The Hidden Cost of Bad Position Data and How Interference Becomes a Commercial Problem

Bad position data becomes a commercial problem long before it becomes a casualty case. In the Gulf, recent JMIC advisories say GNSS interference, spoofing, jamming, AIS anomalies, and communications disruption continue to affect navigational...
The New Shipping Bottleneck Is Not Just Hormuz It Is the Entire Cost Chain

The new shipping bottleneck is not just whether ships can pass Hormuz. It is whether owners, operators, charterers, and cargo interests can absorb everything that widens after that first disruption: higher war-risk cost, slower...
Primorsk and Ust-Luga Go Dark After Ukrainian Drone Strikes

Russia’s two main Baltic petroleum export outlets, Primorsk and Ust-Luga, suspended crude oil and fuel exports from Sunday after drone attacks, according to industry-source reporting published on March 23. Primorsk, where regional officials said...
Fredriksen Reloads in Newcastlemaxes with up to 8 new dry bulk builds

John Fredriksen’s private investment arm, Seatankers Management, has returned to the large dry bulk newbuilding market with an order for four firm 210,000 dwt newcastlemax bulk carriers at China’s Panjin Dajin Offshore, together with...
Small Ships Big Role: Why Lighter Naval Platforms are Growing

Lighter naval platforms are growing as many fleets no longer see every maritime problem as a destroyer or frigate problem. In 2026, the pressure is coming from chokepoint security, grey-zone presence, distributed operations, budget...
Oil Pressure Cruise Prices Could Move Faster Than Expected

On March 16 that Brent crude had moved above $100 a barrel as Middle East tensions disrupted energy markets, while analysts warned Carnival could be the most exposed among the major U.S. cruise operators...
Hormuz Risk Turns Structural as Iran Signals a Prolonged Closure

Iran has signaled that the Strait of Hormuz could remain closed for an extended period if U.S. threats against Iranian energy infrastructure are carried out, with Revolutionary Guards officials saying the waterway would be...
Iran Is Now Threatening a Full Gulf Closure Through Mine-Laying, Not Just Tighter Hormuz Control

Iran’s Defence Council has warned that any attack on its southern coast or islands would trigger a strategic response involving multiple types of sea mines, with the stated aim of closing the entire Gulf...
11 Hard Lessons From the Gulf Shipping Crisis that Owners are Applying

The Gulf shipping crisis has exposed how quickly a regional disruption can turn into an owner-side earnings shock. What looked manageable at first as a routing and war-risk problem has revealed deeper weaknesses in...
Key Bridge-Tech Checks Before Entering Gulf High-Risk Waters

Pre-entry bridge readiness The most dangerous gap is not missing equipment, it is false confidence in equipment In Gulf high-risk waters, a vessel can carry modern bridge systems and still be poorly prepared if...
Ras Laffan Hit Hard as Qatar Confirms Years of Lost LNG Capacity

Qatar has confirmed that missile attacks on Ras Laffan Industrial City caused severe damage to two LNG trains and one gas-to-liquids facility, cutting about 17% of the country’s LNG export capacity and leaving part...
Panama Draws a Harder Line in the Canal Port Fight

Panama’s dispute with Hutchison over the Balboa and Cristóbal canal ports has entered a sharper public phase after President José Raúl Mulino directly rejected the company’s latest arbitration allegations. Hutchison’s Panama Ports Company said...
Container and Inland Logistics Costs Are Still Spreading Outward From the Gulf Shock

The shipping signal here is no longer confined to vessels at sea. The latest evidence shows the Gulf shock is still pushing costs outward across the full cargo chain, from ocean freight into inland...
IMO Pushes a Safe Passage Plan for Ships and Seafarers West of Hormuz

The International Maritime Organization has moved from broad concern to a specific safe-passage proposal for merchant shipping trapped west of the Strait of Hormuz. Following an extraordinary Council session held on March 18 to...
10 Crew Welfare Moves That Matter Most When Seafarers Are Stuck in a Conflict Zone

