War Risk Insurance Outlook for H2 2026 8 Pressure Points Owners Should Budget Before the Next Transit

War risk insurance is heading into the second half of 2026 with three realities in place at the same time. First, the market is still functioning: the London war market is actively quoting and...
Shipboard Noise and Vibration Monitoring Tools Owners Should Consider Before Crew Complaints Become Claims

Shipboard noise and vibration problems rarely stay in one box for long. What begins as crew fatigue, cabin discomfort, or passenger complaints can also signal machinery imbalance, shaftline issues, weak isolation, local structural vibration,...
MSC Rewrites Container Shipping History With an Unmatched Share of Global Capacity

Mediterranean Shipping Company has pushed its grip on the liner market to a level the sector has never seen before. Fresh Alphaliner-based reporting says MSC reached 21.5% of total global container capacity in May,...
Purus Expands Its Samsung LNG Orderbook Again as 2028–2029 Delivery Visibility Deepens

Purus has moved further into South Korean LNG newbuilding tonnage by expanding its Samsung Heavy Industries series again, taking its tally at the yard to four LNG carriers and pushing more delivery exposure into...
Cruise Industry Outlook for H2 2026 Strong Demand Higher Stakes

The second half of 2026 looks constructive for cruise, but not carefree. The industry is entering H2 with record demand, solid pricing support, and a still-expanding newbuild pipeline, yet the margin story is getting...
Kuwait Spot Fuel Sales Return as KPC Tests a Post-War Export Restart

Kuwait has taken one of its clearest commercial steps toward export normalization since the Iran war disrupted Gulf shipping, with Kuwait Petroleum Corporation offering prompt-loading fuel products on a spot basis for the first...
China’s Crude Intake Hits an Eight-Year Low as Hormuz Shock Rewrites the Buying Math

China’s crude import picture has turned sharply weaker as the Hormuz disruption reshaped both price signals and cargo availability. China’s May crude imports fell to 7.79 million barrels per day, the lowest monthly level...
8 Naval Paint and Nonskid Choices That Change Stealth Safety and Upkeep

Naval paint and deck-surface decisions have become much more than cosmetic maintenance choices. Official Navy and NRL material shows that coating decisions can affect infrared signature, solar heat loading, corrosion protection, flight deck durability,...
8 Mooring Line Decisions that Owners Should Recheck Before the Next Port Incident

Mooring line risk is becoming less about one dramatic line failure and more about a chain of smaller management decisions that quietly stack up before a port call. Current IMO-linked requirements now push owners...
Containership Orderbook Nears 40% of Fleet as Oversupply Risk Starts Casting a Longer Shadow

The containership ordering wave has moved into territory that many market participants now treat as a structural warning, not just another cyclical burst of optimism. Current June coverage says the global containership orderbook is...
Morgan Stanley Sees Multi-Year Vessel Shortage Across Tanker, LNG and Energy Shipping Markets

Morgan Stanley’s latest shipping call is that vessel availability across energy trades is likely to stay tighter for longer, with the bank arguing that Asia’s energy-security shift is triggering an investment supercycle that will...
Pipe Spool Tracking Systems That Can Save Shipyards Real Time Before the Next Block Build

Shipyards are getting more serious about smart pipe tracking because the cost of losing spool visibility is rarely limited to one missing component. It usually shows up later as installation delays, crew time spent...
Top 12 Marine War Risk Insurance Providers

Ship Universe Provider Report Marine War Risk Insurance Companies War risk insurance has moved from a back-office renewal item to a live operating decision for ships trading near conflict zones, sanctions-sensitive regions, piracy corridors,...
Cruise Refit Traps That Can Turn Drydock Into a Budget Fight

Cruise refits are getting bigger, bolder, and more commercially important, which is exactly why scope creep is becoming more dangerous. Royal Caribbean is pushing multiple large ship amplification projects, Celebrity is investing more than...
Panama Canal Demand Surges on Hormuz Disruption Just as El Niño Threat Returns

The Panama Canal is seeing another wave of demand as shipping dislocation tied to the Middle East conflict keeps redirecting cargo flows, even as weather forecasters and canal officials turn their attention back to...
U.S.-Cleared Shadow-Fleet Scrapping Deal Opens a New Exit Path for Sanctioned Ships

