CMA CGM Launches Ocean Rise Express: Direct Japan and South China to North Europe Service

CMA CGM just created a direct Japan to North Europe option that does not rely on alliance partner loops, launching Ocean Rise Express (OCR) as a weekly standalone string that starts in Japan, sweeps South China, and then runs straight into North Europe before returning via South China.

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Ocean Rise Express puts Japan back on a direct North Europe loop

CMA CGM is launching Ocean Rise Express (OCR), a weekly Asia to North Europe string designed as a dedicated Japan and South China to North Europe connection that is not presented as an Ocean Alliance partner loop. CMA CGM’s published service flyer shows a 98-day rotation with nine ports, starting in Japan (Kobe, Nagoya, Yokohama), calling South China (Xiamen, Yantian), then North Europe (Rotterdam, Hamburg, Southampton), returning via South China (Nansha) back to Japan.

  • Service snapshot
    Weekly frequency, 98-day rotation, 9 ports of call on the published OCR flyer.
  • Core pitch
    Direct Japan loading, South China consolidation, then straight into North Europe with a single-carrier execution chain.
  • “solo” impact
    One operator can simplify schedule accountability and product design when alliance network coverage shifts.
Bottom Line Impact
The immediate operational effect is a cleaner Japan to North Europe option with fewer handoffs, which can change booking behavior on time-sensitive cargo when shippers want a direct loop rather than feeder plus transshipment routing.
Ocean Rise Express (OCR): CMA CGM runs a standalone Japan + South China to North Europe loop OCR is listed as weekly, 98 days, 9 ports, with Japan origin calls and North Europe destination calls on CMA CGM’s published flyer
Service cadence
Weekly frequency
OCR is published as a weekly service.
Rotation shape
98 days, 9 ports
Japan start, South China consolidation, North Europe discharge, return via South China.
Directness signal
Japan to Rotterdam in the published lane
CMA CGM flyer shows Rotterdam reached at day 42 from Kobe in westbound transit view.
Reader shortcut Service snapshot Port rotation as published Built for Solo loop matters Early watchpoints
Japan-first loading OCR starts with three Japan calls before moving into South China.
Japan origins
Kobe → Nagoya → Yokohama → Xiamen → Yantian → Rotterdam → Hamburg → Southampton → Nansha → (back to) Kobe
Rotation is shown on the CMA CGM OCR flyer with 9 ports and a 98-day duration.
Shippers who want Japan export cargo on a direct mainline path to North Europe without relying on a separate alliance feeder chain. It concentrates schedule accountability and product design under one operator when alliance coverage is being reshaped. First sailings and early cutoffs, plus whether additional Japan feeder support is added around the loop for other Japanese gateways.
South China consolidation OCR adds two South China calls before the Europe leg.
South China
The published westbound sequence shows Xiamen and Yantian before the Europe arrival sequence.
CMA CGM’s transit-time view places Yantian at day 9 and Rotterdam at day 42.
Cargo that benefits from a South China consolidation point without switching carriers for the Europe mainline leg. It can reduce handoffs, which is often where schedule variability and documentation friction appear first. Booking mix and load discipline across Japan and South China, especially in the first 6 to 10 sailings.
North Europe trio OCR calls three North Europe ports on the published sequence.
North Europe
Rotterdam → Hamburg → Southampton, then return via Nansha.
These three Europe calls appear in CMA CGM’s eastbound transit-time view.
Beneficial cargo is time-sensitive Japan and South China export flows into the core North Europe discharge complex. A defined Europe discharge set can simplify network planning for shippers that previously relied on alliance rotations that changed port coverage. Berth windows and consistency of the three-port discharge sequence, especially around peak week bunching.
Return via Nansha The published eastbound path shows Nansha as the South China pivot before returning to Japan.
Return leg
Southampton → Nansha → Kobe appears on the published eastbound transit-time view. Shippers that prefer a predictable Asia return leg and a consistent Japan restart point. A stable return leg supports equipment positioning and can reduce empty reposition noise on the Japan end. Whether Nansha becomes the consistent return pivot or whether the carrier adjusts the South China return leg after launch.
Alliance adjacency Industry commentary noted OCR does not appear as a partner loop on public schedules of alliance counterparts.
Outside partner loop
The service is published under CMA CGM’s OCR line service and schedules tools. Japan exporters who want a carrier-controlled product while alliance networks evolve, rather than a multi-carrier loop with shared decisions. It gives CMA CGM a lever to fill a coverage gap without waiting for partner alignment on a full alliance loop. Whether the loop is sustained as a permanent product, and whether partner networks respond with alternate direct coverage or feeder structures.
OCR transit snap tool: published day markers, in one tap
Uses CMA CGM’s OCR flyer day numbering to show the direct lane timing markers that matter most to planners

OCR’s published flyer provides day markers that let planners sanity-check the direct lane: Japan loading starts at day 0 (Kobe), South China loading is shown at day 7 (Xiamen) and day 9 (Yantian), and Rotterdam is shown at day 42 on the westbound view. The tool below converts those markers into simple day-to-Rotterdam or day-to-Kobe checks.

Transit marker calculator
Result
Choose values to see the marker delta.
Marker days are taken from CMA CGM’s OCR flyer transit-time view (day numbers shown next to ports). This is not a contractual ETA.
Operational touchpoints that change when a loop is standalone
Single-carrier responsibility chain
One operator owns the loop design and execution, which can simplify exception handling when a sailing slides.
Japan export predictability
Three Japan calls at the front of the loop create a clean pickup window before South China consolidation.
Europe discharge sequence
Rotterdam, Hamburg, Southampton appear as the published North Europe trio, which helps planning for multi-country distribution.
Return leg equipment logic
Return via Nansha to Kobe is shown on the flyer, which helps equipment reposition planning across Japan and South China.
Service rotation details and transit day markers are based on CMA CGM’s published OCR service flyer.
Bottom Line Impact
OCR gives CMA CGM a direct Japan plus South China to North Europe product with fewer coordination layers. If the loop holds schedule, it becomes a strong alternative for shippers that value directness and predictable port sequence more than maximum alliance coverage.
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By the ShipUniverse Editorial Team — About Us | Contact