Crew welfare stops being a side issue very quickly when crews cannot rotate, cannot repatriate, and cannot trust that the next call will make things easier. In a conflict zone, fatigue, stress, family pressure,...
Washington Targets the IMO Net-Zero Framework as Fleet Planning Enters a New Uncertainty Phase

The U.S. has taken an openly hostile position toward the IMO Net-Zero Framework, opposing the draft rules that would combine a global marine-fuel standard with greenhouse-gas pricing for international shipping. The framework was approved...
15 Pieces of Navigation Redundancy That Suddenly Matter More in the Gulf

Navigation redundancy has moved from a best-practice conversation to a live operating issue in the Gulf. Current JMIC advisories say significant GNSS interference, spoofing, and jamming continue across the Strait of Hormuz approaches, Gulf...
Jones Act Pause as Fuel and Fertilizer Cargoes Get a 60-Day Opening

The White House said on March 18 that the United States will suspend Jones Act requirements for 60 days, temporarily allowing foreign-flagged vessels to move cargo between U.S. ports that would normally have to...
Cruise Itinerary Shake-Up Quiet Changes Are Reshaping 2026

Cruise lines are not just adding ships and opening sales. They are actively reshaping schedules underneath the surface. In the last year, operators have canceled selected voyages, swapped homeports, shifted ships between regions, rewritten...
Seafarer Entrapment in the Gulf Has Become a Front-Rank Shipping Signal

This has moved beyond a welfare sidebar and into core shipping-market risk. Reuters reports countries including Bahrain, Japan, Panama, Singapore, and the UAE, with support from the United States, have proposed an IMO-backed safe...
Ras Laffan and Gulf Energy Hubs Move Into the Strike Zone

Over the past several days, Gulf energy infrastructure has been directly targeted in a way that goes beyond tanker risk or general regional instability. In Qatar, official statements and diplomatic filings say Ras Laffan...
Readiness vs Expansion Why More Hulls Alone Will Not Fix Naval Gaps

Adding hulls looks like the simplest answer to naval gaps, especially when fleet-size comparisons dominate headlines and political debate. But the harder truth in 2026 is that fleet power depends just as much on...
Bunker Market Buckles as War Distorts Supply, Premiums, and Refuelling Access

The bunker market across Asia has entered a more stressed phase as the war in the Middle East continues to distort fuel oil flows, tighten prompt availability, and drive sellers into more defensive behavior....
CMA CGM Opens Sea Road Rail Gulf Corridors Outside Hormuz

CMA CGM has formally reopened import and export bookings for key Gulf markets using a set of named multimodal corridors designed to avoid a direct Strait of Hormuz transit. In customer advisories issued on...
Maritime Cyber Is Surging and Why 2026 Feels Like a Turning Point

Maritime cyber risk is moving into a different category in 2026 because the problem is no longer confined to isolated office IT incidents or abstract warnings about future digitalization. It is being shaped by...
Short Cruises Big Margins

Three- to five-night sailings are back in focus because they now solve several cruise-industry problems at once. They fit travelers with less vacation time, they create a lower-friction entry point for first-time cruisers, they...
Autonomous Warships Are Moving Faster Than Many Fleets Are Ready For

Autonomous warships and naval unmanned systems are no longer sitting in the experimental corner of fleet planning. In 2026, the shift is showing up in real deployments, dedicated unmanned surface vessel divisions, allied budget...
Gulf Disruption Is Now Hitting the Broader Cargo Network, Not Just Tankers

The latest read-through is bigger than energy shipping. What started as a tanker and chokepoint crisis is now clearly spilling into the wider cargo network: food imports, medicine flows, container handling, fallback ports, inland...
Digital Fog Moves Closer to the Engine Room

New maritime cybersecurity research published this week disclosed a chain of vulnerabilities in a widely used maritime IoT platform that, according to the researchers, could have allowed a remote attacker using only a web...
Why Better Voyage Decisions Are Becoming the Fastest Way to Save Money at Sea

The fastest savings at sea are increasingly coming from decisions made before a vessel burns the next ton of fuel, not from one more round of hardware spend. That is because voyage economics are...