7 Sea Chest Cleaning Systems Owners Should Compare Before Biofouling Rules Tighten

Sea chest cleaning is moving from a maintenance detail into a bigger compliance and trading issue because sea chests sit right inside the “niche area” problem regulators and inspectors care about most. IMO’s 2023...
Money Controls That Maritime Operators Need Before the Next Fraud Attempt Hits

Maritime payment workflows are getting harder to protect because the problem is no longer limited to obviously fake invoices. The bigger operational risk now sits at the intersection of supplier identity, altered bank details,...
LNG Tankers Through Hormuz Are Restarting, but the Route Is Still Far From Normal

LNG tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has improved from the near-freeze seen earlier in the conflict, but the latest vessel movements still point to a tightly controlled and incomplete restart rather than...
Hong Kong Tanker Owner Teying Pivots From a Fast VLCC Profit to a Big China LR2 Newbuild Play

Hong Kong-based Teying Shipping has shifted from a short-cycle crude-tanker asset trade into a much larger long-horizon ordering move in the product-tanker market. The company has contracted four firm 115,000 dwt LR2s with options...
Naval Corrosion-Control Products That May Protect Readiness Better Than Another Dashboard

The most recent Navy corrosion-control material makes a plain point that is easy to overlook in a fleet obsessed with software, data, and digital modernization. The Navy says prioritizing corrosion control reduces costly repairs,...
Oil Sinks on Iran Deal Hopes Even as Washington and Tehran Stay Stuck on the Hardest Terms

The latest market move and the latest diplomacy are sending two different signals at once. Oil dropped sharply as traders reacted to rising hopes that the United States and Iran could edge toward a...
EU Drops Fertiliser Tariffs for a Year as Hormuz Shock Hits Farm Input Costs

The European Union has moved to temporarily suspend customs duties on key nitrogen-based fertilisers for one year as the Hormuz crisis drives up global prices and threatens farm input affordability. The Council said the...
Cruise Entertainment Tech Upgrades That Could Lift Premium Guest Spend

Cruise entertainment tech is becoming a revenue question, not just a production-quality question. The commercial backdrop is strong enough to matter. CLIA says global cruise passenger volume reached 37.2 million in 2025, a record...
Maritime Chokepoints That Are Rewriting Shipping in 2026

As of mid-May 2026, the global chokepoint picture is no longer one single shipping story. The Strait of Hormuz is the most acute live disruption, with high attack risk and freight markets still reacting...
9 Payment Controls Maritime Finance Teams Should Lock Down Before Fraud Gets More Expensive

Maritime payment control is becoming a sharper operating issue because the risk no longer sits only in obvious fake invoices. It now shows up across altered bank details, vendor impersonation, duplicate billing, sanctions and...
Drewry’s May 21 Container Index Signals an Early Peak Season Freight Turn

Drewry’s latest World Container Index for 21 May shows the container market firming again, with the composite index rising 6% week on week to $2,712 per 40ft container, marking the third consecutive weekly increase...
Panama Canal Slot Bids Explode as Global Route Stress Pushes Premium Passage to New Extremes

The latest Panama Canal auction data show how sharply passage value has risen during the current global shipping disruption. Recent reporting said a Neopanamax slot bid reached $4 million, matching the highest level previously...
Tanker Market Update Freight Rates Stay Elevated as Hormuz Risk Reshapes Global Oil Flows

The latest tanker market picture is no longer moving in one direction. Crude-tanker earnings remain unusually strong by historical standards, but the drivers underneath them are starting to split. Traffic through the Strait of...
Vessel Lay-Up and Reactivation Costs Owners Should Price Before Parking Older Tonnage

Parking older tonnage can look like a simple cost-cutting move, but the real economics usually hinge on everything that has to be preserved, re-certified, re-crewed, tested, and reactivated before the ship can trade again....
Spare Parts Traceability Tools Shipmanagers Need Before Counterfeit Risk Gets More Expensive

Counterfeit and non-genuine parts are easier to dismiss when they appear to be only a purchasing problem. The evidence says they can become a machinery, compliance, and casualty problem much faster than that. In...
Shipping, Ports and Class Societies Move From AI Pilot Projects to Live Operations

