According to www.seatrade-maritime.com, container shipping lines are pivoting their newbuilding strategies — with a marked increase in orders for vessels under 7,500 TEU since June 2025, signaling a strategic recalibration toward fleet flexibility and accelerated renewal.
Fleet renewal driven by ageing tonnage and environmental economics
MDS Transmodal data shows that vessels 7,500 TEU and under constitute an ageing segment of the global container fleet. Senior analyst Antonella Teodoro noted that little to no demolition has occurred over the past seven months, reinforcing pressure to replace older units. Newbuilds in this size class may reflect preparations for “accelerated scrappage” in the near to mid-term future, as efficiency gains — especially when factoring in emerging environmental pricing mechanisms — make recycling economically compelling.
The analysis of the older fleet was first published by MDS Transmodal on 2 December last year, and its conclusions remain valid today. According to Teodoro, these smaller vessels offer not only compliance advantages but also lower operational risk profiles amid tightening emissions regulations and rising carbon costs.
Geopolitical uncertainty fuels demand for redeployable capacity
Conflicts in the Black Sea and Middle East, coupled with persistent instability around key chokepoints, have elevated the strategic value of flexible tonnage. As Niels Rasmussen, Chief Shipping Analyst at Bimco, observed:
“Even if the Strait of Hormuz reopens, significant uncertainty will remain and continue to shape market outcomes.”
This uncertainty includes questions about the durability of any US/Iran peace deal following full reopening of the Strait; whether vessels will resume transit through the Suez Canal; and whether the current 10% emergency US import tariffs — set to expire on 23 July — will be reinstated or extended.
Freight intelligence platform Xeneta reported that prior to the February escalation, 99 services operated in the Arabian Gulf, representing 3.2 million TEU of capacity — approximately 10% of the global fleet. Following the 28 February attacks, only 11 services remain active, carrying just 74,000 TEU — underscoring the acute vulnerability of large, fixed-route deployments.
Phased return and risk-mitigated redeployment
Peter Sand, chief analyst at Xeneta, emphasized caution in recovery planning:
“This agreement should be greeted with realism and extreme caution.”
Xeneta outlines a three-phase return: first, evacuation of the 50 vessels still trapped in the Strait of Hormuz and repatriation of seafarers; second, reactivation of feeder and regional services — lower-risk operations that form the foundation for intra-regional trade; and third, cautious reintroduction of mainline Asia–Europe and Asia–North America services.
“Carriers had to act fast when the conflict escalated and the Strait of Hormuz closed in February, but the return will be far more cautious,” Sand said. The fear remains that re-trapping headhaul tonnage could trigger network-wide disruption — making smaller, agile vessels the logical starting point for service restoration.
Strategic balance: scale versus resilience
Teodoro underscored that while ultra-large container ships remain indispensable for core trunk routes, the orderbook shift reflects a broader recognition that competitiveness now hinges on dual capabilities: economies of scale and rapid redeployment. “Smaller and mid-sized vessels provide considerably more deployment options than ultra-large container ships, allowing carriers to adjust service patterns, redesign networks, open new routes and respond more effectively to changes in demand,” she explained.
This recalibration is already visible in ordering patterns. Since June 2025, newbuild commitments have concentrated heavily in sub-7,500 TEU classes — a trend aligned with both impending scrappage waves and the need to serve regional, North–South, and feeder markets more nimbly. As Teodoro concluded: “While large vessels continue to dominate capacity additions, the strong concentration of new orders in smaller vessel classes suggests that carriers are preparing both for increased scrappage of older tonnage and for a market environment in which network adaptability is becoming as important as scale.”
Source: Seatrade Maritime
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










