
Mutares Agrees to Sell inTime to Tawin Holdings Group
Mutares, the German private‑equity firm, has agreed to sell its European time‑critical logistics subsidiary, inTime, to Tawin Holdings Group. inTime provides ultra‑fast, same‑day and next‑hour delivery services across key European hubs. The divestiture aligns with Mutares’ strategy to streamline its portfolio and redeploy capital into higher‑growth sectors. Tawin aims to use the acquisition to expand its footprint in the fast‑growing time‑critical logistics market.

Turkiye Has Modernized 60 Railway Stations in One Year
Turkey’s state railway operator TCDD renovated 60 stations in the past year, blending historic preservation with modern upgrades. The projects included seismic reinforcement at 16 sites and accessibility improvements at seven stations. Overall rail infrastructure has expanded to 13,919 km,...
US-Israel-Iran War: JMIC Data Shows ‘Near-Total Temporary Pause in Routine Commercial Traffic’ Through Strait of Hormuz
JMIC data shows routine commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has virtually stopped, with only two cargo vessels recorded in the past 24 hours versus the usual 138. The pause follows a U.S.–Israel strike on Iran and Iran’s retaliatory...

Why Your Planning Team Needs a BI Layer
Rail planning teams often add new data feeds that become extra log‑ins and reconciliation chores, leaving planners to rebuild spreadsheets for every decision. The article argues that a dedicated business intelligence (BI) layer, placed atop existing asset stores, can turn...

Melbourne Agency’s AI Integration to Deliver $20 Million in Savings for Four Clients
Melbourne‑based Arcadian Digital has signed AI integration projects with four logistics and warehousing clients—Bowens Timber and Hardware, Minus 1, uTenant and Steel Chief—projected to generate more than $20 million in savings over the next 12 months. The agency is delivering bespoke, API‑first middleware...

Next Section of Naples - Bari High-Speed Line Completed
Italian Rail Network (RFI) has placed the 18 km Cancello‑Frasso Telesino‑Dugenta segment of the Naples‑Bari high‑speed line into service, marking the second commissioned stretch after Bovino‑Cervaro. The double‑track section includes a 4 km Monte Aglio tunnel, eight viaducts and the removal of...

Logan & Gold Coast Faster Rail Project Works Underway
The ActivUs consortium—Acciona, CPB Contractors, UGL, SMEC and WSP—has entered the design and construction phase of Queensland’s Logan & Gold Coast Faster Rail project. Jointly funded by the Australian and Queensland governments, the A$5.75 bn initiative will quadruple tracks on the...
WEBINAR: Want to Scale ITS ? Edge AI Can Help
The webinar hosted by ITS International featured OnLogic VP Sheldon Sun and Intel technologist Tony Abuta discussing how edge artificial intelligence can help scale intelligent transportation systems (ITS). They emphasized maximizing existing assets and selecting the right rugged hardware to...

LKW Walter and DP World Launch New Germany-Serbia Intermodal Service
DP World and Austrian carrier LKW Walter have launched a dedicated intermodal rail service linking Novi Sad, Serbia, with the logistics hub of Herne in Germany. The route runs three times weekly, offering faster transit than conventional trucking and cutting carbon...

Unlucky Again? American Airlines Boeing 787 Remains Grounded 1 Month After Madrid Incident
American Airlines’ Boeing 787 Dreamliner was forced to land in Madrid on February 3, 2026 after a nose‑gear failure, then ferried to the carrier’s Tulsa maintenance hub for repairs. The incident follows a spate of recent AA mishaps, including a...

‘Republika Srpska Railways May Not Survive Steel Chain Collapse’
The closure of Bosnia’s New Zenica Steelworks threatens the survival of the Railways of Republika Srpska (RRS), which derives about 60% of its freight revenue from the plant. Earlier bankruptcies at the Lukavac coke plant and the looming collapse of...

Valeo to Showcase In-Cabin Tech at SXSW 2026
Valeo will showcase a suite of in‑cabin and lighting technologies at SXSW 2026, highlighted by the production‑grade Racer gaming system now installed in the Renault Filante. The Racer leverages ADAS sensors to blend real‑world driving data with gameplay, a collaboration with holoride...

Friday Forum: Degrees or Diesel?
Britain’s rail freight sector is celebrating its 200th anniversary by pledging to recruit 2,000 apprentices, signalling a major push to address skills shortages. The industry now competes with road logistics, aviation, ports and tech firms for talent, offering both apprenticeship...

