OOCL box ship in Red Sea hit by rocket fired from a drone
Risks to container vessels passing through the Red Sea region have been further heightened after ...
JBHT: STATUS QUO GM: PARTNERSHIP UPDATEEXPD: NOT SO BULLISHEXPD: LEGAL RISK UPDATE WTC: LOOKING FOR DIRECTIONTSLA: SERIOUS STUFFF: STOP HEREDSV: BOUNCING BACK HD: NEW DELIVERY PARTNERSKNX: SOLID UPDATE PG: WORST CASE AVOIDEDKNX: KEEP ON TRUCKING GM: UPGRADE
JBHT: STATUS QUO GM: PARTNERSHIP UPDATEEXPD: NOT SO BULLISHEXPD: LEGAL RISK UPDATE WTC: LOOKING FOR DIRECTIONTSLA: SERIOUS STUFFF: STOP HEREDSV: BOUNCING BACK HD: NEW DELIVERY PARTNERSKNX: SOLID UPDATE PG: WORST CASE AVOIDEDKNX: KEEP ON TRUCKING GM: UPGRADE
Not every supply chain is as efficient. But according to research by the European Union, terrorist group ISIL can receive components for explosives within a month, raising questions as to oversight of the supply chain. It suggests companies from countries the world over have helped the group import IED components, with Turkey and India among the most involved. The EU wants companies to adopt more robust accounting policies which would show what happens to goods once they have left their care.
Houthis to cease attacks on non-Israeli shipping in Red Sea
CMA CGM set to be first liner to resume Suez transits?
Returning to Suez and rates: the shipping contract conundrum
More than 220 China-built ships at risk from US trade reprisal
Service return to using Suez Canal 'just a one-off' says CMA CGM
Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd shuffle port calls on transatlantic services
Comment on this article