The Next Ballast Water Spending Wave: Service Problems Owners Should Budget After Installation

A lot of ballast water spending is now shifting from retrofit capex into service friction after the system is already onboard. That is a serious owner issue because the rules do not end with...
Shared Data Shared Risk 10 Maritime Identity Gaps Buyers Cannot Ignore

Maritime identity management is moving from a back-office admin topic into a real operating risk because digital shipping now depends on more shared workflows among ships, ports, terminals, authorities, vendors, and cloud-connected service providers....
CMB.Tech Rides the Hormuz Rate Spike as Tanker Earnings Break Higher

CMB.Tech said its first-quarter core profit surged as the Strait of Hormuz disruption squeezed available tanker supply and drove freight rates sharply higher. The company reported first-quarter EBITDA of $558.3 million, up from $158.4...
Russian LNG Reaches China After an Extraordinary Six-Month Voyage

A Russian LNG cargo has reached China after spending nearly six months at sea, a transit time that sharply exceeds the roughly 45 days normally needed for a Baltic-to-Asia voyage and underscores how sanctions,...
8 Cruise Food Waste System Questions Buyers Should Ask Before Installing New Tech

Cruise food-waste systems are getting more attention because the buyer is no longer choosing between “doing nothing” and “buying a machine.” The real decision is about matching a waste stream, a discharge regime, a...
Tanker Newbuild Orders Are Racing Toward a Record 2026 as VLCC and Suezmax Contracting Explodes

The tanker ordering cycle has accelerated sharply in 2026, with crude tanker contracting already running at a pace that would challenge or surpass historical annual highs if sustained. BIMCO says the first quarter of...
Panama Canal June Maintenance Could Tighten Slots Just as Rerouted Demand Builds

Fresh concern is building around the Panama Canal ahead of a scheduled Gatun Locks outage in June, not because the waterway is planning a drought-style shutdown, but because demand has already been rising before...
Before Drone Boats Go Mainstream 8 Shipboard Systems Navies May Need

Counter-USV defense is moving from hypothetical planning into a practical fleet question because navies are now treating uncrewed surface threats as real training and operational problems, not just future concepts. In January 2024, the...
Marine Valve and Actuator Failures Owners Should Budget for Before Off-Hire

Valve and actuator problems rarely look expensive when they start. A slow-closing ballast valve, a sticky cargo-line actuator, a leaking pneumatic line, or a misbehaving positioner can feel like routine maintenance right up until...
U.S. LNG Returns to China as Direct Cargo Trade Reopens After a Long Freeze

Direct U.S. LNG shipments are heading to China again after roughly a year without regular cargo movement between the two sides. Recent reporting says three LNG carriers, Umm Al Hanaya, Al Sailiya, and Id’Asah,...
Spare Parts Authentication Tools Shipmanagers Should Put in Place Early

Counterfeit and non-genuine parts are easier to dismiss when they look like a procurement issue instead of a reliability issue. Recent evidence makes that harder. In May 2026, the UK MAIB said the catastrophic...
Iran War Costs Global Companies $25 Billion and Counting as Fuel, Freight and Supply Chains Bite

The latest reporting indicates the economic hit to global business from the Iran war has climbed to at least $25 billion, with the burden spread across 279 companies in the United States, Europe and...
9 Naval Cable-Protection Technologies Moving Into the Budget Mainstream

Naval cable protection is no longer being treated as a side-security issue that can be covered by occasional patrols and general maritime awareness. NATO’s Baltic Sentry mission was launched specifically to increase critical-infrastructure security...
Iran’s Hormuz Crypto Insurance Plan Adds a New Layer of Shipping Risk

Iran-linked reporting over the weekend said Tehran has launched or is piloting a new maritime insurance framework for the Strait of Hormuz, branded “Hormuz Safe,” that would let ships and cargo owners obtain digital...
Cuba Cargo Shock as Hapag-Lloyd and CMA CGM Freeze New Bookings

Hapag-Lloyd and CMA CGM have suspended bookings to and from Cuba after a new U.S. executive order widened sanctions risk for foreign companies doing business linked to key sectors of the Cuban economy. Both...
Cruise Laundry Upgrades That Can Cut Utility Waste and Ease Labor Pressure

