Bunker Market Buckles as War Distorts Supply, Premiums, and Refuelling Access

The bunker market across Asia has entered a more stressed phase as the war in the Middle East continues to distort fuel oil flows, tighten prompt availability, and drive sellers into more defensive behavior....
CMA CGM Opens Sea Road Rail Gulf Corridors Outside Hormuz

CMA CGM has formally reopened import and export bookings for key Gulf markets using a set of named multimodal corridors designed to avoid a direct Strait of Hormuz transit. In customer advisories issued on...
Maritime Cyber Is Surging and Why 2026 Feels Like a Turning Point

Maritime cyber risk is moving into a different category in 2026 because the problem is no longer confined to isolated office IT incidents or abstract warnings about future digitalization. It is being shaped by...
Short Cruises Big Margins

Three- to five-night sailings are back in focus because they now solve several cruise-industry problems at once. They fit travelers with less vacation time, they create a lower-friction entry point for first-time cruisers, they...
Autonomous Warships Are Moving Faster Than Many Fleets Are Ready For

Autonomous warships and naval unmanned systems are no longer sitting in the experimental corner of fleet planning. In 2026, the shift is showing up in real deployments, dedicated unmanned surface vessel divisions, allied budget...
Gulf Disruption Is Now Hitting the Broader Cargo Network, Not Just Tankers

The latest read-through is bigger than energy shipping. What started as a tanker and chokepoint crisis is now clearly spilling into the wider cargo network: food imports, medicine flows, container handling, fallback ports, inland...
Digital Fog Moves Closer to the Engine Room

New maritime cybersecurity research published this week disclosed a chain of vulnerabilities in a widely used maritime IoT platform that, according to the researchers, could have allowed a remote attacker using only a web...
Why Better Voyage Decisions Are Becoming the Fastest Way to Save Money at Sea

The fastest savings at sea are increasingly coming from decisions made before a vessel burns the next ton of fuel, not from one more round of hardware spend. That is because voyage economics are...
Washington Hardens Hormuz Transit Rules for U.S.-Flag Ships

MARAD has issued a new U.S. maritime security advisory for the Persian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz, and Gulf of Oman that gives U.S.-flagged vessels more explicit operating instructions during transit. The advisory, numbered 2026-004...
The New Navigation Redundancy Playbook

Satellite navigation has not stopped being essential, but it has stopped being sufficient on its own. The change is no longer theoretical. In March 2025, IMO, ICAO, and ITU jointly warned about the rising...
The Hidden Cost of Fragmented Maritime Software

The hidden cost of fragmented maritime software is not just that teams have too many systems. It is that critical work gets broken across disconnected tools, repeated by different people, and re-checked because nobody...
The Naval Cyber Gap: Blind Spots at Sea

Naval cyber risk is no longer a niche IT problem sitting somewhere below missiles, propulsion, or ship design. The gap now is between how fast navies, shipyards, suppliers, and maritime operators are digitizing and...
Singapore’s Ammonia Bunkering Race Gets a New Japanese Push

Singapore’s ammonia bunkering plans picked up again on March 17 after Sumitomo Corporation, K Line, and NYK Bulkship (Asia) said they had signed a memorandum of understanding to jointly carry out a front-end engineering...
Nearly 80 Ships and Billions Committed

The cruise newbuild story is no longer just a shipyard headline. It is now a market-structure story. Cruise Industry News’ latest March 2026 orderbook update shows 78 ships on order representing more than 206,600...
Gulf Supply-Chain Disruption Is Spreading Well Beyond Tankers Into Food, Medicine, and General Cargo Logistics

This is no longer just an oil-and-tanker shock. The Hormuz disruption is now hitting food, medicines, and industrial cargo across the Gulf, with about 70% of the region’s food imports normally moving through the...
IMO Says Escorts Are No Safety Fix as Emergency Council Meets on Gulf Shipping

The International Maritime Organization has convened an Extraordinary Council session in London for March 18 and 19 to address the impact of the Middle East conflict on shipping and seafarers in the Arabian Gulf,...
Marlink launches XChange NextGen, the edge platform powering maritime digital possibilities

Built on a scalable platform architecture, the new XChange NextGen unlocks the full Marlink Possibility Portfolio, enabling operators to build, scale and future proof secure digital operations with complete flexibility. Oslo and Paris, 17...
The Most Expensive Clauses Owners Still Underestimate

Owners still get trapped by clauses that look familiar on paper but become brutally expensive once a voyage goes sideways. The cost usually does not come from the clause itself. It comes from underestimating...
Real-Time Vessel Monitoring Platforms Compared in 2026

Real-time vessel monitoring is no longer just about seeing where a ship is on a map. For many commercial and operational users, the platform decision now comes down to a bigger question: do you...
Cruise Industry Segments Most Exposed to Fuel Spikes

Fuel pressure is back in the cruise conversation because the oil shock is no longer theoretical. Reuters reported on March 16 that Brent had crossed $100 a barrel during the latest Middle East disruption,...
Procopiou Deepens His Hengli Crude Tanker Push

George Procopiou’s latest VLCC move is not just another tanker order. It is a strong signal that one of shipping’s most active owners still sees room to press scale into the crude cycle, while...
War Planning Widens as Fujairah Disrupts and Gulf Infrastructure Comes Under Fire

The latest escalation in the Gulf is no longer only a shipping-lane story. It is increasingly affecting the infrastructure that helps keep regional trade and energy flows moving when conditions in and around the...
15 Naval Programs That Matter Most in 2026

The naval programs drawing the most attention in 2026 are the ones combining real money, real schedule pressure, and real strategic consequences. That is pushing the spotlight toward nuclear-submarine production, missile-defense destroyers, allied undersea...
Shadow-Fleet and Sanctions Enforcement Risk Is Tightening in Northern Europe

In Northern Europe, enforcement is moving into a more operational phase. Swedish authorities boarded the EU-sanctioned tanker Sea Owl 1 off Trelleborg, detained its Russian captain over alleged false documents, and said the ship...
Selective Passage Replaces Normal Shipping in Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz is no longer behaving like a normal commercial corridor with elevated risk. It is starting to look more like a politically filtered access system. New reporting says commercial traffic remains...
8 Ways Ship Operators Lose Money on Port Calls Without Realizing It

Port-call losses rarely announce themselves as a major mistake. They build through small decisions that look harmless in real time: a soft PDA review, a vessel hurried toward a berth that is not ready,...
When GPS Lies at Sea: The New Maritime Tech Race Around GNSS Jamming, Spoofing, and Positional Trust

When GPS lies at sea, the risk is rarely “loss of a nice-to-have.” GNSS is welded into everything from ECDIS positioning and AIS time stamps to satellite comms timing and automated reporting. In March...
DA-Desk: Port Cost Control Without the Spreadsheet Chaos

Partner Spotlight DA-Desk is built for one of the most repetitive, high-friction workflows in shipping: port cost management. When PDAs and FDAs are handled across email threads, PDFs, and spreadsheets, the hidden cost is...
Washington Opens an At Sea Sanctions Valve and Eyes a Jones Act Escape Hatch

The U.S. is now testing two very different levers to cool an overheated oil and fuel market. One is external: Treasury has officially opened a 30 day window for the delivery and sale of...
Norway Blocks Norwegian-Flagged Ships From Hormuz Transit

Norway has now moved past caution and into prohibition: the Norwegian Maritime Authority said on March 12, 2026 that Norwegian-flagged vessels may not enter the Persian Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz until further...