When Ship Connectivity Starts Paying the Service Bill

Remote technical support at sea starts saving real money when connectivity stops being just a communications utility and starts acting like a service-delivery channel. The strongest savings cases are not abstract. They come from...
UK ETS Shipping Contract Fixes Owners Should Make Before July 2026

The UK ETS issue is no longer theoretical for domestic shipping. The UK government has confirmed that from 1 July 2026 the scheme will cover domestic maritime voyages and in-port emissions for vessels of...
U.S. Launches $774 Million Port Upgrade Push Across 37 Projects

The United States has committed $774 million for a new round of port infrastructure awards covering 37 projects across coastal seaports, Great Lakes ports, and inland river ports, according to the Maritime Administration announcement...
Hormuz Freedom of Navigation Mission Moves From Diplomacy to Military Planning

The international effort to restore freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz has moved beyond general diplomatic language and into active coalition-building, military planning, and early expressions of national support. Britain and France...
10 Cruise Hotel Load Upgrades That Can Cut Fuel Burn More Than Many Owners Expect

Cruise hotel-load engineering is easy to underrate because the biggest energy drains are often hidden behind ceilings, bulkheads, ductwork, pumps, control cabinets, and chilled-water loops rather than visible on the outer deck. But passenger...
Japan Is Treating Vessel Passage as a Top-Level Diplomatic Issue

The latest signal is that Japan is no longer handling Hormuz as a distant shipping problem. It is treating safe vessel passage as a matter for direct leader-to-leader diplomacy. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi spoke...
Russia’s LNG Fleet Grows Just as Europe’s Door Starts Closing

Russia has added four liquefied natural gas carriers to its fleet just as Europe’s restrictions on Russian gas imports move closer to full effect. Ship-tracking data and the Russian ship register show the four...
10 Reasons Technical Data and Lifecycle Support Are Getting Harder to Ignore in Naval Programs

Technical data rights and lifecycle support keep moving toward the center of naval acquisition because they shape who can repair, compete, upgrade, and sustain systems once the easy early decisions are long over. GAO...
Hull Coatings or Air Lubrication: Which Upgrade Pays Back Faster in 2026

The answer is usually not the same for every ship, but one pattern keeps showing up clearly. Hull coatings tend to win the faster-payback argument more often because they usually cost less, fit more...
Carbon Accounting Software for Shipping: Features That Separate Useful Tools From Compliance Theater

Carbon accounting software in shipping is starting to matter less as a reporting accessory and more as an operating and commercial control layer. That shift is coming from regulation and contracts at the same...
Jones Act Waiver Battle Intensifies as Trump Extends Emergency Shipping Relief

The fight over the Trump administration’s Jones Act waiver has entered a sharper phase after the White House moved to extend the measure by 90 days, keeping in place an emergency exemption that allows...
First Japan-Linked Crude Tanker Clears Hormuz, But Traffic Is Still Far From Normal

Japan-linked tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is beginning to move again, but only in a very limited and carefully managed way. A tanker operated by a subsidiary of Idemitsu Kosan has now...
10 Shipboard Systems Naval Cyber Teams Should Worry About Before Inbox Filters

Email security still matters, but official Navy, maritime, and OT-security material points to a broader and more operationally serious problem set aboard ships. NAVSEA’s NSWC Philadelphia says its cybersecure machinery-controls mission covers surface-ship machinery...
The U.S. Is Expected to Extend the Blockade, Keeping Gulf Shipping Disruption Alive

The latest market read is that Gulf shipping disruption is likely to last longer because Washington is expected to extend its blockade of Iranian ports rather than let pressure ease quickly. Reports that the...
Panama Canal Transit Costs Soar as War-Rerouted Trade Rewrites Shipping Economics

Panama Canal traffic and pricing have both accelerated as the Middle East war reroutes cargoes toward the waterway, pushing more vessels to compete for transit certainty at the same time. Canal officials said some...
Air Quality, HVAC, and Wellness Systems: 9 Cruise Ship Upgrades With Real Buyer Appeal

Cruise buyers do not usually board asking about air changes per hour or ventilation architecture, but they absolutely notice the outcomes: quieter cabins, steadier temperatures, less humidity, fewer odors, better sleep, cleaner-feeling public spaces,...
9 Digital Twin Uses for Ships That Deliver More Than a Nice Screen

A lot of digital twin talk in shipping still sounds impressive before it sounds useful. The stronger real-world cases are the ones tied to a decision or an action, not just another visual layer....
Marine Insurance Questions Owners Should Ask Before Sending Ships Into High Risk Corridors

Owners sending ships into high-risk corridors are not really making one decision. They are making several at once: whether the vessel can legally and contractually trade there, whether the insurance stack actually matches the...
Open Tonnage Swells Across the Tanker Market

The tanker market is shifting from wartime tightness into a new phase of oversupply as a wave of ballasting ships returns to open markets faster than cargo demand can absorb them. The clearest sign...
Panama Canal Cost Shock Ripples Across Global Shipping

Panama Canal pricing pressure has become one of the clearest secondary effects of the Iran war on global shipping because the canal is now absorbing rerouted cargo demand that was not originally supposed to...
LNG Cruise Ships Still Look Smart Until the Methane Math and Fuel Pathway Get Harder

LNG cruise ships in 2026 sit in an awkward but important place. They are clearly more than a marketing experiment, because the cruise orderbook still contains a large LNG share, major operators already have...
Japan-Linked Crude Is Testing Hormuz Again

A meaningful live-market test is now underway in Hormuz. The Panama-flagged VLCC Idemitsu Maru, carrying about 2 million barrels of Saudi crude, has been attempting to cross the Strait, making it the first Japan-linked...
Yangzijiang Maritime’s New 10-Ship Deal Expands Its Fleet Growth Playbook

Yangzijiang Maritime has signed contracts for 10 additional newbuildings at independent Chinese shipyards, extending its fleet growth drive with deliveries scheduled from 2027 to 2029. The deal covers four 114,000 dwt product or crude...
10 Patrol Vessel Systems Buyers Keep Coming Back To

Small combatants are drawing bigger procurement attention because they offer a comparatively affordable way to cover EEZ patrol, maritime interdiction, infrastructure protection, SAR, anti-smuggling, low-intensity combat, and selective ASW or unmanned missions without moving...
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,...