IMO MASS Code Turns Autonomous Ships Into a Boardroom Decision

The MASS Code changes autonomous shipping from concept pitch to due diligence file The new global safety framework does not make autonomous cargo ships instantly mainstream. It gives owners a clearer way to test,...
Fujairah Bunker Premium Widens the Fuel Gap for Gulf and Asia Voyages

Fujairah’s bunker market is still carrying a clear premium over several major refueling hubs, keeping voyage-cost planning uneven for ships moving through the Middle East Gulf, Indian Ocean, and Asia-Europe trades. Current bunker listings...
Fuel Planning Mistakes That Hurt Owners During Chokepoint Disruptions

Disrupted routes punish weak fuel planning During a chokepoint crisis, the bunker plan becomes a commercial risk document. The owner has to think beyond distance and daily consumption. Fuel price spreads, reserve policy, waiting...
Poland’s Gdańsk LNG Expansion Sets Up a New Baltic Gas Hub

Poland is moving toward a second floating LNG import unit at Gdańsk, expanding a project that was already designed to add a new Baltic gateway for seaborne gas. Gaz-System’s Gdańsk FSRU program is built...
Hormuz Traffic Reopens Slowly as Gulf Ship Movements Start to Unfreeze

The latest Gulf shipping picture is being shaped by a controlled reopening rather than a clean return to normal trade. In the last 24 hours, Maersk confirmed that the Maersk Baltimore and one time-chartered...
Cruise Port Growth After Galveston’s Surge: 9 Infrastructure Investments Other Ports Should Study

Galveston’s useful lesson is that cruise growth works best when the port upgrades the whole landside and berth system instead of chasing one shiny terminal at a time Other ports should study the infrastructure...
Ship Recycling Market Turns Selective as Supply Stays Tight

The current ship recycling market is moving through a cautious, uneven phase, with firm buyer interest in several destinations but not enough end-of-life vessel supply to create a broad transaction wave. Recent market reporting...
8 Hard Questions China’s Submarine Surge Is Forcing on Allied Shipbuilders

The rising pressure from China’s submarine output is not asking allied industry for another strategy deck. It is asking whether allied yards and suppliers can convert urgency into repeatable submarine throughput without breaking their...
Autonomous Vessel Tech: Where are we really in 2026?

The 2026 autonomy story is practical, supervised, and mission specific Autonomous vessel technology is not arriving as one giant leap into crewless ocean shipping. It is entering maritime through controlled lanes: port operations, autonomous-capable...
10 Data Points That Can Change a Charter Negotiation

Charter negotiations now turn on proof, not promises A vessel’s commercial story is stronger when the owner can prove how the ship actually performs. Speed, fuel burn, hull condition, weather impact, idle time, emissions,...
Dirty Tanker Earnings Break Higher as Clean Market Loses Momentum

The tanker market is splitting into two very different stories this week. Dirty tanker earnings are moving higher as crude tanker demand tightens around Gulf-linked cargoes, VLCC positioning, and renewed loading expectations, while clean...
Germany Pivots From F126 Frigates to TKMS Warship Plan

Germany has formally moved away from its troubled F126 frigate program after years of delay, rising cost expectations, and growing uncertainty over whether the original shipbuilding structure could deliver the vessels on a workable...
Wallenius Wilhelmsen Secures Long Auto Shipping Runway Through 2031

Wallenius Wilhelmsen has agreed to an early three-year extension of a shipping contract with a leading European auto manufacturer, adding an estimated $420 million of future revenue to the agreement and extending the relationship...
Hormuz Route Reset Gives Shipping a Temporary New Passage Window

Oman has opened two temporary shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz, one north and one south of the existing lane, and said vessels using them will not be charged tolls during the current...
Cruise Hotel AI Systems That Can Relieve Labor Pressure

The strongest systems usually work as quiet copilots. They route, predict, triage, prioritize, and surface next actions. That matters onboard because hotel operations at sea are dense, multilingual, and time-sensitive in ways that shore-side...
10 C4ISR Systems Navies Are Backing as Fleets Spread Out

