Seko Logistics appoints Ursula Wallace to head up North America ocean freight
Seko Logistics has appointed veteran forwarder Ursula Wallace (above) to head its ocean product, North ...
Crane Worldwide Logistics has appointed Ivan Liso (pictured above) as its director of projects, EPC & marine for the Europe, Middle East, India and Africa (EMEIA) region.
He will lead the company’s global specialised solutions group for the region and report to Joshua van Altena, EMEIA director of operations and Chris Mitchell, vice president of global specialised solutions.
“Ivan has extensive experience in the shipping and freight industry, which will be a tremendous asset to our valued clients and global team,” Mr Mitchell said.
Mr Liso has worked in freight forwarding since 1995 and was sales and division manager at Pacorini Forwarding’s project cargo division, where he was responsible for managing heavy and oversized cargo, exceptional transport, road surveys, projects and chartering of vessels. Pacorini was acquired by Crane in 2017.
In his new role he will be responsible for managing vessel chartering within EMEIA market, supporting pricing and solutions for the specialised solutions business and developing new opportunities in the project cargo sector.
'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