According to www.scangl.com, the 2026 logistics and supply chain landscape is expected to mirror the volatility experienced in 2025 — though with shifting drivers and headlines.
Ongoing Geopolitical Pressures
The source states that multiple active conflicts and diplomatic developments continue to shape global freight flows. These include Ukrainian naval drone strikes on two Russian oil tankers in the Black Sea [1]; intensified rhetoric from NATO leadership warning that allies are Russia’s next target [3]; and ongoing peace talks in Berlin following the Ukraine war [4]. In parallel, ceasefire-related developments in Gaza — including the return of bodies — signal continued instability in the Eastern Mediterranean [11].
Suez Canal: Return Uncertain, Risks Remain
The Suez Canal Authority announced a formal update on 25 November 2025 regarding operations [12], yet Maersk has publicly dampened expectations about container lines’ early return to the canal [13]. Industry analysts warn that a sudden, large-scale reversion of container traffic to the Suez route could introduce new operational pressures on terminals and vessel scheduling [15][16]. This uncertainty coincides with broader port disruptions, including national strike action at the Port of Antwerp-Bruges between 24–26 November 2025 [18].
Fleet Expansion and Capacity Shifts
The source notes major carrier investment activity: COSCO Shipping signed a $7 billion deal for fleet expansion [5]. Concurrently, several container line announcements — reported by ShippingWatch — indicate strategic capacity adjustments across Asia-Europe and intra-European services [6][7][8][9][10]. These moves reflect efforts to rebalance network resilience amid persistent Red Sea diversions and evolving demand patterns.
Practitioner Implications
For global supply chain professionals, this environment demands heightened scenario planning around routing flexibility, carrier diversification, and real-time port congestion monitoring. The convergence of geopolitical flashpoints — from the Black Sea to the Suez and Gaza — means single-source dependencies carry elevated risk. As noted in industry reporting, even modest shifts in canal usage can ripple through inland rail, trucking, and warehousing networks. Professionals should prioritize visibility tools integrated with dynamic regulatory and incident data feeds, particularly for EU, US/LATAM, and Asia port terminals referenced in the source.
Source: www.scangl.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










