Cooling demand increases warehousing vacancies, with rents inching down
Cooling demand has ended the long run of increasing warehousing costs and nudged the average ...
The US plans to impose additional limitations on US carriers – most of which are freighter operators – operating in and over Afghanistan have been withdrawn. CH Aviation reports that the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) proposals, initially lodged in May, sought to restrict flights below a certain altitude, unless authorised by the US government and approved by the FAA. The decision appears linked to the FAA’s realisation that all US carriers operating in Afghanistan are doing so at the behest of government or military. Such restrictions, it reportedly admitted, would merely add a layer of bureaucracy and achieve little.
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HMM sees opportunities in Hapag-Lloyd’s exit from THE Alliance
The rise and rise of China's ecommerce platforms
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Legal battle heats up over 'unseaworthy' and 'reckless' MV Dali
DSV chief reticent on Schenker: the focus on growing market share
Another strong month for US ports as container flows continue to rise
MSC redeploys 'Israel-linked' box ships away from Persian Gulf
Alex Lennane
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