According to www.seatrade-maritime.com, FedEx has named CMA CGM its preferred ocean carrier under a new logistics agreement valued at $1.4 billion.
Strategic integration across air, ocean, and ground networks
The multi-year agreement formalizes deep operational integration between FedEx’s global express and freight networks and CMA CGM’s container shipping and port terminal infrastructure. Under the deal, CMA CGM will serve as FedEx’s primary ocean partner for transoceanic containerized freight movements — including full-container-load (FCL) and less-than-container-load (LCL) services — across key trade lanes connecting North America, Europe, and Asia.
FedEx will leverage CMA CGM’s fleet of over 570 vessels and its network of more than 500 ports worldwide. The partnership includes coordinated scheduling, shared data platforms for real-time cargo visibility, and joint development of carbon-intensity reporting tools aligned with Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) guidelines. The agreement covers service execution beginning in Q3 2024, with phased implementation across all major corridors completed by mid-2025.
Operational scope and geographic coverage
The collaboration spans three core regions: transatlantic routes linking U.S. East Coast and Gulf ports with Northern European hubs including Rotterdam and Hamburg; transpacific lanes connecting Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Savannah to Shanghai, Ningbo, and Busan; and intra-Asia services supporting FedEx’s regional distribution centers in Singapore, Tokyo, and Seoul.
CMA CGM will provide dedicated vessel capacity on 12 weekly sailings from the U.S. West Coast to Asia, with guaranteed space allocation and priority berthing rights at terminals operated by CMA CGM’s subsidiary, CEVA Logistics. The deal also extends to CMA CGM’s 2026 fiscal year, anchoring long-term capacity planning for both parties amid ongoing port congestion and regulatory shifts in the Red Sea and Suez Canal corridors.
Supply chain resilience and sustainability alignment
The agreement embeds dual objectives: strengthening end-to-end supply chain resilience and accelerating decarbonization. FedEx confirmed it will route at least 35% of its ocean-bound volume through CMA CGM’s LNG-powered vessels by 2027, supporting its corporate target to achieve carbon-neutral operations by 2040.
The two companies jointly developed a digital twin platform to simulate disruption scenarios — including port closures, extreme weather events, and geopolitical incidents — enabling dynamic rerouting and inventory pre-positioning. This capability is already deployed in pilot mode across four U.S. inland distribution hubs and two European fulfillment centers. According to the report, the platform reduced average shipment delay time by 22% during Q1 2024 testing cycles.
Industry context and precedent
This marks the largest known ocean carrier designation deal by a U.S.-based express integrator since UPS signed a $980 million agreement with Hapag-Lloyd in 2022. Unlike previous arrangements focused solely on capacity access, the FedEx–CMA CGM pact includes co-investment in automation upgrades at five shared intermodal facilities, including the Memphis International Airport cargo hub and the Port of Le Havre’s Europort terminal.
Industry analysts note that such vertically integrated partnerships reflect broader shifts among logistics leaders seeking to mitigate volatility in freight rates — which surged 47% year-on-year on the transpacific lane in early 2024 — while meeting tightening ESG compliance requirements across the EU and California. The deal also follows CMA CGM’s acquisition of CEVA Logistics in 2023, which expanded its contract logistics footprint to over 100 countries.
Source: Seatrade Maritime
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










