Explore

  • Trending
  • Latest
  • Tools
  • Browse
  • Subscription Feed

Logistics

  • Ocean
  • Air Cargo
  • Road & Rail
  • Warehousing
  • Last Mile

Regions

  • Southeast Asia
  • North America
  • Middle East
  • Europe
  • South Asia
  • Latin America
  • Africa
  • Japan & Korea
SCI.AI
  • Supply Chain
    • Strategy & Planning
    • Logistics & Transport
    • Manufacturing
    • Inventory & Fulfillment
  • Procurement
    • Strategic Sourcing
    • Supplier Management
    • Supply Chain Finance
  • Technology
    • AI & Automation
    • Robotics
    • Digital Platforms
  • Risk & Resilience
  • Sustainability
  • Research
  • English
    • Chinese
    • English
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
SCI.AI
No Result
View All Result
Home Risk & Resilience Disruptions

Hapag-Lloyd War Costs: $40-50M/Week Amid Gulf Gridlock

2026/03/29
in Disruptions, Risk & Resilience
0 0
Hapag-Lloyd War Costs: $40-50M/Week Amid Gulf Gridlock

According to www.freightwaves.com, the U.S.-led military conflict in Iran is costing Hapag-Lloyd $40 million to $50 million per week, driven by surging fuel, insurance, storage, and inland transportation expenses.

Operational Disruption Deepens

The world’s fifth-largest container line has six ships trapped in the Persian Gulf, with a combined capacity of 25,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs). These are feeder-sized vessels typically used for short-haul port-to-port shuttles. Due to Iranian restrictions on maritime transit through the Strait of Hormuz, Hapag-Lloyd cannot call ports inside the Gulf — though it continues serving Salalah in Oman and Jeddah in Saudi Arabia.

CEO Rolf Habben Jansen confirmed on an earnings call that approximately 50% of the carrier’s contract freight to the region faces disruption. The company has suspended services not only through Hormuz but also via the Red Sea–Suez Canal corridor, where Houthi militia in Yemen have threatened renewed attacks in support of Iran.

Financial and Strategic Impact

Hapag-Lloyd reported operating profit declined to $3.5 billion from $4.9 billion in 2025, citing elevated costs and excess global container shipping capacity. To offset mounting expenditures, the German carrier introduced contingency and emergency surcharges — though Habben Jansen noted recovery is typically delayed.

“Costs are increasing sharply. If we look at the impact that this has on us, then we talk easily about $40 million or $50 million per week that we are facing at this point in time,” said Hapag-Lloyd CEO Rolf Habben Jansen, on an earnings call, “mainly related to bunker [fuel], but also insurance costs are up significantly and so are costs related to storage and in some cases also inland transportation.”

The company is actively monitoring potential fuel supply constraints, especially as volatility threatens bunkering availability. While Asia is not one of Hapag-Lloyd’s primary refueling hubs, Habben Jansen emphasized it remains “something to keep an eye on” amid broader regional instability.

Realistic Outlook for Key Trade Corridors

Regarding the Red Sea route, Habben Jansen stated: “I think right now it would not have been right to assume that the Red Sea opens up soon.” He assessed the scenario of continued closure through 2026 as “the most realistic” — a view aligned with recent operational adjustments by Maersk, MSC, and CMA CGM, all of which have maintained rerouted Cape of Good Hope sailings since late 2023. Public filings and shipping industry reports confirm that over 70% of container vessel transits between Asia and Europe remain diverted around Africa, adding 10–14 days to voyage times and increasing fuel consumption by 25–35%.

Supply Chain Implications and Risk Mitigation

For supply chain professionals, these developments mean sustained pressure on landed cost modeling, longer lead times for Middle East–bound cargo, and heightened exposure for contracts tied to Gulf and Red Sea ports. Emergency surcharges are now standard across major carriers — not temporary anomalies — and require proactive clause review in procurement and logistics agreements. Visibility tools must integrate real-time geopolitical risk feeds, and dual-sourcing strategies for Gulf-based distribution centers are no longer optional but operationally urgent.

