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Ship Recycling Market Braces for Capacity Crunch as Geopolitical Shifts Reshape Supply Dynamics

By MGN EditorialJune 29, 2026 at 06:00 AM

The ship recycling market is transitioning from a period of tonnage shortage to a potential capacity crunch, with easing Iran sanctions and a possible return to Red Sea transits threatening to compress scrap prices.

## Ship Recycling Market Faces Structural Shift Amid Geopolitical Changes The global ship recycling market is navigating a significant inflection point, moving from a prolonged tonnage shortage toward a looming capacity crunch, according to analysis from Wirana Shipping, as reported by Seatrade Maritime. The anticipated shift is being driven by two converging geopolitical developments: the potential easing of sanctions on Iran and a prospective return to normal shipping transits through the Red Sea. Both factors carry substantial implications for the volume and pricing of scrapping candidates entering the market. ### Red Sea and Iran Sanctions: Twin Pressures on Scrap Values The ongoing Houthi-related disruptions in the Red Sea have, until recently, kept older and less fuel-efficient tonnage in active service, as elevated freight rates and rerouting demand made even marginal vessels commercially viable. A normalisation of Red Sea transits would reduce that demand buffer, potentially releasing a wave of scrapping candidates onto the market simultaneously. Meanwhile, any substantive easing of Iran sanctions could reintroduce Iranian-flagged or Iran-linked tonnage into the broader recycling supply chain, further adding to available volumes at a time when recycling yard capacity — particularly in South Asia — may struggle to absorb the influx efficiently. According to Wirana Shipping, this combination of factors could substantially pressure prices for scrapping candidates, reversing the relative firmness that sellers have enjoyed during the tonnage-scarce period. ### Market Context Ship recycling markets in Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan have experienced volatile conditions over the past two years, shaped by fluctuating steel plate prices, currency pressures, and inconsistent tonnage supply. Recycling yards have at times competed aggressively for available vessels, supporting scrap values. A sudden surge in supply could erode that competitive dynamic and shift negotiating leverage back toward buyers. For shipowners managing ageing fleets, the timing of recycling decisions is becoming increasingly strategic. Those who move early — before a potential supply glut materialises — may secure more favourable returns on end-of-life tonnage. Industry observers will be closely monitoring developments in both the Red Sea security situation and diplomatic progress on Iran sanctions in the coming months, as either development alone could meaningfully alter the recycling market's trajectory. Together, they represent a confluence of risk that market participants would be prudent to factor into fleet planning decisions.
#ship recycling#demolition market#Iran sanctions#Red Sea#scrapping#Wirana Shipping#tonnage supply#recycling yards

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