets as War Disruption Rewrites Trade Flows

Current LNG shipping demand is no longer moving in one clear direction. The latest market picture shows a sharp divide between stronger long-haul demand for flexible Atlantic Basin cargoes and weaker import appetite across...
Drewry WCI Slips Again as Container Spot Rates Keep Losing Altitude

Drewry’s latest World Container Index update for 30 April shows the benchmark falling for a third straight week, down 1% to $2,216 per 40ft container. The decline was driven by softer pricing on Asia-Europe,...
Iran’s Export Choke Is Tightening as Crude Piles Up on Tankers

The maritime signal here is no longer just that Iranian exports are under pressure. It is that the pressure is physically migrating into floating storage, which is a more dangerous stage of disruption. The...
IMO Carbon Rules Face Rising Resistance as U.S. Pressure Reshapes the Vote

The current IMO carbon story has moved well beyond a technical debate over marine fuels. The fight is now centered on whether the organization can still carry its net-zero shipping framework forward after a...