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.
| 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’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.
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