9 Air Lubrication Claims Owners Should Verify Before Believing the Savings

Air lubrication has moved well beyond concept-stage marketing. Lloyd’s Register said in 2025 that Silverstream’s system was installed on more than 100 vessels and had logged more than a million hours of in-service monitoring,...
10 Ship Financing Trends Quietly Changing

Ship finance is not changing through one dramatic break with the past. It is shifting through a series of quieter adjustments that matter a lot to owners, lenders, and lessors: banks are lending again...
U.S. LNG Record Run as Middle East Disruption Pulls Cargoes East

U.S. liquefied natural gas exports climbed to a new monthly record in March, as global buyers scrambled to replace volumes lost or delayed by the Middle East supply shock and by the disruption of...
London Pushes a 35-Nation Bid to Reopen Hormuz

Britain hosted a virtual meeting on Thursday with representatives from 35 countries to discuss reopening the Strait of Hormuz and restoring freedom of navigation after the waterway’s effective closure during the Iran war. The...
When a Refurbishing Strategy Makes Way More Sense than Ordering another Ship

When the cruise market gets more expensive, more crowded, and less forgiving of slow payback, refurbishment can start looking a lot smarter than another ship order. Newbuilds still matter, but they demand years of...
Tanker Markets Outside the Gulf Are Tightening Hard as Buyers Replace Lost Middle East Supply

One of the clearest maritime spillover signals right now is that the freight shock is no longer confined to the Gulf itself. As disrupted Middle East exports force refiners and traders to replace barrels...
Hormuz Safe Passage Now Comes at a Steep Price

A more controlled transit regime is taking shape in and around the Strait of Hormuz as a small number of ships resume movement only under far narrower conditions than before the war. The current...
Top 10 Naval Workforce Problems in 2026 and Strategies to Resolve

The naval workforce problem in 2026 is no longer one issue hiding behind another. It is a stack of connected problems: too few sailors in key billets, too few skilled yard workers, too much...
12 Human-Machine Friction Points That Get Exposed in Disrupted Navigation Environments

Disrupted navigation environments do not only expose weak signals, bad position data, or interference. They also expose the way people and systems struggle together when confidence starts breaking down. The pattern is usually familiar:...
6 Ports and Service Clusters Quietly Building Strategic Relevance

Some ports and service clusters are becoming more strategically relevant not because they suddenly turned into global giants, but because route disruption, longer voyages, energy transition, and supply-chain rebalancing are making their specific strengths...
IEA Warns Middle East Oil Supply Disruptions Will Worsen in April and Hit Europe

The International Energy Agency is warning that Middle East oil supply losses will worsen in April and start hitting Europe more directly as the shutdown of Hormuz-era flows keeps draining available barrels from the...
Procurement Signals That Could Reorder the Naval Winner List

Naval procurement is starting to reward a different set of strengths than the old headline cycle suggested. In 2026, the most important shift is not simply who can promise the biggest platform. It is...
Asia’s LNG Shock Turns March Into the Sharpest Import Pullback Since 2022

Asian LNG imports fell sharply in March as the Iran war disrupted Middle East supply, pushed prices higher, and forced buyers across the region into a more defensive posture. Ship-tracking data showed LNG deliveries...
12 Signs Cruise Competition Is Shifting From Hardware to Experience Design

The next competitive shift in cruise is becoming easier to see. Bigger ships still matter, but the sharper fight is moving toward how the vacation feels, flows, and differentiates itself after the booking is...
The Hormuz Response Is Shifting Toward Escort-Style Protection, but Without Firm UN Enforcement Backing

The latest move around Hormuz is not a clean return to normal navigation. It is a shift toward a loving, coalition-style protection model built around defensive coordination and merchant-ship escorting, but without the stronger...
Qatar Waters Strike Marks Gulf Attack Wave’s Return

A fuel oil tanker chartered by QatarEnergy was hit in Qatari waters in the early hours of April 1, in what officials described as part of a broader missile attack directed at Qatar. The...
Shipping Niches Becoming More Valuable Because Voyages Are Getting Longer

Some shipping niches are becoming more valuable not because they suddenly became fashionable, but because voyage math has changed. When ships spend more days at sea, the economics of support, optimization, fuel efficiency, timing...
Europe Braces for a Long-term Energy Shock

The European Union has warned member states to prepare for a prolonged disruption to energy markets as the Iran war continues to unsettle fuel flows, refinery planning, and price formation across the region. The...
The PNT and Sensor Questions Fleets Should Stop Pushing Down the List

PNT and sensor integrity are no longer narrow bridge or electronics topics. They now sit closer to the center of fleet resilience because more navigation, reporting, optimization, maintenance, remote support, and commercial decision-making depends...
8 Cruise Add-Ons Guests Keep Buying Even When Trips Get More Expensive

Cruise fares may get more attention in tough cost cycles, but the more revealing story is often what happens after the booking. Even when travel gets pricier, guests do not stop spending across the...
Fire on the Anchorage A Fully Loaded VLCC Is Hit off Dubai

A fully loaded Kuwait-flagged VLCC, Al Salmi, was struck while anchored off Dubai in the early hours of March 31, 2026, setting off a fire and sharply escalating the maritime picture in Gulf waters....
Baltic Energy-Export Disruption Remains a Live Maritime Signal

The Baltic export story is still very much live for maritime stakeholders because the disruption has moved beyond a one-off attack and into a repeat-strike pattern against Russia’s western oil corridor. Reuters reported today...
China Confirms Three Ships Passed Through Hormuz on Second Attempt

China said three Chinese ships recently transited the Strait of Hormuz after coordination with relevant parties, giving the market one of its clearest signs yet that selected commercial passage is possible again. The most...
How The MUSV Shift Changes the Industrial Map

The Navy’s new MUSV direction is starting to look less like a niche unmanned program and more like an industrial signal. In FY2026, the Department of the Navy says it is combining the medium...
10 Maritime Businesses Quietly Winning From the New Cape Route

The new Cape route economy is not only about longer voyages and higher freight bills. It is also creating a second layer of winners among maritime businesses that benefit when ships stay off the...
When Small Data Errors Become Big Maritime Failures

Small data errors rarely stay small for long in maritime operations. A position offset, stale port data field, weak sensor input, mismatched timestamp, or badly governed system link can start as something that looks...
Hormuz Is Not Reopened, But a Narrow Passage Is Reappearing

The latest picture in and around the Strait of Hormuz is not a return to normal shipping, but a partial and tightly constrained trickle of movement. Official maritime advisories still describe the threat environment...
Insurance Has Not Disappeared but the Rules Have Changed Fast

Marine insurance has moved into a more segmented posture as the war-driven threat picture around the Persian/Arabian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, and connected waters has intensified. London’s Joint War Committee widened listed areas in...
Europe Cruise Trends That Could Outperform the Broader Market This Year

Europe cruise demand is holding up better than many casual observers assume, but the areas most likely to outperform are not simply “Europe in general.” The strongest pockets this year appear to be port-intensive...
Cape Diversion Pressure Is Shifting From Vessels to Ports

Pressure is now migrating into the port system itself. Morocco’s Tanger Med is actively preparing for heavier traffic as Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, and CMA CGM keep rerouting around southern Africa, with voyage extensions of roughly...