9 Insurance Battles Marine Owners Should Prepare For Next

Marine insurance is moving into a more complicated phase because four pressure points are starting to overlap instead of staying separate. Cyber risk is no longer just an IT issue. IMO’s updated cyber risk...
Maritime Data Ownership: Who Controls the Vessel Data After the Software Is Installed?

A vessel can now produce valuable data every hour: fuel burn, engine condition, route performance, hull efficiency, cargo status, emissions, crew records, maintenance history, sensor feeds, port clearance documents, incident logs, and cyber alerts....
Posidonia 2026 Opens With Security, Decarbonization, AI and Nuclear Shipping Moving to the Front of the Industry Agenda

Posidonia 2026 opens in Athens this evening with the event arriving at its largest scale yet and with a sharper strategic tone than in past editions. Organizers say this year’s exhibition will host 2,227...
20,000 Seafarers Trapped in Gulf Shipping Gridlock as Hormuz Stays Far From Normal

Roughly 20,000 seafarers remain stranded aboard ships inside the Gulf because traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is still severely constrained despite intermittent diplomatic progress and a temporary ceasefire. Current reporting says vessel movements...
France Tightens Atlantic Pressure on Russia’s Shadow Fleet With Another Tanker Interception

France has carried out another high-profile intervention against a Russia-linked oil tanker in the Atlantic, escalating a pattern of maritime enforcement that is now stretching beyond the Mediterranean into wider European waters. President Emmanuel...
Cruise AI Profit Engines or Guest Trust Problem

Cruise AI is moving out of theory and into the revenue stack. The business incentive is obvious. CLIA says global cruise passenger volume hit a record 37.2 million in 2025, and Carnival said 34%...
3D Printed Military Boats for Forward Logistics Gimmick Today or a Real Naval Tool Tomorrow

3D-printed military boats are not fantasy anymore, but they are not ready to replace conventional naval small craft either. The best current evidence points to a middle ground. The University of Maine printed 3Dirigo,...
Starlink at Sea or Managed Maritime Connectivity for Commercial Fleets

Starlink has changed the conversation at sea. For commercial fleets, the old question was usually whether a vessel had enough bandwidth for email, crew welfare, basic reporting, and remote support. Now owners are looking...
Top 10 Ship Retrofits That Could Keep Older Vessels Earning Longer

Older ships do not stay commercially alive just because steel prices are high or freight markets give them one more cycle. They stay alive when owners can keep them compliant, efficient enough to charter,...
Hormuz Weekend Shipping Update: Mine Warning, Fresh U.S. Action and Fragile Ceasefire Hopes Keep Traffic on Edge

The Strait of Hormuz weekend news flow pointed in one direction: the shipping situation is still unstable, even without a new full-scale closure announcement. On Saturday, Oman’s Maritime Security Centre issued a navigation warning...
Cruise Capacity Boom and the 8 Supplier Pressure Points That Could Tighten Fast Before 2030

Cruise growth is no longer just a demand story. It is becoming a systems-capacity story, and that is exactly where suppliers need to pay attention. CLIA says global cruise passenger volume reached a record...
China Extends Pressure to Taiwan’s East Coast in a New Coast Guard Patrol Signal

China said its coast guard carried out law enforcement patrols in waters east of Taiwan, widening the pressure picture beyond the Taiwan Strait and the island’s western side. The move came after Japan and...
Navios Partners Expands VLCC Fleet With Four Newbuilds and Locks In Long-Term Earnings Cover

Navios Partners has moved deeper into large crude tanker expansion by agreeing to acquire four scrubber-fitted VLCC newbuildings for a total of $482 million, with delivery scheduled for the second half of 2028. The...
Key Naval Supply Chain Niches That Could Surge as Fleets Modernize

Naval supply chains are becoming more important not only because fleets want more ships, but because modernization is pushing demand into harder-to-replace components, more distributed production, and more maintenance-intensive upgrade cycles. The Navy’s 2026...
10 Sanctions Red Flags That Can Turn a Normal Voyage Into a Legal Problem