Think the Same Avios Flight Costs the Same via BA, Qatar and Finnair? Think Again
Recent expansion of Avios to Qatar Airways Privilege Club and Finnair Plus means the same award flight can cost very different amounts depending on which platform you use. A Helsinki‑Osaka round‑trip example shows British Airways charging the highest taxes, Qatar...

Bangkok Airways Deepens Regional Connectivity in New Strategic Direction
Bangkok Airways is shifting from its boutique airline image toward a sustainability‑focused strategy that emphasizes regional connectivity, especially through a new secondary hub in Phuket. The carrier has begun decarbonisation by using a 1% Sustainable Aviation Fuel blend on international...

Railway Supply Industry News Round-Up
This week’s railway supply chain updates include a high‑pressure water‑jet paint‑stripping system from BvL Oberflächentechnik that trims axle processing to under 23 minutes, UNIFE’s warning that the EU Industrial Accelerator Act could leave rail manufacturing exposed without strategic‑sector status, Finland’s...

ScotRail Seeks Financing Options for Replacement Suburban Trains
ScotRail has launched a procurement process to identify a financier and owner for a new fleet of electric and battery‑electric multiple‑units slated for delivery in 2031. The tender requires submissions by April 10, with invitations to bid expected on July 17, and...
Energy Insiders Podcast: The Revolution in Electric Trucking
The Energy Insiders podcast released on March 6, 2026 spotlights a seismic shift in Australia’s trucking sector as battery prices plunge. Daniel Bleakley of New Energy Transport explains how lower‑cost batteries are making electric trucks financially viable against diesel. The episode also...

Some Call It The Worst-Looking Chevy Corvette Ever Made, Others Just See An Old C4
The 1995 Chevrolet Corvette Indy 500 pace‑car replica is a rare C4‑based special edition, painted in a bold purple‑white scheme that divides enthusiasts. Only 527 units were built, each featuring official Indy 500 decals and the same 5.7‑liter LT1 V8 as...
RANKED: Top 20 Automakers by Battery Metals Spending
The global passenger EV market grew 18% YoY in 2025, pushing battery capacity deployment past 1 TWh for the first time. Raw‑material costs for lithium, graphite, nickel, cobalt and manganese reached $15.6 billion, an 11% rise over 2024 but still half of...

Royal Caribbean Group Proposes Ship Repair Yard for Panama's Pacific Coast
Royal Caribbean Group has presented Panama’s president with a proposal to build a 400‑meter, 130,000‑ton floating dry dock on the Pacific coast near Puerto Armuelles. The facility, slated for operation by 2031, would service the cruise line’s largest ships and...
Electrifying All Road Freight Between Sydney and Melbourne Is a No Brainer: The Payback Is Less than 4 Years
Electrifying the 900 km Sydney‑Melbourne freight corridor could cut fuel costs by $0.9 billion annually and deliver a payback of two to four years. Battery‑electric 60‑tonne trucks with 450 km+ range and megawatt‑scale chargers already exist, offering quieter, faster, and lower‑maintenance operation. Capital...

Video of the Week: Asia Pacific’s Talent Test - Staffing Growth in a Constrained Labour Market
Asia‑Pacific airlines face a decade‑long talent crunch as passenger traffic surges, requiring over 400,000 additional aviation professionals by the mid‑2030s. The shortage spans pilots, engineers, cabin crew and digital specialists, creating a structural mismatch between demand and supply. Recruitment struggles...

How Iran Defied Sanctions To Build A Secret Boeing Fleet
Iran has built a clandestine fleet of roughly 60 Boeing and Airbus jets by exploiting shell companies, forged documents, and mid‑flight diversions that skirt international export controls. The network sources used parts through a global broker chain, reverse‑engineers components, and...

