The Hidden Cost of Manual Disbursement Account Handling in Shipping

Manual disbursement account handling looks manageable until the real cost is measured across the full port-call chain. The leakage rarely appears as one dramatic failure. It tends to build through slower approvals, tariff and...
Golden Pass Texas Prepares for First LNG Export as Train 1 Moves Into Cargo Phase

Golden Pass LNG in Sabine Pass, Texas is now at the point where its first export cargo is about to leave the terminal, marking the shift from startup milestones into actual seaborne LNG trade....
Predictive Maintenance in Shipping The Buyer Questions That Separate Real Value From Sales Hype

Predictive maintenance in shipping is no longer just a concept pitch. Major maritime players now market it around real-time vessel data, anomaly detection, and lower unscheduled maintenance, while class and research bodies frame data-driven...
Singapore, Los Angeles and Long Beach Renew Green Shipping Corridor With a More Operational Next Phase

Singapore, Los Angeles and Long Beach have renewed their Green and Digital Shipping Corridor agreement for another three years, extending a trans-Pacific initiative that now sits further along than a simple memorandum stage. The...
9 Luxury Cruise Hardware Bets That Can Outearn Flashy Attractions

Luxury cruise buyers usually do not book on the same logic as mass-market buyers chasing the newest thrill deck. The current premium signal is pointing somewhere else: larger all-oceanfront suites, better terraces, stronger bathroom...
U.S. Exports Are Surging, but Replacement Capacity Is Still Not Enough

The latest energy-shipping signal is that U.S. crude and fuel exports are doing real heavy lifting, but they still cannot fully replace what the market has lost from the Gulf. Reuters reported on April...
Hormuz Crisis Update: Traffic Back Near Zero After Ship Seizure Shocks the Strait

In the last 24 hours, the Strait of Hormuz has shifted further away from any meaningful restart and back toward emergency-level movement after the U.S. seizure of the Iranian-flagged cargo ship Touska reignited confrontation...
10 Commercial Angles Hidden Inside Naval Maintenance Backlogs and Depot Capacity Strain

Naval maintenance backlogs and depot-capacity limits are not just internal Navy management issues anymore. They are shaping a wider commercial market in which the most valuable contractors are often the ones that shorten repair...
10 Ship Types Where Wind Assisted Propulsion Has the Best ROI in 2026

The real ROI of wind-assisted propulsion is not spread evenly across shipping. It tends to be strongest on ships with long ocean legs, relatively stable speeds, enough open deck or structural integration room, and...
8 Maritime Tech Integrations That Save More Money Than Buying Another Standalone Tool

The strongest maritime tech savings often come from connecting systems that already sit close to the money, rather than adding one more isolated dashboard or niche app. Current vendor and class examples point in...
Hormuz Reopening Will Not Restore Oil and LNG Flows Quickly

Even if the Strait of Hormuz reopens to commercial navigation, the return of oil and LNG flows will lag far behind the act of reopening the waterway itself. The latest reporting shows the gap...
Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Expands Into Repair and Conversion in a Major Yard Market Shift

Yangzijiang Shipbuilding has moved into ship repair and conversion by establishing a new wholly owned subsidiary, Jiangsu Yangzi Hongda Shipbuilding and Repair, with registered capital of US$100 million to develop and operate facilities in...
Cruise Shore Power The Plug In Bet Getting Harder to Ignore

Shore power has moved from a sustainability talking point into a real fleet-planning issue for cruise operators because the economics, regulation, and port politics are all tightening at once. The upside is easy to...
Insurance and Sanctions-Workaround Capacity Are Still Evolving Around the Disruption

One of the most important but quieter maritime signals right now is that trade continuity is being rebuilt through insurance adaptation and sanctions-workaround capacity, not through a clean return to normal risk conditions. Reuters...
Hormuz Traffic Near Zero Again After U.S. Seizes Iranian Cargo Ship

Commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has fallen back to near-zero levels after a brief, uneven pickup over the weekend ended with the U.S. seizure of an Iranian cargo ship, a move that...
The Supplier Edge Naval Buyers Will Value Most When Capacity Gets Tight

