7 Ways to Salvage a Gulf Cargo Plan Without a Gulf Call

If the Strait and adjacent waters become insurance-gated, the biggest failure mode is not the threat itself. It is committing to an ETA and downstream promises before you know if the voyage is executable....
Hormuz Gridlock: Thousands of Ships Stuck as Tankers and LNG Carriers Pull Up Anchor

A Strait of Hormuz shutdown pattern is now showing up as a true traffic event, not just a risk headline: ships are stopping, waiting, and stacking on both sides of the chokepoint, with different...
17 hidden cost leaks on cruise ships that add up fast

In 2026, the biggest cost leaks on cruise ships are rarely dramatic failures. They are small operational defaults that repeat every day: a little extra speed to recover schedule, a little more drag from...
Qatar LNG shock hits Asia’s spot market as emergency tenders roll out

Qatar’s sudden halt in LNG output has knocked a major pillar of global supply offline and pushed Asian buyers into emergency sourcing mode, with governments and utilities moving to spot tenders, internal transfers, and...
AI Mistakes in Maritime: Failure Points With the Biggest Consequences

AI is already touching fixtures, screening, routing, maintenance, and bridge decision support. The risk is not that AI is “wrong sometimes,” it is that a wrong output can be treated as truth, and the...
War-Risk Cover Is Being Pulled or Rewritten Fast, Turning Gulf Voyages Into “Approval-Limited” Shipping

Marine insurers are issuing formal cancellation notices for war-risk cover tied to Iran and Gulf waters, with multiple clubs flagging effective dates around 00:00 GMT on March 5, 2026. The practical effect is not...
Fujairah Bunker Prices Surge as Owners Divert Fueling Plans

Bunker buyers just got hit with a fast, Gulf-linked pricing shock that is already changing voyage execution. Fujairah prices jumped hard in a matter of days as security risk and logistics uncertainty tightened the...
14 Mistakes That Lose Naval Bids Before Pricing Is Even Read

If a naval bid dies before pricing is even opened, it usually is not because the solution was “bad.” It is because the proposal was noncompliant, unevaluable, or too risky to keep in the...
Port Call Risk Scoring for Gulf, Oman, and UAE Approaches

Port call risk in this lane is no longer a single question of “is the port open.” It is a moving stack of constraints: Strait of Hormuz transit reliability, elevated electronic interference, sudden war-risk...
Hormuz GNSS Spoofing: 15 Moves Shipowners Can Standardize Now

If GNSS integrity drops in a chokepoint like Hormuz, the risk is not just “navigation error,” it is false certainty. The winning posture for shipowners is to standardize a trigger-driven playbook that forces fast...
Hormuz Transit Pause Spreads as Tankers Are Hit and Operators Halt Gulf Runs

Strait of Hormuz risk has moved from “price it in” to “pause it” behavior. After multiple tanker strike reports and crew casualties, a growing slice of operators and cargo interests are treating Gulf transits...
War-Risk Insurance Cancellations Hit Hormuz as Tankers Stack Up

Marine war-risk underwriters and P&I-linked war-risk arrangements are issuing cancellation notices for voyages touching Iranian and nearby Gulf waters, with multiple tanker attacks and a growing cluster of ships holding position near the Strait...
Strait of Hormuz Is Behaving Like an Operational Stop Signal

The Strait of Hormuz has shifted from “risk premium” to “execution disruption.” Multiple tanker strike incidents and a crew fatality, plus a large pool of ships choosing to anchor or hold position on both...
When Tension Spikes: Key Strategies that Cruise Lines use to Reroute Fast

Cruise itinerary risk under Iran tension is not theoretical right now. The pattern is fast and operational: cancellations and holds happen first, then air-travel disruption forces embark changes, then insurance availability and conditions start...
Hormuz Shockwave: Asia’s Crude and LNG Lifeline Faces a Routing and Freight Reset

