According to The Loadstar, escalating geopolitical tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have triggered a 42% vessel rerouting rate among container carriers, driven by projectile attacks on commercial vessels and heightened insurance premiums.
Strait of Hormuz disruption reshapes global routing
The Strait of Hormuz — through which 21 million barrels per day of oil and 30% of global seaborne crude transit — has become a flashpoint for supply chain volatility in Week 28 of 2026. Following the 2 July 2026 projectile strike on HMM’s Namu, a Malta-flagged boxship operating on the India-Europe corridor, multiple carriers including CMA CGM, Hapag-Lloyd, and Maersk implemented emergency diversions via the Cape of Good Hope. According to the report, this rerouting pushed average transit times from 18 days to 32 days for Asia–Europe services, directly contributing to schedule reliability falling to 58% across major alliances in June 2026.
New surcharges and regulatory shifts
In response to elevated war-risk premiums and operational uncertainty, at least five major lines introduced new emergency surcharges effective 29 June 2026. CMA CGM and Hapag-Lloyd each launched a $350 per TEU ‘Hormuz Security Surcharge’, while Yang Ming added a $275 per TEU transshipment risk fee for all calls at Jebel Ali and Khor Fakkan. The source states that these fees are expected to remain in place through Q3 2026 unless IMO-led maritime security coordination improves.
Air freight adaptation and forwarder guidance
BoxC chief sales officer Craig Strickland emphasized practical compliance implications during the podcast, noting that EU importers now face revised low-value consignment relief (LVCR) thresholds effective 1 July 2026: “All goods valued above €150 must undergo full customs declaration — no more blanket VAT exemptions,” he said. He also flagged IATA’s Direct Air Waybill (e-AWB) mandate, requiring 100% electronic documentation for air cargo shipments into the EU starting 1 October 2026. According to the report, freight forwarders who fail to comply risk shipment holds and €2,500 per-violation penalties.
Carrier strategies and market conditions
The Loadstar’s Gavin van Marle highlighted how carriers are shifting toward hub-and-spoke models to offset congestion: DSV announced an ASX-listed partnership with UPS to co-develop transshipment hubs in Dubai and Khor Fakkan, with capital commitments totaling $480 million over three years. Meanwhile, DHL launched a new daily air service between Shanghai and Frankfurt on 12 July 2026, citing “persistent ocean capacity constraints” as justification. DHL also upgraded its full-year 2026 guidance, projecting 7.2% revenue growth in air logistics — up from its prior forecast of 5.8%.
Source: The Loadstar
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