This article was AI-assisted and reviewed by the SCI.AI editorial team before publication.

Source: FreightWaves

More on This Topic

  • China Launches Trade Probes Against US Ahead of Xi-Trump Summit (Mar 29, 2026)
  • Iran War Costs Hapag-Lloyd $40-50 Million Weekly: Supply Chain Disruption Risks Intensify (Mar 29, 2026)
  • Iran War Costs Hapag-Lloyd $40–50M/Week: 6 Ships Stuck (Mar 28, 2026)
  • Middle East Logistics Disruption: 75% of US Forwarders Report Operational Crisis (Mar 26, 2026)
  • Tariff Volatility Drives 2026 Supply Chain Regionalization (Mar 26, 2026)

Related Posts

Nearshoring Infrastructure Gap: LATAM Needs 3–5% GDP Annually
Geopolitics

Nearshoring Infrastructure Gap: LATAM Needs 3–5% GDP Annually

March 29, 2026
0
Reshoring Talent Gap: 2026 Supply Chain Hiring Crisis
Logistics & Transport

Reshoring Talent Gap: 2026 Supply Chain Hiring Crisis

March 29, 2026
4
Qatar LNG Crisis Threatens Semiconductor & Steel Supply Chains
Geopolitics

Qatar LNG Crisis Threatens Semiconductor & Steel Supply Chains

March 29, 2026
0
China Launches Trade Probes Against US Ahead of Xi-Trump Summit
Geopolitics

China Launches Trade Probes Against US Ahead of Xi-Trump Summit

March 29, 2026
1
Iran War Costs Hapag-Lloyd $40-50 Million Weekly: Supply Chain Disruption Risks Intensify
Disruptions

Iran War Costs Hapag-Lloyd $40-50 Million Weekly: Supply Chain Disruption Risks Intensify

March 29, 2026
1
Qatar LNG Crisis Disrupts Helium Supply: 65% Korea Dependence
Geopolitics

Qatar LNG Crisis Disrupts Helium Supply: 65% Korea Dependence

March 29, 2026
1

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

DHL概述了其2030年的雄心 | Ti Insight

DHL Outlines Its Ambitions for 2030

4 Views
February 16, 2026
The Hidden Anchors: Why U.S. Reshoring Fails Without Decoupling Internal Value Chains from China

The Hidden Anchors: Why U.S. Reshoring Fails Without Decoupling Internal Value Chains from China

2 Views
March 17, 2026
Physical AI Breaks Warehouse Automation Barriers: RyderVentures Bets on Flexible Hardware Revolution in 2026

Physical AI Breaks Warehouse Automation Barriers: RyderVentures Bets on Flexible Hardware Revolution in 2026

3 Views
March 17, 2026
The €2 Small Parcel Tax: How France’s 2026 Levy Will Reshape Global Cross-Border Logistics

The €2 Small Parcel Tax: How France’s 2026 Levy Will Reshape Global Cross-Border Logistics

5 Views
March 1, 2026
Show More

SCI.AI

Global Supply Chain Intelligence. Delivering real-time news, analysis, and insights for supply chain professionals worldwide.

Categories

  • Supply Chain Management
  • Procurement
  • Technology

 

  • Risk & Resilience
  • Sustainability
  • Research

© 2026 SCI.AI. All rights reserved.

Powered by SCI.AI Intelligence Platform

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Facebook
Sign Up with Google
Sign Up with Linked In
OR

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Supply Chain
    • Strategy & Planning
    • Logistics & Transport
    • Manufacturing
    • Inventory & Fulfillment
  • Procurement
    • Strategic Sourcing
    • Supplier Management
    • Supply Chain Finance
  • Technology
    • AI & Automation
    • Robotics
    • Digital Platforms
  • Risk & Resilience
  • Sustainability
  • Research
  • English
    • Chinese
    • English
  • Login
  • Sign Up

© 2026 SCI.AI