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Home Supply Chain Manufacturing

Shipping industry fights talent shortage amid 2M-seafarer workforce

2026/06/13
in Manufacturing, Supply Chain
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Shipping industry fights talent shortage amid 2M-seafarer workforce

Like trucking and railroads, shipping struggles in fight for talent, aging workforce — FreightWaves SONAR Demo | SONAR Login | Customer Support | SONAR Demo | Subscribe | Newsletters Contact Us Brands Search AI Search Close Search for: Search Read Brands FreightWaves American ShipShipCheckpoint SONAR Trending Topics Startups Reindustrialization Global Supply Chain Trade and Compliance Borderlands: Mexico Fuel News Legal Issues Trucking Compliance Company Earnings Modes Truckload Less than Truckload (LTL) Parcel Freight Railroad Maritime Air Cargo Insights SONAR Chart of the Week SONAR Sitreps State of Freight Insights #WithSONAR SONAR Freight Market Updates Sponsored Insights Warehouse In The Sky Insurance & Risk Management Watch FreightWaves Today What the Truck?!? Brake Check The Long Haul TruckTech Loaded & Rolling Listen Newsletters SONAR Learn More Request a Demo SONAR Knowledge Center SONAR API Awards FreightTech Awards Fraud Fighters Awards AI Excellence in Supply Chain Awards ShipChoice Awards Events Supply Chain AI Symposium Future of Rail Summit Enterprise Fleet Summit F3: Future of Freight Festival Resources Advertise Freight Industry White Papers FreightWaves Webinars About Us Our Mission Market Experts Editorial Team RSS Facebook Twitter LinkedIn YouTube Instagram ● Watch Now –> Click here to open Menu Click to close the product launchpad Home / American Shipper / Like trucking and railroads, shipping struggles in fight for talent, aging workforce American ShipNews Top Stories Like trucking and railroads, shipping struggles in fight for talent, aging workforce Global crime underscores vessel crews’ needs for legal protections Stuart Chirls · Friday, June 12, 2026

By Stuart Chirls | 2026-06-12

Global seafarer workforce under strain

Shipowners and operators are challenged with a global fight for talent in an industry that relies on 2 million men and women to crew the world’s fleet of commercial maritime vessels.

“This could hardly be more topical at a time when around 20,000 seafarers are stuck in the Persian Gulf,” said Paul Pathy, president of the Baltic and International Maritime Council (BIMCO), at the group’s seminar in Athens. “At times like these, it’s not only the principle of freedom of navigation that is compromised, but also the freedom of our seafarers who are prevented from going home to their families. Once again, they are paying a very high price in the middle of a conflict. Their freedom of navigation should never be negotiable.”

Copenhagen-based BIMCO is a global association of shipowners, charterers, shipbrokers, and agents.

“[W]hen shipping makes the headlines, it’s usually because something has gone wrong, and too often what gets lost behind the headlines is the human dimension; the people,” said BIMCO Secretary General and Chief Executive David Loosley.

Workforce transition and retention challenges

The meeting came ahead of the release later this month of a report detailing maritime workforce issues.

Elpi Petraki, an executive with shipowner Enea Management of Greece and president of the Women’s International Shipping & Trading Association, told a panel about the importance of not only attracting the younger generation of seafarers, but also of focusing on retaining the experience and institutional knowledge of individuals who are transitioning to shore-based roles.

Looking at the profile of a seafarer, and what is needed to prepare them for the future, “there are gaps in the recruitment and training processes,” said Julia Anastasiou, chief crew management officer at OSM Thome, a leading ship management company headquartered in Norway with offices in the United States. She added there is a fight for talent as opposed to a fight for recruitment, and that gaps and costs translate to human beings.

Improvements must be done collectively and involving governments, flag states and other stakeholders, Anastasiou said.

New fuels, upskilling, and safety imperatives

New technologies have made upskilling a critical need for hundreds of seafarers.

“With the new fuels coming in, the industry will need to address this due to the transitional period,” said Marina Papaioannou, regional maritime academies manager at DNV (DNVG02-PRO.OL) of Oslo, one of the oldest classification societies that set technical standards for vessel safety and performance. She warned that the industry must address issues of safety regarding the new fuels such as liquefied natural gas and ammonia. “Skills such as leadership and communication must be enhanced to make the seafarers feel safe and that the human element must never be left behind,” she added.

Criminalization of seafarers and legal vulnerability

Another panel discussion focused on the growing problem of criminalization of seafarers.

Eleni Antoniadou, a maritime lawyer at Gard AS, a protection and indemnity (P&I) mutual insurance association in Greece, said that seafarers are frequently scapegoated in cases involving drugs.

“Such cases often get a lot of media attention and often lead to long detentions for the seafarers,” she said. The industry is seeing a rise in drug cases and urged shipowners to support crew by providing legal support, accommodations, medical care, food, and more.

Seafarers in these situations and their families often don’t know what will happen next, said Alan Croft, business development manager at the International Seafarers’ Welfare and Assistance Network (ISWAN). “The role of the network is to reduce the human impact and that prevention and preparedness is critical, including education on the consequences, the risk of cutting corners, what to do, who to contact immediately, what their rights are and how to preserve evidence.” He suggested that a practical emergency pack could make a real difference for seafarers who are essential to global trade but often not treated as such.

Fair treatment of seafarers as a term somewhat predates a feeling that seafarers are treated unfairly, but that states will often say they offer due process, said Leo Bolivar, Manila country manager at International Registries, Inc., which manages the Marshall Islands ship registry. He said that while complicated, a collective effort is necessary in cases of flag states versus coastal states, and all stakeholders must collaborate.

Read more articles by Stuart Chirls here.

Related coverage and upcoming events

Related coverage:

  • Port of Los Angeles forecasts 7% container volume decline
  • Long Beach awards $54M in small business contracts
  • Conservative network has law protecting U.S.-flag shipping in its sights
  • For 1st time, U.S. approves controversial LNG production ship

Upcoming FreightWaves Events

  • Supply Chain AI Symposium: Past the hype. Join operators, founders, and enterprise leaders figuring out how to deploy AI in supply chain. July 15, 2026. The Old Post • Chicago, IL. Register Now
  • F3: Future of Freight Festival: Industry-defining keynotes, rapid-fire technology demos, and industry leaders networking in experiences across Chattanooga — plus the inaugural F3 Awards Dinner featuring the FreightTech and ShipChoice reveals. October 27, 2026 – October 28, 2026. The Signal at Chattanooga Choo Choo • Chattanooga, TN. Register Now

Source: FreightWaves

Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.

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