Temporary Baltimore shipping channel shift in bid to remove MV Dali
The temporary 30ft channel that allowed larger vessels to transit Baltimore harbour has been closed, ...
UK environment secretary George Eustice is coming under heightened pressure from the seafood industry, with two groups threatening legal actions. A solicitor representing 20 shellfish firms told The Guardian group action was being considered in response to government “negligence and maladministration” that has seen exports of live mussels, cockles, oysters and other shellfish caught in UK waters blocked from Europe. Alongside this, solicitors for one British firm have said government “false hope” to the industry had misled them and warned it was contemplating a “substantial damages claim”.
'I'm scared', says Boeing whistleblower, after two others suffer mysterious deaths
DSV could face $16m bill after helicopter is written off in haulage accident
FAK rate hikes holding, with strong demand into peak season predicted
Déjà vu as major ocean carriers scramble for tonnage and containers
Indian trade disrupted as port congestion forces liner services to skip calls
Ecommerce boom may be opening the doors for smugglers
Don't get too confident for Q2, market risks haven't disappeared, warns Yang Ming chief
Don't chase that final dollar, warning to shippers delaying signing new contracts
Shipper frustration as spot rates rise alongside demand, and cargo is rolled
Airfreight contracts begin to reflect threat of a Q4 capacity crunch
Q1 'better than expected' for Maersk – but 'there's more pressure to come'
Comment on this article