A voyage can look commercially ordinary on paper and still carry sanctions risk that grows into a contract dispute, an insurance problem, a payment blockage, a cargo hold, or a regulator-facing legal event. The...
Machinery Warnings Owners Should Catch Before the Next Failure Hits

Predictive maintenance in shipping is no longer just a digital nice-to-have. Class and OEM material now treat it as part of a more serious maintenance and survey framework. DNV says its Condition Based Maintenance...
Drewry’s Latest World Container Index Shows Container Rates Still Climbing as Early Peak Season Tightens the Market

Drewry’s newest weekly update shows container spot rates continuing their recent rise rather than flattening out. The World Container Index increased 3% week on week to $2,800 per 40-foot container, extending the current uptrend...
South Africa Pushes LNG Port Buildout Forward With Ngqura Deal as Richards Bay and Durban Plans Stay in Play

South Africa’s port-led LNG strategy has moved into a new phase after Transnet National Ports Authority signed a 25-year terminal operator agreement for an onshore LNG regasification facility at the Port of Ngqura in...
Hormuz Shipping Is Reopening in the Dark as Tankers Resume Transits With Transponders Off

Over the last 48 hours, the most revealing Hormuz development has not been a broad reopening of traffic. It has been the appearance of a limited number of energy cargoes moving again under unusually...
Top Safety Issues on Cruise Ships that Guests Worry About Most Before They Sail

Cruise guests usually do not think about safety in one neat category. They worry about the things that can visibly ruin a trip, threaten health, or make them feel vulnerable far from shore. Right...
Hong Kong Convention Is Live 8 Ship Recycling Decisions Owners Should Recheck in 2026

Ship recycling is no longer something owners can leave to the final sale conversation. Since the Hong Kong Convention entered into force on 26 June 2025, the practical burden is now much more front-loaded:...
Fleet Data Platforms That Make Compliance Reporting Pay at Sea

Compliance reporting is turning into a much bigger commercial data problem than it used to be. IMO DCS requires ships of 5,000 GT and above to collect and report fuel-consumption data, and since 2023...
Seafarer Abandonment Crisis Deepens as WMU Launches a Global Research Push

The latest development in the seafarer abandonment story is not a single casualty or enforcement action, but a new large-scale research project aimed at understanding why existing legal protections keep failing in practice. The...
Limited Sailings, Rising Costs, and a Corridor Still Far From Normal a Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz is showing selective movement again, but the latest shipping picture is still one of restricted access, incomplete confidence, and very uneven normalization. In the newest verified movements, crude, naphtha, and...
Nuclear Power for Ships Gains Real Momentum as IMO, MARAD and Class Move From Theory to Framework Building

Commercial nuclear power for ships has moved into a more concrete phase over the last few months. The clearest recent developments are no longer just concept studies. In January, IMO’s Ship Design and Construction...
Global Port Expansion Update 2026 as Chile’s $4.45 Billion San Antonio Buildout Leads a New Capacity Wave

Chile’s approval of the $4.45 billion San Antonio “Outer Port” expansion is one of the biggest fresh port-capacity moves now on the board, and it is landing alongside several other meaningful infrastructure steps across...
Shipbuilding Boom as New Orders Surge Across LNG, Boxships, Bulkers, and Specialty Fleets

The newest shipbuilding picture is no longer centered on one vessel class or one decarbonization theme. Over the past several months, commercial ordering has spread across containerships, LNG carriers, dry bulk vessels, open-hatch specialty...
Undersea Drone Capabilities Navies Are Most Likely to Push Next

Navies are moving past the stage where undersea drones are judged only by whether they can dive, navigate, and come home. The official signal now is much more specific. The U.S. Navy has accepted...
10 LEO Upgrade Questions Owners Should Ask Before Replacing VSAT at Sea

The real decision is no longer just “LEO or VSAT.” Official maritime providers are increasingly framing the market around hybrid and multi-orbit architecture instead of a clean one-for-one replacement. Inmarsat says Fleet Xpress remains...
8 Maritime Insurance Shifts Owners Should Budget For as Geopolitical Risk Spreads

Marine insurance is becoming more operational, more contract-driven, and more route-specific as geopolitical risk spreads across more trading patterns. In 2026, owners are not just dealing with higher war-risk premiums. They are dealing with...