Legal wrangle over terminal project could hobble South African port efficiency hopes
Continued congestion at South African ports hit by high winds has brought calls for a ...
There has been insufficient mainstream publicity on the IMO’s 2020 global emissions regulation for shipping, and a lack of transparency by container lines on their recovery strategies.
These are the worrying conclusions of a review by maritime consultant Alphaliner and a shipper survey by Drewry Supply Chain Advisors.
It has been estimated that the cost of compliance with the IMO’s 0.5% sulphur cap on fuel from 1 January 2020 could be a $15bn annual bill for the liner industry – each Asia to North Europe round ...
Amazon pushes into LTL for small package fulfilment and UPS does a u-turn
New senior management for DSV as it readies for DB Schenker takeover
Volumes set to 'fall off a cliff' as US firms hit the brakes on sourcing and bookings
Asian exporters scramble for ships and boxes to beat 90-day tariff pause
Temporary tariff relief brings on early transpacific peak season
'Tariff madness' will prompt renegotiation of ocean shipping contracts
Forwarders 'allowing the fox into the chicken run' by supporting 'hungry' carriers
Response to tariffs by Chinese importers may see extra costs for US shippers
Comment on this article
Peter
October 04, 2018 at 9:18 amReally, carriers were waiting this for a long time, it is harvest time!!