Owners Turning Drydock Into a Commercial Advantage

A drydock slot is no longer just a maintenance obligation. In 2026 it can be one of the most commercially useful decisions an owner makes all year. That is because the economics now reach...
8 Maritime Procurement Tech Moves That Cut Parts Delays Without Cutting Corners

Parts delays in shipping rarely come from one dramatic failure. More often, they build through slow identification, fragmented approval chains, incomplete technical data, piecemeal ordering, weak inventory logic, and last-minute logistics that leave owners...
IMO Carbon Levy Pressure Returns as the EU Pushes Shipping Pricing Back to the Front

Pressure for a global shipping carbon levy at the IMO has moved back to the center of the maritime regulatory agenda after European governments agreed to keep pressing for a global price on shipping...
Somali Piracy Update 2026: Hijackings Return as the Threat Spreads Again

Somali piracy has moved back from background risk to active shipping concern, and the latest pattern shows why. After a quieter first quarter on paper, the past several days have brought a sharper turn:...
Bigger Cruise Ships Bigger Service Contracts

The commercial story behind the newest mega-cruise ships is not only about waterparks, neighborhoods, or passenger counts. It is also about the supplier layers that quietly grow with ship scale. Royal Caribbean’s Icon of...
Crew Welfare Is Turning Into a Commercial Constraint in the Persian Gulf

The Persian Gulf disruption is no longer only a vessel-routing, oil-price, or insurance story. It is becoming a crew endurance problem with direct commercial consequences. Thousands of seafarers remain stuck aboard tankers, container ships,...
LNG Carrier Orders Rebound Despite Iran War Shipping Uncertainty

LNG carrier ordering is picking up again in 2026 even though the Iran war has made LNG shipping routes, cargo timing, and freight-market direction much harder to read. In the first quarter alone, 35...
Private-Sector Services That Could Become Critical as Naval Maintenance Backlogs Deepen

Naval maintenance backlogs are no longer just an internal readiness problem. They are increasingly defining where private-sector help becomes strategically important. GAO reported in 2025 that private-shipyard maintenance availabilities for nonnuclear surface ships were...
8 Maritime Winners and 8 Losers From the Hormuz Crisis

The Hormuz crisis is severe enough that it creates both direct damage and relative beneficiaries at the same time. The losers are easier to spot because the Strait remains a core artery for crude,...
10 Maritime Cybersecurity Weak Points Getting Worse as Ships Get More Connected

The cyber risk picture on ships is getting harder, not easier, because more vessel functions now depend on digitalization, integration, automation, and network-based systems. IMO’s revised 2025 maritime cyber risk guidance says that shipping’s...
White House Moves to Extend Jones Act Waiver as Fuel Pressure Persists

The White House is moving to extend the temporary Jones Act waiver that has allowed foreign-flagged vessels to move fuel and other goods between U.S. ports, as the administration looks for more time to...
Panama Canal Auction Prices Surge as Rerouted Energy and Cargo Demand Reprices Transit Access

Panama Canal auction prices have surged sharply as rerouted cargo demand, especially from energy trades, has put much more pressure on last-minute transit access. Canal officials said some vessels recently paid more than $1...
Ship Detention Has Moved to the Front of the Crisis Map

The most urgent maritime signal right now is no longer just that traffic through Hormuz is badly impaired. It is that seized commercial ships have been taken into port with crews still on board,...
U.S. LNG Is Temporarily Covering a Qatar-Sized Global Supply Gap

U.S. LNG exporters have, for now, offset the sharp drop in shipments from Qatar after Iranian attacks damaged Qatari LNG facilities and broader Middle East disruption choked regional flows. Current trade data show the...
Ship Automation and Control Systems Systems Made Simple

Ship automation is basically the vessel’s nervous system for monitoring, control, alarms, and fast operational response. In modern commercial ships, that usually means a combination of alarm and monitoring, power and energy management, machinery...
FuelEU Pooling in Plain English for Shipowners