When the naval industrial base gets tight, buyers usually stop rewarding suppliers simply for being available and start rewarding them for reducing risk. The current evidence points in that direction: GAO says the ship...
12 Expensive Compliance Mistakes That Quietly Hurt Fleet Economics

Compliance losses rarely arrive as one dramatic penalty. More often they show up as a spread of smaller economic leaks that owners tolerate for too long: surrendered allowances bought too late, FuelEU flexibility left...
Pakistan-Flagged Tanker Exits Hormuz With UAE Crude in Rare Breakthrough

A Pakistan-flagged Aframax tanker has successfully exited the Strait of Hormuz carrying a cargo of UAE crude, giving the market one of its clearest recent examples of a non-Iranian energy voyage completing the passage...
Container Spot Rate Rally Ends as Drewry Index Slips and Negotiations Reset

The six-week container spot-rate rally has ended, giving the market its clearest sign yet that the Middle East fuel shock may be losing some of its immediate pricing force just as annual contract discussions...
8 Ways Better Emissions Data Turns Into Commercial Leverage at Sea

Better emissions data is no longer just a reporting chore. In 2026 it is increasingly tied to freight negotiations, carbon-cost allocation, FuelEU pooling decisions, customer transparency, and fleet strategy. The reason is simple: EU...
The Market Is Shifting From Blockade Headlines to Post-Conflict Navigation Planning

A meaningful change is taking shape in the Hormuz story. The conversation is no longer centered only on blockade mechanics, turned-back ships, and sanctions-linked enforcement. It is now starting to move toward what a...
Yangzijiang Maritime’s Eight VLCC Bet Signals a Bigger Push Into the Crude Tanker Cycle

Yangzijiang Maritime has moved decisively into the large crude tanker segment with an eight-ship VLCC newbuilding program, pairing it with the sale of four smaller MR tankers in a reshaping of its tanker exposure....
10 Cargo Chains on the Front Line if Hormuz Stays Broken

If disruption in the Strait of Hormuz persists, the most exposed maritime trade segments are not all hit in the same way or on the same timeline. Crude oil and LNG sit at the...
Fujairah Bunker Market Deteriorates Sharply as Sales Crash and Supply Tightens

Fujairah’s bunker market has moved from stressed to clearly impaired. Fresh data published today showed marine fuel sales at the UAE hub fell to 158,852 cubic meters in March, about 157,300 metric tons, down...
10 Shipboard Data Problems That Kill Maritime Tech ROI Early

Ship operators are buying more software, sensors, dashboards, and AI layers, but a lot of ROI still breaks before the technology itself has a fair chance to work. The recurring cause is weak shipboard...
Cruise Flow Spending The New Embarkation Arms Race

Cruise lines are putting money into passenger flow because embarkation, reboarding, and turnaround speed now affect far more than guest mood for the first hour of the trip. They shape terminal labor needs, customs...
Europe Eyes Canadian LNG via the Panama Canal as Hormuz Risk Reshapes Supply

European buyers are exploring whether future LNG cargoes from Canada’s Pacific coast could be sent through the Panama Canal to Europe as part of a longer-term supply diversification strategy that has gained urgency after...
Sanctioned Supertankers Are Now Actively Testing the Blockade

A new enforcement phase is emerging in the Gulf: the issue is no longer only whether the U.S. blockade exists, but whether sanctioned tankers will probe it in practice. A second U.S.-sanctioned VLCC entered...
Japan Shipbuilding Slots Are Effectively Sold Out Through 2029, Pushing Orders Into 2030

Japan’s shipyards have now built up enough committed work to keep export berths effectively occupied through 2029, with industry data showing about three and a half years of backlog in hand as of the...
Can Western Navies Build Faster or Just Promise Bigger Fleets

Shipbuilding growth is not just a money question because the real bottlenecks sit inside yards, suppliers, designs, and labor pipelines Buyers looking at Western naval expansion plans need to think less like headline readers...