Sunday, May 17, 2026
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USS Gerald R Ford returning to Virginia

USS Gerald R. Ford and Strike Group Arrive Home Ending Record Deployment

Published May 16, 2026 3:10 PM by The Maritime Executive

USS Gerald R. Ford and her strike group returned to base, completing a record deployment and the first combat action for the Navy’s newest carrier. The ship, which had deployed on June 24, 2025, for what was expected to be a routine mission to participate with NATO on exercises and visit the Mediterranean and Northern Europe, instead found herself involved first in the actions around Venezuela and then returned to the Mediterranean and Red Sea for the commencement of the...

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US nuclear submarine in Gibraltar

British and American Nuclear Submarines Appear in Gibraltar

Published May 16, 2026 12:25 PM by The Maritime Executive

Two nuclear submarines have made surprise appearances in Gibraltar. The Royal Navy’s HMS Anson arrived in Gibraltar days after an American nuclear submarine that was thought to be USS Alaska made a brief stop in the British overseas territory. The Royal Navy’s Astute Class nuclear attack submarine HMS Anson (S124), which left Faslane on January 10 for an extended duration deployment to HMAS Stirling in Western Australia, was seen docking back in Gibraltar on May 14. After its outward journey,...

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USCG icebreaker Storis

USCG Storis Completes Winter Bering Sea Deployment as Commissioning Proceed

Published May 15, 2026 7:22 PM by The Maritime Executive

The U.S. Coast Guard is highlighting that its newest polar icebreaker, USCG Storis, completed a grueling 36-day deployment to the Bering Sea during harsh winter conditions as the crew training and commissioning of the vessel continue. She returned to her homeport in Seattle on May 11 Commissioned in 2025, Storis is the first polar icebreaker added to the Coast Guard in more than two decades. Originally built for commercial operations, Storis is a 360-foot medium icebreaker with a displacement of...

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sails on LNG carrier

First Installation of Solid Wind Sails on an LNG Carrier

Published May 15, 2026 7:10 PM by The Maritime Executive

Pictures recently appeared showing the first-ever installation of solid wind sails on an LNG carrier. Hanwha Ocean highlighted the vessel, which is nearing construction at its shipyard in South Korea, as part of a project for Japanese shipping company Mitsui O.S.K. Lines. MOL, working with Japanese shipbuilder Oshima Shipbuilding Company, commercialized the designs for a telescopic sail made of fiber-reinforced plastic and installed the first one on a coal carrier, which entered service in October 2022. It has continued to...

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Offshore

offshore wind farm

UK Approves Three Offshore Wind Farms as it Looks to Next Allocation Round

The UK continues to push forward with its focus on renewable energy, with the Energy Secretary Ed Miliband announcing the approval of three projects, two of which have already completed electricity contracts and are likely to move forward quickly. It comes as the Crown Estate released a new report saying the UK has reached 19 percent of its energy generation coming from offshore wind energy and a total of 30 percent coming from a combination of onshore and offshore wind...

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Shipbuilding

sails on LNG carrier

First Installation of Solid Wind Sails on an LNG Carrier

Pictures recently appeared showing the first-ever installation of solid wind sails on an LNG carrier. Hanwha Ocean highlighted the vessel, which is nearing construction at its shipyard in South Korea, as part of a project for Japanese shipping company Mitsui O.S.K. Lines. MOL, working with Japanese shipbuilder Oshima Shipbuilding Company, commercialized the designs for a telescopic sail made of fiber-reinforced plastic and installed the first one on a coal carrier, which entered service in October 2022. It has continued to...

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Environment

A giant guitarfish is among the species being caught by bottom trawling. (Sarah Foster)

Op-Ed: Bottom Trawl Operators Need to Prove That They Are Sustainable

[By Sarah Foster and Amanda Vincent] Bottom trawlers extract one-quarter of the world’s fisheries catches by weight and raise significant ecological, economic and social concerns. Given that, you’d think there would be an answer to basic questions in fisheries: how many fish species are being caught, and what are they? In reality, though, bottom trawling is often proceeding blindly. Bottom trawling is widespread and problematic. Gears operate by dragging large weighted nets across the ocean floor (some as wide as...

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Business

shipyard

Global Maritime Firms Prioritize Expansion in West Africa

Rerouting of global trade around the Cape of Good Hope has presented growth opportunities for some regions in Africa. Particularly, West Africa has greatly benefited from the diversion of the shipping traffic, with major maritime companies expanding their presence in the region. The longer voyage around the Cape of Good Hope has spiked demand for bunker fuels at emerging supply points in Africa. In addition, demand for ship repair services is also rising, an opportunity that West African countries appear...

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