Global container shipping major CMA CGM has upgraded its PEARL service to provide a direct ocean connection between key Indian ports and major gateways on the United States West Coast — a development that is expected to significantly improve trade efficiency on one of the world’s fastest-growing bilateral trade corridors.
The enhanced service will route vessels through select Chinese ports before making calls at Indian and US West Coast ports, creating a more streamlined loop that reduces the dependence of Indian shippers on transshipment hubs such as Colombo, Singapore, and Port Klang. By eliminating an additional transshipment leg, the service is expected to cut transit times and lower overall logistics costs for Indian exporters and importers.
Who Stands to Benefit
The upgrade is particularly significant for exporters of time-sensitive cargo categories including ready-made garments, engineering goods, pharmaceuticals, and perishable agricultural produce — all sectors where delivery predictability and transit speed are critical competitive factors in the US market. Importers, too, are expected to benefit from more reliable arrival schedules, which are crucial for inventory management and just-in-time supply chain operations.
India’s bilateral trade with the United States has grown rapidly in recent years, with the US now among India’s largest export destinations. The absence of reliable direct container services between Indian ports and the US West Coast has historically forced shippers to rely on multi-leg itineraries that added cost and uncertainty.
Reducing Transshipment Dependency
The shift away from transshipment hubs is a recurring theme in India’s port and shipping strategy. The Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways has long identified transshipment dependency as a structural weakness in India’s maritime trade competitiveness, and direct service upgrades by major carriers like CMA CGM represent market-driven progress toward addressing it.
The timing of the PEARL service upgrade is also notable given the ongoing disruptions to global shipping routes caused by the Strait of Hormuz crisis. While the India–US West Coast route is not directly affected by the Hormuz closure, the broader environment of supply chain uncertainty is driving shippers to seek more stable and predictable routing options — a need that direct services are well placed to address.
Strengthening India–US Supply Chains
CMA CGM’s move is likely to attract attention from other major carriers assessing the potential of direct India–US services. With India positioning itself as a global manufacturing hub and a preferred alternative to China for several product categories, demand for reliable direct shipping connectivity with North America is expected to grow steadily in the coming years. The PEARL service upgrade represents a concrete step in building the shipping infrastructure to support that growth.







