Global shipping disruptions persist into 2026

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International container shipping faces ongoing challenges in early 2026, with carriers rerouting via the Cape of Good Hope, new EU emissions costs, and port congestion driving up freight rates and transit times worldwide. Shipping lines control vessel schedules, port calls, and container loading, often rolling shipments to later sailings or imposing short-notice fuel and congestion surcharges that inflate final costs beyond initial quotes.

​From January 1, the EU Emissions Trading System’s expanded phase has raised costs for voyages touching EU ports by several hundred USD per container, compounded by frequent fuel hikes averaging $350 per unit and currency fluctuations in USD or EUR pricing.

​Regionally, Australia and New Zealand shipments endure extended Cape routings from Suez avoidance, with Asian hub congestion causing repeated rollovers that demand generous timing buffers. North America sees tighter space on Southampton-centric services, higher rates, and new Low Water Surcharges on St. Lawrence routes to Canada, alongside potential booking cancellations. Asia and Middle East moves face standard Cape detours and full sailings skipping ports, necessitating early bookings, while Africa services hold steady at major ports but drop remote routes reliant on weak inland links. Latin America remains reliable ocean-wise, though destination customs delays often trigger excess storage fees.

​Regulatory hurdles add friction: EU ICS2 demands detailed sender data for transiting containers, UK waste inspections risk customer-borne demurrage, and stricter checks reject subpar containers or undeclared hazards like lithium batteries in e-bikes, potentially leading to fines or disposal. Fridges and freezers require proper hazardous declarations to avoid penalties.

​To navigate this, experts urge early booking, date flexibility, and full disclosure of special items, treating quoted times as estimates amid carrier-driven variables. For Indian logistics players eyeing exports, these trends signal higher costs on key lanes like Europe, Americas, and Oceania, underscoring the need for agile supply chains.

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One Ocean Maritime Media Private Limited
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