Thursday, April 09, 2026
MORE TOP STORIES
Chinese owned bulker docked in Australia

Australia Bans Chinese-Owned Bulker for Unpaid Crew Wages

Published Apr 9, 2026 5:55 PM by The Maritime Executive

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority, well-known for its strict enforcement actions, announced it has issued a six-month ban against a Chinese-owned bulker for unpaid crew wages and other violations. It is the second ban the authority has issued in a little over a month, with it saying it should serve as a reminder to employers of their obligations under the Maritime Labour Convention. The Liberia-flagged bulker BBG Wuzhou (81,895 dwt) recently arrived in the port of Newcastle, where AMSA reports...

Continue Reading...
GUGI

UK Foils "Nefarious" Russian Activity Near Subsea Cables

Published Apr 9, 2026 4:57 PM by The Maritime Executive

The UK government claims that it has discovered and disrupted Russian plans to conduct "nefarious" activity over critical subsea fiber optic cables. The plot involved the assets of the secretive Main Directorate of Deep Sea Research (GUGI), a spy-submarine outfit that reports directly to the Russian Ministry of Defense. The month-long operation started when British forces detected an Akula-class Russian attack sub in Arctic waters last month. Working with Norwegian partners, the UK military tracked the sub; further detections established...

Continue Reading...
French troops boarding tanker

France Targets Shadow Tankers with Stiffer Penalties for False Flag

Published Apr 9, 2026 4:55 PM by The Maritime Executive

France is reported to be pursuing legislation to stiffen the penalties for vessels flying false flags or failing to comply with the instructions of the authorities. It comes after France has detained three shadow fleet tankers in the past seven months in an effort to crack down on violations of the sanctions on the Russian oil industry. The French news agency Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported on Wednesday that it had seen draft legislation that calls for the tightening of the...

Continue Reading...
Temporarily welcome again: Russian crude imports have boomed (file image courtesy SCF)

Gulf Conflict Gives a Boost to Sanctioned Oil Producers

Published Apr 9, 2026 3:52 PM by The Maritime Executive

The conflict in the Arabian Gulf has given a lift to sanctioned crude oil producers, according to analysts at Vortexa. "High-risk" Russian, Venezuelan and Iranian barrels have been helping to fill the gap left by the removal of everyday Saudi, Kuwaiti, Iraqi and Emirati grades - bringing revenue for blacklisted exporters and relief for global energy markets. Sanctioned grade export quantities have expanded every month since the start of the year, helping to keep on-water inventory high despite an accelerated...

Continue Reading...
MORE STORIES BY CATEGORY

Offshore

US LNG export terminal at Sabine Pass

QatarEnergy’s U.S. LNG Plant Achieves First Production at Critical Time

Just as the world is looking for alternative sources of LNG, Golden Pass LNG in Texas reported it has achieved first production. The project, which has been in planning and development for 15 years, is set to start export shipments in the second quarter, coming online to help fill some of the shortfall from Qatar and the Middle East. The United States is already setting records for LNG shipments and has been rivaling Qatar for the title of the largest...

Continue Reading...

Shipbuilding

tanker shipbuilding

Shipbuilding Orderbook Hits 17-Year High Driven by Tankers Reports BIMCO

The boom in shipbuilding orders is continuing, reaching a 17-year high, reports industry group BIMCO. While it sees a slowing in some sectors, it points to a recent surge in crude oil tanker orders coming after the container segment was already driven to new highs. During the first quarter of 2026, newbuilding contracting has risen 40 percent year-over-year to 17.6 million Compensated Gross Tonnes (CGT). In total, it calculates the global shipping orderbook reached 191 million Compensated Gross Tonnes (CGT)....

Continue Reading...

Environment

massive Guaibamax ore carrier

Mining Giant Vale Orders World's First Ethanol-Powered Giant Bulkers

Vale reports it has entered into an agreement with China’s Shandong Shipping Corporation to build the first large ocean-going vessels that will use ethanol as their primary fuel. It is an adaptation of its current design for the massive Guaibamax vessels (325,000 dwt) and follows news from earlier this year that reported Vale and Everllence were working on ethanol as a marine fuel for its engines. According to Vale, the agreement with Shandong includes 25-year contracts for the construction of...

Continue Reading...

Business

Dali containership bridge Baltimore

Maryland Reaches Settlement in Principle with Owner/Operator of Dali

The State of Maryland announced that it has reached a settlement in principle with the owners and operators of the containership Dali for the 2024 destruction of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. Details of the settlement were not announced, with the state saying terms were being finalized but that it resolves a significant portion of its claims, specifically against Grace Ocean and Synergy Marine. Maryland had filed in U.S. District Court alleging that the disaster was the result of “negligence,...

Continue Reading...