According to container-news.com, Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) has announced revised Freight All Kinds (FAK) rates for containerized shipments from South Asia to Europe, effective 15 July 2026 and valid until 31 July 2026.
Rate Adjustments by Origin Port
MSC’s new rate structure applies to exports from Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. For shipments originating in Colombo, the carrier set rates at US$2,550 per 20DV and US$2,850 per 40DV/HC for destinations including Antwerp and Valencia. From Chattogram, the corresponding charges are US$2,550 per 20DV and US$3,350 per 40DV/HC.
For Indian ports, MSC introduced higher tiers: shipments from Nhava Sheva and Port Qasim to Antwerp are priced at US$4,150 per container; those from Ennore and Kolkata carry rates of US$4,350 and US$4,450, respectively. To Valencia, rates range from US$4,250 to US$4,550, varying by port of loading.
Included and Excluded Surcharges
The published FAK rates incorporate base ocean freight, contingency adjustment charge, piracy risk surcharge, and emission control area charges. However, several additional fees apply separately depending on origin and destination. These include bunker recovery charge, EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) levy, FuelEU Maritime surcharge, emergency fuel surcharge, terminal handling charges, and security-related fees.
This layered surcharge model reflects ongoing cost volatility across regulatory, environmental, and security domains — a pattern increasingly common among major carriers serving high-risk or environmentally regulated corridors such as the Red Sea and North Sea routes.
Operational Context and Market Implications
The timing coincides with sustained capacity constraints following the Red Sea rerouting crisis and tightening EU decarbonization mandates. According to the report, MSC’s move aligns with recent actions by other global carriers: Hapag-Lloyd recently announced a General Rate Increase (GRI) for shipments from the Indian Subcontinent and Pakistan to North America, while COSCO SHIPPING Ports-led consortium secured a terminal concession at the port of Tarragona in Spain — signaling continued infrastructure investment amid shifting trade flows.
For supply chain professionals, these revisions mean tighter budgeting windows and heightened need for real-time rate benchmarking. The 31 July 2026 expiry date implies a likely reassessment cycle tied to summer peak season demand and Q3 2026 regulatory developments under FuelEU and ETS frameworks. Shippers sourcing from Kolkata now face the highest published rate in the region — US$4,450 per 40ft container to Antwerp — underscoring port-specific cost differentials that influence inland logistics planning and multimodal routing decisions.
Source: container-news.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