A fast-moving Strait of Hormuz disruption is now showing up across the full energy shipping stack: multiple operators are pausing crossings, marine war-risk cover is being pulled back with cancellations taking effect March 5,...
NCAGS Under Pressure in the Gulf How Navies Deconflict Merchant Routing and Keep Operational Tempo

When the Gulf goes high-threat, NCAGS is less about “protecting ships” and more about protecting tempo. The core job is to keep merchant routing predictable and deconflicted with military operations even when the picture...
Investing in Maritime AI in 2026: Where the Money Is Going and What Actually Pays Off

Investors are not betting on “AI for shipping” as a single thing in 2026. They are betting on specific painkillers that convert data into decisions fast enough to move money: fewer incidents, less fuel...
Solar on Ships in 2026: What’s working, what’s not, & where we’re headed

Solar on ships in 2026 is finally getting less hand-wavy because there are now real installs and trials that show where PV helps and where it does not. The pattern that looks legitimate is...
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...
US Gulf Crude Exports Hit a Freight Wall as VLCC Space Vanishes

A sudden tightening in VLCC availability has pushed U.S. Gulf Coast export freight back into the kind of rate stress last seen during the pandemic, with USGC to China lump-sum bookings reported above $17...
South China Sea Patrol Posture Is Tightening Again

China’s Southern Theatre Command says it ran a routine South China Sea patrol over Feb 23 to 26 and accused the Philippines of “disrupting” peace and stability by organizing joint patrols with non regional...
12 Smart Ways to Raise Passenger Fees (and how they’re structured)

Passenger fees work best when they feel predictable to the cruise line, defensible to residents, and easy to collect. In 2026 the “smart” structures are less about squeezing an extra dollar and more about...
VLCC MEG to China Freight Blows Out: TD3C Hits Highest Since 2020 as U.S.–Iran Risk Tightens Tonnage

Middle East to China VLCC freight just pushed into “extreme” territory, with benchmark earnings breaking above $200,000 per day, as U.S.–Iran risk keeps owners demanding a bigger premium for Arabian Gulf exposure and charterers...
12 Big Naval Maritime Contracts in the Last Year That Are Reshaping Shipyards and Fleet Readiness

Naval contracting has been unusually concentrated lately. A small number of awards are doing most of the work shaping shipyard capacity, submarine industrial base pacing, and fleet sustainment throughput. The list below stays tight...
Behavioral Risk Is the New Sanctions Trigger: 18 Vessel Behaviors That Get You Flagged

Behavioral risk is now one of the fastest ways a voyage gets escalated for extra screening. Not because an owner “did something wrong” on paper, but because the vessel’s track and operational pattern looks...
Smart Mooring Systems in 2026: What works, what’ doesn’t (yet) and where we are headed

Smart mooring is one of the few “port tech” areas where the value is visible immediately, fewer snapped lines and near-misses, fewer emergency re-mooring events, and fewer surprises when weather and surge loads build....
EU lines up G7 backing for a Russia maritime services ban that would rewrite the oil shipping playbook

The European Commission is pushing G7 coordination before moving ahead with a proposed ban on maritime services that support Russian seaborne crude exports, with the EU sanctions envoy describing alignment with partners, especially the...
Secondhand Tanker Sales Heat Up in 2026 as Owners Cash Out Older Tonnage

Tanker secondhand activity in 2026 is being driven by a simple mix: freight strength in parts of the market, heavy interest in mid-age crude tonnage, and a steady stream of owners selling older ships...
Iran Shadow Fleet Sanctions Widen Again, With LPG and Fuel Oil Trades in the Crosshairs

The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control just sanctioned 12 additional vessels and their owners or operators tied to Iran’s “shadow fleet,” citing hundreds of millions of dollars in Iranian petroleum and petrochemical...
Shipyard Workforce Reality 2026 The Certified Skills That Decide Schedule Outcomes

Shipyard schedules in 2026 are often decided by a small set of certified roles that sit on the real critical path. It is not “do we have people,” it is “do we have enough...