Tuesday, February 24, 2026
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Drug boat strike

U.S. Strikes Suspected Drug-Smuggling Boat, Killing Three

Published Feb 23, 2026 10:27 PM by The Maritime Executive

On Monday morning, U.S. forces struck and destroyed a drifting suspected drug boat in the Caribbean, killing three. It was the second strike in a week, following an attack Friday that killed three additional suspects, and was the eighth declared strike since the beginning of the month. The death toll from U.S. Southern Command's kinetic countertrafficking campaign is now at least 137, and possibly as high as 148. In parallel with the airstrikes on drug boats - led by special...

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KVH file image

From Sea to Sky

Published Feb 23, 2026 8:26 PM by Mia Bennett

Nestled within the aptly named Post Office Bay on Galapagos' Floreana Island sits a relic of analog communication. A barrel beckons visitors to pitch in their unstamped postcards in the hopes that a passer-by bound for the addressed location retrieves the epistle and ferries it to its destination. If, say, you were a tourist from Palm Beach, Florida and you found a missive to Miami in the barrel, you might take it with you and hand-deliver it to the addressee...

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PCG servicemembers recover another body from the water at the wreck site, February 21 (PCG)

Philippine Divers Release Video of Search for Remains Inside Lost Ferry

Published Feb 23, 2026 8:22 PM by The Maritime Executive

The Philippine Coast Guard's salvage divers continue to conduct dangerous and difficult search-and-recovery work at the wreck site of the Trisha Kerstin 3, the ferry that capsized and sank off Basilan in late January. The confirmed death toll from the sinking has risen to 65, and Philippine leaders have demanded accountability - even prosecution - for those responsible for the vessel's final voyage. Over the weekend, divers recovered another body from the wreck - the remains of crewmember Rodolfo Cabilan...

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Seatrium Singapore shipyard

Seatrium Consolidating Business by Divesting Non-Core Assets

Published Feb 23, 2026 7:44 PM by The Maritime Executive

Singapore-based Seatrium is highlighting a series of recent transaction agreements, all designed to consolidate its business and produce operating cost savings from the sale of non-core assets. It highlights that it has already created US$40 million in savings while noting that it has earmarked additional non-core assets for investment. Seatrium was formed by the 2023 merger of Sembcorp Marine and Keppel Offshore & Marine. “These divestments represent an acceleration in Seatrium’s asset portfolio optimization strategy, optimizing the group’s cost structure,...

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Offshore

offshore wind farm

DOJ Files Appeal on Court Blocking Trump’s Moratorium on Wind Energy

The U.S. Department of Justice’s Environment & Natural Resources Division filed notice with the district court in Massachusetts for an appeal on the court ruling blocking Donald Trump’s Executive Order from January 2025 establishing a moratorium on permitting, leasing, and other authorizations for wind energy projects. It is the latest step in the Trump administration's continuing battle against renewable wind energy. The filing came 45 days after District Judge Patti B. Saris had ruled in December 2025, calling the Executive...

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Shipbuilding

Landing Craft Heavy Australia

Austal Finalizes Large Contract to Build Australia’s Landing Craft Heavy

Austal Defence Shipbuilding Australia highlighted the announcement by the government’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence, Richard Marles, and Minister for Defence Industry, Pat Conroy, as the finalization of a large contract to build the country’s new Landing Craft Heavy (LCH) vessels. It was expecting to sign the contract, valued at approximately A$4 billion (US$2.8 billion), later on Friday while highlighting it was the second major contract for the company under its Strategic Shipbuilding Agreement (SSA) with Australia. The...

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Environment

Ship

Navigating the Deadlock: Accelleron’s Daniel Bischofberger on Green Fuels

Accelleron, a leading provider of turbocharging, fuel injection, and digital solutions for marine engines and ships, recently released a study on the multifaceted, multi-industry challenges slowing shipping's transition to carbon-neutral fuels. TME recently spoke with CEO Daniel Bischofberger about the current state of marine decarbonization, regional developments in Asia-Pacific, and the path forward for the industry. Can you describe the current state of shipping's transition to carbon-neutral fuels? The ships are ready, but the fuel is not. The technology exists...

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Business

Zim containership in port

Zim Employees Return to Work as Union Reports Tentative Agreements

The union representing Zim’s Israeli workers has reportedly reached terms on a tentative agreement regarding employment, severance payments, and compensation after staging a strike that stopped port activity and work at the company’s headquarters. The union said a tentative agreement would be finalized between ZIM CEO and Hapag-Lloyd, and according to the news outlet Calcalist, it has total trust in Eli Glickman to honor the agreement. The union had reacted to a lack of employment agreements and said it had...

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