Distributed fleets reward systems that keep commanders confident when the force is scattered, the network is stressed, and the sensor picture has to stay usable across ships, aircraft, shore nodes, submarines, and unmanned platforms....
Predictive Maintenance Is Challenging Planned Maintenance Across the Fleet

The savings battle is moving from calendar discipline to machinery intelligence Planned maintenance gives vessel operators structure. Predictive maintenance gives them earlier warnings. The strongest fleets are not abandoning one for the other. They...
Maritime Investments Shipowners Are Reconsidering as Carbon Costs Move Closer

Carbon is starting to price the next shipowner mistake Owners are not just buying ships, retrofits, software, and fuel optionality anymore. They are buying exposure to carbon rules, charterer behavior, lender expectations, operating data,...
Qatar LNG Tankers Return Through Hormuz as Gas Shipping Restarts

Qatari-linked LNG shipping is moving back into view after a period of disrupted Gulf gas flows, with multiple empty LNG carriers tied to Qatar returning through the Strait of Hormuz and fresh tanker activity...
Container Rates Are Climbing Again as FBX and XSI Flash a Firmer Pricing Trend

Container freight pricing has turned more active again across the main east-west lanes, and the latest readings from FBX and XSI show the move is no longer isolated to one corridor. Early June data...
Cruise Shore Power Readiness and the 9 Questions That Matter Most

Shore power becomes financially dangerous when ports and lines treat it like infrastructure first and utilization logic second A technically impressive installation can still disappoint if ships cannot use it often enough, cheaply enough,...
Singapore Bunker Spike Puts Fuel Cost Pressure Back on Voyage Planning

Today’s bunker tape is giving operators a split signal rather than a clean market direction. Singapore VLSFO jumped to $711.50/mt, up $42.00, while Rotterdam VLSFO slipped to $604.50/mt, down $7.00, leaving the Global 20...
AI Tools Naval Shipyards May Need Before Delays Compound Again

Shipyards do not lose months only because people work too slowly. They lose months because decisions arrive late, vendor information arrives incomplete, rework hides inside quality loops, and testing evidence is not ready when...
Hormuz Transit Confusion Keeps Gulf Shipping on Alert

Washington and Tehran are sending different signals over ship movements through the Strait of Hormuz, leaving operators with a recovery story that is still difficult to trade, insure, and schedule with confidence. Recent ship-tracking...
11 Hidden Retrofit Costs That Can Sink Green Shipping ROI

The retrofit price is only the first number Green shipping retrofits can improve fuel performance, emissions exposure, charter appeal, and regulatory positioning. The business case breaks when owners model the equipment price but undercount...
Ship Market Week Ahead as Freight Gains Meet Bunker Strain

The shipping market enters the new week with a sharper split between strong freight signals and tougher operating risk. Container spot rates are still being pushed upward by early peak-season demand, fuel surcharges, and...
Venezuelan Crude Export Surge Sends Fresh Signal to Tanker Markets

Venezuela’s crude comeback is starting to show up in tanker flows, refinery sourcing, and Atlantic Basin supply math. Ship-tracking data point to Venezuelan oil exports rising again in May to roughly 1.25 million barrels...
Ship Sensor Data Is Becoming the Hidden Revenue Layer of the Fleet

The quiet asset already sailing with the fleet Shipowners are collecting more technical data than ever, but the commercial value is often trapped in fragmented dashboards, noon reports, vendor portals, class files, spreadsheets, and...
Hormuz Shipping Rebound Looks Fragile as Gulf Operators Face Mixed Signals

The Strait of Hormuz is no longer in a simple “closed or open” phase. The latest traffic picture looks more like a cautious restart, with some oil and LNG movements resuming, some vessels still...
Black Sea Strikes Shadow Fleet Pressure and Port Risk Are Rewriting Maritime Trade Again

The Black Sea picture is shifting through three channels at the same time. Russian attacks are still hitting Ukraine’s export system around Odesa and the Danube, including foreign-flagged merchant ships and port infrastructure. Ukraine...