Wednesday, July 01, 2026
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containership aground near Hormuz

Iran Exploits Containership Grounding to Assert Hormuz Control

Published Jul 1, 2026 10:21 AM by The Maritime Executive

Iranian state media released a video and is reporting that a containership went aground because it was operating outside its designated shipping lane in the Strait of Hormuz. The IRGC, however, appears to be exploiting an incident involving a shadowy vessel that was operating on an Iranian coastal route. The state media report only identified the vessel as “foreign” and said it had gone aground on July 1. It asserted the ship was “bypassing” the Strait of Hormuz outside the...

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Iridium

Rocket Lab to Buy Iridium for $8 Billion

Published Jun 30, 2026 11:00 PM by The Maritime Executive

Iridium, the high-uptime LEO satcom operator, will soon be acquired by launch services company Rocket Lab, the two firms announced Monday. The $8 billion deal will create a vertically integrated rocket-plus-satcom company, comparable in structure to the core businesses of SpaceX/Starlink. Rocket Lab plans to pay each Iridium shareholder $27 per share in cash, plus new shares of Rocket Lab to bring the total near to about $54 per share. The deal should close in mid-2027, once shareholder approvals are...

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USS Boxer and USS Portland in Indian Ocean

Report: White House Still Looking at Alternatives to Iran Peace Deal

Published Jun 30, 2026 10:52 PM by The Maritime Executive

Amidst fitful talks with Iran on formalizing an MOU on the end of the multimonth conflict, the Trump administration is still considering options other than a negotiated solution, according to the Wall Street Journal. The president is said to be contemplating whether to return to war with Iran with greater intensity with a new round of strikes. For now, he favors diplomacy, and is willing to extend the ceasefire out past the current August 18 endpoint if needed. The pause...

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File image: Jones Act tanker Lone Star State (Press handout courtesy NASSCO)

Study: Jones Act Waivers Had No Effect on Military Operations

Published Jun 30, 2026 8:34 PM by The Maritime Executive

The Trump administration's controversial 150-day waiver of the Jones Act had no impact on military operations and could have been served by existing American vessels, according to a new study from the consultancy Navigistics. 78 foreign-flag voyages between U.S. ports occurred between the start of the program and June 1, the latest available date of MARAD reporting. According to Navigistics, none of these voyages carried products compatible with U.S. military requirements, suggesting that only commercial products were moved. While the...

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Offshore

China floating wind platform and 16 MW turbine

China Deploys First 16MW Floating Offshore Wind Tension-Leg Platform

China continues its developments, placing it at the forefront of the offshore wind energy sector. In the latest development, officials reported deploying the largest tension-leg floating offshore wind platform designed to hold a 16 MW turbine. The platform was assembled at the Gaolan Port in Zhuhai, south China, and departed on June 28 for its deployment in the South China Sea. The structure stands more than 307 meters (1,007 feet) and weighs almost 8,000 tonnes. It is the largest of...

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Shipbuilding

South Korean shipbuilder

Gunsan Shipyard to Restart Shipbuilding After Nine Years

Plans to fully relaunch the long-dormant Gunsan Shipyard in South Korea got a boost as the company signed a letter of intent to build its first ships in nine years. The contract was announced concurrently with the closing of the acquisition of the yard by an investment group from HD Hyundai. The yard had fallen victim to a downturn in the shipbuilding industry nearly a decade ago and never achieved its full potential as an expansion for Hyundai’s shipbuilding operations....

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Environment

hydrogen-powered short-sea dry bulk carrier concept

Norway Accelerates Hydrogen-Power Bulker Project for Shortsea Shipping

Norway’s LH2 Shipping reports it is accelerating the development of hydrogen-powered shortsea shipping bulkers for the Baltic with an additional grant from the Norwegian government program to accelerate the green energy transition. The company will add a fifth and sixth bulker to its plan, saying that increased support reflects the growing momentum for liquid hydrogen as a viable alternative fuel for shortsea shipping. The company was awarded an additional grant of approximately $35.82 million from Enova, which it says will...

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Business

Brittany Ferries

Ferry Operator Cites EU ETS and Taxes in Plan to Sell Vessels, Stop Routes

After more than 50 years of service for cargo and passengers between France and the UK, Brittany Ferries reports it must adapt and reallocate resources. The company reports it is facing large bills in 2026, coming in part from the European Union’s Emission Trading System, as well as a rising tax burden, and repayments of COVID loans. The EU Emissions Trading System was extended to the maritime transport sector on January 1, 2024. It currently stands at 70 percent of...

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