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A recent adjustment to one of MSC’s Asia-North Europe strings suggests the world’s largest shipping line is positioning itself to bid for a terminal expansion project in Klaipeda that could transform the Lithuanian port into a new Baltic hub.

Yesterday, MSC issued a customer advisory announcing proof forma schedule changes to two Asia-North Europe strings – the Britannia and Albatross services – which will provide Klaipeda with a second weekly direct call from Asia.

In its rejigged Albatros service, MSC has elected ...

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  • Tony Gu

    April 29, 2026 at 7:34 pm

    The Klaipeda angle is interesting from the Canada-bound LCL side. Most consoles into Montreal still come out of Hamburg or Rotterdam, but Baltic origin has been creeping up in our manifest mix the last two years — Lithuanian / Polish / Latvian shippers consolidating volumes that used to flow through Russian gateways.

    What changes on our end: phyto and TSE requirements often differ from the standard Northwest European playbook, so the broker side has to flag earlier in the booking. Drayage windows are the same once it lands.

    If MSC really builds Klaipeda into a hub, we’ll see more direct sailings vs feeder routing. On paper that means tighter ETAs. In practice probably wider variance for the first 6-12 months until rotation stabilizes.