Cruise laundry is easy to overlook because guests mostly see the result, not the system behind it. But onboard laundries sit at the center of three recurring operator pressures at once: energy consumption, freshwater...
FuelEU Surplus Mistakes That Leak Charter Value

FuelEU surplus can become real commercial property long before it becomes a formal compliance document, which is exactly why owners can accidentally give it away in charter deals. Under the European Commission’s FuelEU guidance,...
Oil Climbs Again as Gulf Ship Seizures and Attack Risk Keep Traders on Edge

Oil prices rose sharply on May 15 as the market reacted to a fresh combination of Gulf shipping risk and fading confidence in a stable U.S.-Iran de-escalation path. Brent was up 3.3% at $109.19...
Somali Pirate Ransom Shock Hits Product Tanker Trade Again

Somali piracy has pushed back into the tanker market with a new hostage case that now centers on a reported $10 million ransom demand for the release of the small product tanker Eureka and...
Vessel Camera Analytics and the 9 Uses That Are More Practical Than Full Autonomy

Vessel camera analytics is becoming more commercially interesting because the best use cases do not require the industry to wait for fully autonomous ships. IMO’s current roadmap still points to May 2026 for finalizing...
LNG Carrier Market Heats Up Again as Rates, Orders and Long-Term Charters All Push Higher

The current LNG shipping picture does support the idea that LNG vessels are hot again, but the strength is showing up in several different layers at once rather than in only one headline rate....
Arabian Truck Corridors Become Shipping’s New Hormuz Workaround

Shipping lines are increasingly using sea-land combinations across the Arabian Peninsula to keep cargo moving around the Strait of Hormuz disruption, shifting containers onto truck corridors through Saudi Arabia, Oman, and the UAE after...
Onboard Carbon Capture: Ship Types That May Have the Space, Weight, and Port Access to Make It Work

Onboard carbon capture is starting to look less like a blanket answer for shipping and more like a vessel-selection problem. The ship types that appear most workable are generally the ones with long-haul operating...
11 Maritime E-Certificate Workflows Still Stuck Between Portals PDFs and Email

E-certificates are no longer a fringe idea in shipping. IMO’s Facilitation Committee approved a maritime digitalization strategy in March 2026 that explicitly targets easier sharing, verification, and renewal of ship certificates, and IMO’s facilitation...
Safe Bulkers Doubles Down on Fleet Renewal With Four More Japanese Newbuilds

Safe Bulkers has expanded its dry-bulk orderbook again, adding four Japanese newbuilds in a move that pushes the company deeper into long-cycle fleet renewal rather than near-term secondhand opportunism. The company announced on May...
U.S. Energy Outlook Rewrites the Middle East Supply Shock and Extends Shipping Pain

The U.S. Energy Information Administration has sharply revised its Middle East disruption outlook, replacing last month’s assumption of a shorter Hormuz interruption with a much larger and longer supply hit. In its May Short-Term...
8 Naval Laser Problems the Fleet Still Has to Solve

Naval laser weapons are no longer stuck at the concept-art stage. The U.S. Navy’s HELIOS has already been installed on a destroyer and successfully engaged aerial targets during testing, while the UK’s DragonFire has...
Norden Buys Four Modern Handysize Bulkers in a Focused Bet on Tight Small-Bulker Supply

Norden has expanded its dry cargo fleet by purchasing four handysize bulkers built in 2024, with delivery scheduled during the second quarter of 2026. The company said the ships’ open-hatch and box-hold design makes...
Safe Bulkers Doubles Down on Fleet Renewal With Four More Japanese Newbuilds

Safe Bulkers has expanded its dry-bulk orderbook again, adding four Japanese newbuilds in a move that pushes the company deeper into long-cycle fleet renewal rather than near-term secondhand opportunism. The company announced on May...
Cruise Medical Center Upgrades Older Ships May Need Sooner Than Expected

Older cruise ships were not all designed for the same onboard medical expectations operators are facing now. The baseline has moved. CLIA says its oceangoing members must follow ACEP-linked medical-facility guidelines requiring at least...