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Maersk Adds Emergency Fuel Surcharge as Middle East Tensions Squeeze Supply Chain Costs

By MGN Maritime JournalistMarch 26, 2026 at 04:03 PM

A. P. Moller–Maersk is implementing temporary fuel surcharges on Polish intermodal operations, citing unprecedented energy price pressures tied to geopolitical disruption of Hormuz Strait shipping. The move reflects broader strain on maritime logistics as the industry navigates both near-term cost volatility and long-term energy transition.

A. P. Moller–Maersk announced new fuel surcharges on intermodal transportation in Poland, effective March 30, citing a confluence of global energy price spikes amplified by Middle East security developments. The carrier will apply a 12% surcharge on truck transport and 6% on rail container operations (RCO) through at least mid-April, with bi-weekly reviews planned as energy markets remain volatile. The surcharges target the Intermodal Handling and Hauling fees (IHI/IHE) and apply to bookings placed from March 16 onward. According to Maersk's announcement, the escalation reflects the critical role of the Strait of Hormuz—through which approximately 20% of global fuel transits—in an unstable geopolitical environment. The carrier emphasized the measures are necessary "to ensure service continuity, safeguard cargo integrity, and secure sufficient vendor capacity across our network." The Poland move signals broader pressure on European overland and intermodal corridors as fuel availability tightens and logistics vendors demand cost recovery. For shippers, the temporary surcharges add uncertainty to budget forecasting at a moment when supply chain costs are already under pressure from multiple directions: container rates volatile, port congestion variable, and now energy costs spiking without clear end date. **Broader Energy Transition Underway** While Maersk addresses immediate fuel cost shocks, the maritime sector is simultaneously investing in long-term alternatives. The Port of Hamburg this week emphasized its hydrogen transition commitment, announcing the relocation of the Fraunhofer Center for Maritime Logistics and Services (CML) to the ZAL TechCenter and establishing a new Fuel Cell Integration Center (FCIC). The facilities will house the Hanseatic Hydrogen Center for Aviation and Maritime (H2AM), which combines expertise from maritime and aviation research. According to Prof. Dr.-Ing. Carlos Jahn, head of Fraunhofer CML, the co-location with aviation partners at ZAL offers efficiency gains: "Joint hydrogen research drives innovation in shipping and aviation." The center will conduct materials testing under extreme conditions—cryogenic temperatures of liquid hydrogen and altered pressure states—to validate fuel cell reliability in maritime environments, where high humidity, corrosive salt air, and vessel motion impose stresses beyond those faced by land-based systems. Planned facilities including altitude and cryogenic chambers will accelerate validation cycles for technology that remains years from broad commercial deployment. However, the investment reflects the sector's recognition that current fuel cost volatility will persist until maritime propulsion transitions away from petroleum-based fuels. **Market Implications** Shippers routing cargo through European intermodal networks should expect similar temporary surcharges from other carriers in coming weeks, as vendor cost pressures cascade through the supply chain. Maersk's decision to review surcharges bi-weekly rather than locking in fixed rates suggests the carrier expects continued volatility; longer-term stability will likely depend on Middle East developments and global petroleum inventories. For logistics planners, the dual pressures—near-term cost spikes and long-term energy transition infrastructure development—underscore the sector's urgent need to hedge exposure across both timescales. Hamburg's hydrogen research investment offers a pathway to cost relief, but not for years. In the interim, shippers face the reality of geopolitically driven fuel volatility as a permanent feature of maritime logistics economics.
#fuel surcharges#Maersk#intermodal#Middle East#hydrogen#maritime energy transition#supply chain costs#Port of Hamburg#Hormuz Strait

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