Artificial intelligence in maritime is no longer sitting mainly in concept decks or future-of-shipping panels. The latest industry picture shows AI moving into real vessel trials, class and compliance workflows, port traffic planning, bridge...
Hormuz Crypto Insurance Plan Raises New Questions for Shipowners, Insurers, and Sanctions Teams

Iran-linked reporting in mid-May said Tehran has introduced a new maritime insurance platform for ships and cargo moving through the Strait of Hormuz, commonly described as “Hormuz Safe,” with digital policy issuance and cryptocurrency...
Iran War Shipping Shock Is Spreading Across Fuel, Freight, Insurance and Corporate Earnings

The maritime economic fallout from the war in Iran has widened beyond a Strait of Hormuz traffic story into a broader cost-and-risk shock for global trade. The latest cross-company tally puts the business hit...
Cruise Virus Outbreaks Return to Headlines as Lines Tighten Health Response

The latest cruise health update is being shaped by two overlapping stories rather than one. In the U.S. CDC’s Vessel Sanitation Program jurisdiction, four gastrointestinal outbreaks had been posted for 2026 as of early...
8 Warship Power Upgrades Navies Need Before Lasers Radars and EW Fight Over the Same Megawatts

Warship power management is starting to look less like a back-room engineering topic and more like a frontline combat-system issue. The U.S. Navy has already had to upgrade electrical power and cooling capacity on...
Cruise Elevator Upgrades Bigger Ships May Need Before Guest Flow Gets Worse

On bigger cruise ships, elevator and escalator problems do not stay trapped inside the vertical-transport department. They spill into embarkation, venue turnover, accessibility, housekeeping movement, dining peaks, and the general feeling that the ship...
Port Call Cost Leaks that Owners Should Audit More Closely in 2026 and 2027

Port call inflation in 2026 is not just a story about one big fee line getting larger. It is a story about more cost layers attaching themselves to ordinary calls, then hiding inside disbursement...
Claims Tech Tools Shipping Teams Can Use to Cut Cargo Damage and Delay Disputes

The strongest maritime claims-tech tools are usually not the ones that promise to automate the legal fight after something goes wrong. The more practical tools strengthen the evidence chain before the dispute hardens. That...
LNG Buyers Move to Lock In Ships as Volatility Pushes Chartering Beyond the Spot Market

The LNG shipping market is apparently shifting toward longer-term charters as Middle East conflict, supply-chain disruption, and wider market volatility make short-term vessel cover less comfortable for buyers and portfolio players. Speaking at Lloyd’s...
EU Alumina Sanctions Pressure Builds as Brussels Moves Closer to Blocking Russia-Bound Shipments

Pressure is rising inside the European Union to shut down a sanctions gap that still allows alumina shipments from the EU to Russia, even after the bloc banned Russian aluminium imports. The latest push...
Crew Area Upgrades Older Cruise Ships May Need to Stay Competitive on Retention

Crew retention on older cruise ships is becoming a facilities question as much as a pay, contract, or promotion question. The baseline for onboard living has been moving upward. CLIA says cruise lines are...
Tanker Resale Prices Are Surging as Buyers Race for Prompt Tonnage

The tanker secondhand market is running hot enough that normal valuation logic is starting to look unreliable. Fresh sale-and-purchase reporting says buyers are paying unusually large premiums for immediate delivery ships as crude freight...
10 Distributed Shipbuilding Supplier Niches the Navy’s Modular Push Could Lift Fast

The Navy’s 2026 shipbuilding plan makes this topic much more concrete than it used to be. The plan says roughly 10% of shipbuilding work is currently performed at distributed sites and sets a goal...
Three VLCCs Slip Out of Hormuz, but the Gulf Still Is Not Back to Normal

Three very large crude carriers are now exiting or have just exited the Strait of Hormuz carrying a combined 6 million barrels of Middle East crude, marking the biggest single day of crude movement...
The Next Ballast Water Spending Wave: Service Problems Owners Should Budget After Installation

A lot of ballast water spending is now shifting from retrofit capex into service friction after the system is already onboard. That is a serious owner issue because the rules do not end with...