The latest development in the shadow-fleet story is a narrow but potentially important U.S.-approved demolition route. Dubai-based recycler and cash buyer GMS has received U.S. authorization to purchase four sanctioned containerships for scrap, creating...
9 Combatant Boat Handling Upgrades That Can Sharpen Boarding Missions

Boarding and interdiction missions are increasingly exposing a simple truth about warship small boats: the limiting factor is often not the RHIB itself, but how quickly and safely the mother ship can launch, recover,...
Executive Maritime Reputation Management: Protecting Trust, Search Results, and Deal Confidence

Maritime executives are no longer judged only by fleet performance, chartering relationships, safety records, and dealmaking. They are judged across search results, sanctions chatter, port incidents, crew complaints, cyber events, litigation filings, ESG pressure,...
Technip Energies Lands Key Mozambique FLNG Scope as Coral Norte Moves Closer to Full Buildout

Technip Energies has secured a major role on Mozambique’s Coral Norte floating LNG project, winning a significant EPCIC contract together with JGC and Samsung Heavy Industries from Mozambique Rovuma Venture, the Eni-led joint venture...
8 Reefer Readiness Upgrades Container Ship Owners Should Price Before Chasing Premium Cold Chain Cargo

Cold-chain demand can look attractive from the outside, but reefer revenue is only as strong as the vessel’s weakest supporting system. The commercial trap for container ship owners is assuming reefer opportunity begins and...
Bunker Proof 9 Sampling and Custody Tools Owners Need Before Fuel Disputes Turn Costly

Marine fuel disputes usually become expensive not only because the fuel may be off specification, contaminated, unstable, or poorly compatible, but because the evidence chain is weak by the time the argument starts. The...
Houthi Threats Reignite Red Sea Shipping Risk as Israel and Iran Exchange Missiles

The Houthis have moved back toward active involvement in the regional confrontation as Israel and Iran trade direct missile fire, adding a renewed Red Sea shipping risk to an already volatile Middle East security...
Cruise Queue Tech That Can Lift Spend Without More Headcount

Cruise queue-management technology is becoming a real revenue lever because waiting time is not just a guest-satisfaction problem. It is also a spend problem. If the line can shorten or smooth dining waits, excursion...
Panama Canal Draft Cut for July Rekindles Drought Fears as Traffic Runs Near Full Use

The Panama Canal has moved back into drought-watch mode after announcing that the maximum authorized draft for Neopanamax vessels will be reduced from 50.0 feet to 49.5 feet tropical fresh water starting July 3,...
Iran Says Strait Stays Open, but New Fee Plan Leaves Owners Facing Fresh Uncertainty

Iran’s latest public position is that the Strait of Hormuz will remain open to navigation, but under new conditions that would include transit fees set under a joint Iran-Oman framework. That is the headline...
Warship Freshwater and Reverse Osmosis Upgrades That Pay Off on Long Deployments

Longer deployments make shipboard water systems feel less like background utilities and more like operational endurance equipment. Official Navy health guidance says most U.S. Navy combatants and submarines use reverse-osmosis water production plants, and...
Shipping’s 2008 Echo and 7 Signs Confidence Could Push Ordering Too Far

Shipping does not need a replay of the last great ordering trap to feel familiar. The current setup already has some of the same emotional ingredients: strong pockets of earnings, long shipyard lead times,...
Maritime AI Moves Into Daily Operations Across Fleets Claims Crews Routes and the Bridge

Maritime AI is starting to matter less as a buzzword and more as an operating layer. The clearest sign is that vendors and operators are no longer talking only about generic copilots. They are...
Drewry’s Latest Container Index Jumps as Peak Season Demand Hits Earlier and Harder

Drewry’s latest weekly World Container Index, posted on 4 June 2026, showed a sharp acceleration in container freight pricing, with the composite benchmark surging 23% week on week to $3,433 per 40ft container. Drewry...
Ship Scrapping is Turning Into a Story of Tight Supply, Tougher Rules, and a Growing Shadow-Fleet Debate

The current ship scrapping picture is not being driven by a flood of end-of-life tonnage. It is being shaped by a shortage of willing candidates, firmer operating markets in several shipping segments, and a...