The New Suez Math How Much Longer Routing Really Changes Voyage Economics

Force majeure and war-risk headlines get attention, but the bigger structural shift is quieter: if carriers and owners treat Suez as intermittently non-executable, the economics flip from “shortest route” to “most reliable plan you can insure and schedule.” Maersk has already announced trans-Suez pauses and Cape rerouting for key services, and multiple carriers diverting away from Suez and Bab el-Mandeb as the security picture deteriorates.
- For liner networks: added days can imply extra vessels to keep the same frequency.
- For tramp trades: added days shift effective supply and can move freight fast.
- For cargo owners: delivery uncertainty can dominate pure transit time.
| Economic lever | How longer routing changes it | Who feels it first | Practical move that reduces pain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sea days and time value | Adds sailing days which translate into hire, crew costs, and time value for charterers and cargo owners. Some industry notes cite Cape rerouting adding up to roughly two weeks in certain cases. | Charterers, owners, cargo interests | Time-box hold decisions, then compare hold vs divert using a break-even day approach. |
| Fuel burn and speed choice | Longer distance magnifies the speed decision. A small knot change becomes a large fuel and schedule delta over a long leg. | Voyage ops, bunker procurement | Run three speed cases: conserve, base, recover schedule. Lock bunker plan to the selected case. |
| Insurance and war-risk gating | If the Red Sea and adjacent areas are treated as higher-risk, “can we insure this leg right now” can override shortest-path routing. Carriers have cited security conditions when pausing trans-Suez routings. | Owners, insurers, chartering approvals | Bind cover before ETA commitment. Align geography wording with the actual route and hold points. |
| Network integrity for liner services | Extra days can require additional ships to maintain weekly strings, plus re-timing of port windows and inland rail links. | Liner ops, terminals, forwarders | Re-cut the rotation with realistic buffers and publish revised cut-offs early to reduce roll volume. |
| Equipment cycles and container positioning | Longer round trips can tighten equipment availability and create imbalances that surface as surcharges and booking restrictions. | Shippers, forwarders, carrier commercial teams | Prioritize high-value cargo and rebalance empties via targeted sweeper sailings where possible. |
| Port congestion risk shifts | When arrivals bunch, “open port” can still behave like a queue. Recovery congestion can be costly after disruption windows. | Terminals, agents, shipmasters | Use appointment discipline for pilotage and tugs. Define drift points to avoid chaotic waiting near approaches. |
| Inventory carrying cost and service levels | Added days hit working capital and stockout risk. For some cargo owners, the service-level penalty outweighs pure freight. | Cargo owners, supply planners | Switch to a cost-of-delay view: stockout window, expedite proxy, and customer penalty exposure. |
| Contract friction | Longer routing can trigger disputes around deviation rights, allocation of extra costs, and delivery windows. | Chartering, legal, claims teams | Document decision rights and cost split early. Separate operational decisions from later settlement when possible. |
| Strategic optionality | When trans-Suez is paused, the value of having a second executable plan increases. Maersk has publicly described pausing trans-Suez sailings and rerouting via the Cape. | Fleet managers, commercial heads | Pre-plan substitution ports, bunker hubs, and alternate discharge nodes as a standing playbook. |
The point of the New Suez Math is not to argue one route is always cheaper. It is to show which lever is dominating for your specific voyage today: extra sea days, fuel and speed choice, canal costs, war-risk premium shock, and the time value of cargo and schedule reliability. The tool below compares Suez versus Cape on a single screen, and lets you add a “hold and then proceed” scenario to see when waiting becomes the worst option.
Core assumptions
Use distance and speed to compute sea days, then layer in the cost stack.
Optional hold scenario
Models “wait X days, then take the chosen route” using waiting fuel and time value.
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