FuelEU pooling matters because it can turn a fleet’s mixed performance into a more manageable compliance position. In plain terms, it lets the over-compliance of one ship help cover the under-performance of another, as...
Golden Pass LNG Ships First Export Cargo From Texas

Golden Pass LNG has now shipped its first export cargo from the Sabine Pass terminal in Texas, moving the long-delayed project from commissioning milestones into active seaborne trade. The cargo departed aboard the tanker...
Iran Tightens Hormuz Control as Ship Seizures, Tolls Claims, and Tanker Intercepts Escalate

Over the last 24 hours, the Hormuz crisis has shifted into a harder and more coercive phase. Iran has publicly displayed commandos boarding two commercial cargo ships in the Strait of Hormuz, said it...
Asian Refinery Cuts Are Turning the Energy Shock Into a Products-Shipping Risk

The latest shift in this crisis is that the damage is no longer confined to crude availability and tanker routing. It is now feeding directly into refinery behavior across Asia, where plants are cutting...
Russia Strikes Odesa Port Infrastructure Again as Ukraine’s Black Sea Export Lifeline Stays Under Pressure

Russia struck infrastructure at Ukraine’s Black Sea port of Odesa overnight, damaging berths, warehouses, railway infrastructure and port operators’ facilities, according to Ukraine’s deputy prime minister. Ukraine’s seaports authority said the attack also hit...
Cruise Ship Absorption Chillers: When Waste-Heat Cooling Is Worth the Retrofit

Absorption chillers are one of those marine ideas that sound smarter every time fuel prices, carbon rules, and hotel-load pressure climb. The logic is simple enough: instead of using a large amount of electricity...
Naval Aviation Support Systems Explained: The High-Value Components Behind Fleet Readiness

Naval aviation readiness is built on a support architecture that goes far beyond the aircraft itself. Official Navy and NAVAIR sources show that readiness depends on a layered system that includes depot maintenance for...
AI for Shipowners: 8 Uses Winning Budget and 6 That Still Look Like Hype

Shipping companies are not short on AI ideas. What they are short on is confidence about which ones deserve real money. Recent maritime AI research shows a market that is interested but selective: 82%...
10 Decarbonization Delays That Quietly Raise Fleet Costs

The real cost of waiting on decarbonization is rarely a single future retrofit invoice. It usually shows up sooner through rising carbon-cost exposure, weaker FuelEU flexibility, recurring CII underperformance, delayed retrofit payback, and ships...
Gunfire in Hormuz and the Biggest Daily Oil Supply Shock on Record

At least three commercial vessels were hit by gunfire in the Strait of Hormuz on April 22, according to maritime security sources and UKMTO-linked reporting, with crews reported safe but one ship’s bridge damaged....
EU 20th Russia Sanctions Package Targets Full Maritime Services Ban on Russian Oil

The European Union’s 20th sanctions package now includes a plan for a full maritime services ban covering Russian crude and refined products, but the measure will not take effect until there is further coordination...
Historic Energy Shock Keeps Maritime Disruption Global

The scale of the current disruption is what makes this more than a regional shipping story. The war involving Iran and the closure of Hormuz have created the largest recorded daily oil supply shock...
Cruise Sustainability Spending That Pays and Spending That Mostly Signals

Cruise sustainability spending is no longer one blended category. The pressure from IMO carbon-intensity rules has made some projects operationally urgent, while FuelEU Maritime is turning shore-power readiness into a route-planning issue for passenger...
Bourbon’s $180 Million Fleet Push Signals a Bigger Offshore Vessel Reset

Bourbon has added 13 vessels since the start of 2026 in an expansion worth more than $180 million, combining acquisitions, reactivations, and recent deliveries into one of the more aggressive offshore fleet moves of...
Repair Work Looks Hotter Than Newbuild Dreams for Smaller Naval Contractors

Smaller naval contractors usually do best where urgency is high, entry barriers are narrow enough to clear, and buyers need schedule relief more than they need massive production scale. Current evidence points strongly in...