The Ritz-Carlton’s 794-Foot Cruise Ship Is Heading to Alaska in 2027
The Ritz‑Carlton Yacht Collection will debut its 794‑foot Luminara in Alaska for the 2027 season, adding 15 Alaska voyages, four Pacific itineraries, and two trans‑continental routes. The ship, launched in July 2025, features 226 suites with private terraces, a Ritz‑Carlton...
Construction of Dual Gauge Railway Line From Bogra to Sirajganj
The Government of Bangladesh, backed by AIIB and NDB financing, is launching an 85 km dual‑gauge railway line from Bogura to Sirajganj, shortening the Bogura‑Dhaka corridor by more than 110 km and cutting travel time by 3‑4 hours. Procurement will follow AIIB’s policy...
Asian Development Bank Giving Central Asia Lots of Attention
The Asian Development Bank announced a $5.4 billion financing plan for Kazakhstan, a $1.1 billion package for Tajikistan, and a $2.5 billion commitment to Azerbaijan, all aimed at strengthening the Middle Corridor trade route. The bank also launched a technical assistance program to...

Cobots Take on Grueling Work
Fairbanks Morse Defense is using collaborative robots, or cobots, to weld aging diesel engines in U.S. nuclear‑navy shipyards, shrinking repair cycles from three weeks to one. Australian OEM Orbimax highlights cobots' lower speed and built‑in safety, allowing workers to operate...

The World's First 9-Speed Automatic Transmission Was Plagued With Problems
The ZF 9HP nine‑speed automatic, launched in early 2013, promised unprecedented fuel‑efficiency and smooth performance by packing nine gears into a compact housing. Within months, owners reported delayed shifts, harsh gear changes, and mechanical failures such as faulty wiring harnesses...

Barkley Regional Airport Launches Fly Barkley Pledge to Strengthen Local Air Service, Boost Regional Economy, and Enhance Access to Global...
Barkley Regional Airport in Paducah, Kentucky launched the Fly Barkley Pledge, urging residents and businesses to prioritize the airport for travel. The airport now offers daily nonstop flights to Chicago O’Hare and Houston George Bush Intercontinental, linking passengers to United’s network of...

Kuala Lumpur–Wuhan Air Link Returns As AirAsia Schedules Four Weekly Flights
AirAsia announced the reinstatement of its Kuala Lumpur‑Wuhan service, slated to begin on 22 May 2026. The carrier will operate four weekly flights using Airbus A320neo aircraft, reviving a route that was suspended in 2020. The connection links Malaysia’s capital...

Fincantieri Delivers Norwegian Luna, Ushering in a New Era for the Expanding Prima Plus Class Fleet with Unmatched Luxury and...
Fincantieri has delivered Norwegian Luna, the second vessel of the Prima Plus class for Norwegian Cruise Line. The 156,000‑gt, 321‑metre ship is about 10 % larger than the original Prima ships and can accommodate over 3,550 guests. Luna blends expanded luxury spaces...

Thousands Of Passengers Suffer In Asia As Thailand, China, India, Türkiye, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, And UAE Cancel 1,222 And Delay...
A massive operational disruption swept across major Asian aviation hubs on March 5, 2026, affecting more than 3,300 flights. Airlines in the United Arab Emirates, India, Indonesia, Thailand, China, Türkiye and Sri Lanka reported a combined 1,222 cancellations and 2,124...

Travel Turmoil at Barcelona International Airport as Emirates, Qatar Airways, El Al, Blue Bird, and Etihad Cancel 21 Flights and...
Travel turmoil at Barcelona‑El Prat saw 21 flights cancelled and more than 300 delayed, involving Emirates, Qatar Airways, El Al, Blue Bird and Etihad. The disruptions affected major international routes to Dubai, Doha, Tel Aviv and Abu Dhabi, stranding thousands of passengers....

12 Popular Cars That Weren't Meant To Be Full Models, At First
The article examines twelve cars that began as trim levels or sub‑models before graduating to full‑blown model lines, including the Toyota Supra, Pontiac GTO, and Subaru Outback. It traces each vehicle’s origins, highlighting how marketing decisions, pop‑culture influence, and motorsport...

This Rare Ultra-Low-Mileage Aston Martin Lagonda Taraf Is up for Auction
A 2017 Aston Martin Lagonda Taraf, one of only 120 ever built, is slated for auction at the 2026 Amelia Concours. The hand‑built V‑12 supersedan has under 500 miles on the clock, making it effectively new. Originally priced around $1 million and sold to...

Warehouses Lack Agility—And Are Paying the Price
Recent Lucas Systems research of 114 U.S. supply‑chain executives reveals that 51% of warehouses consider their automation systems unprepared for unforeseen disruptions, while 77% admit that at least half of their hardware or software is too rigid. The lack of...
TPM26: War a Problem for Container Shipping, but Not ‘Pandemic-Scale’: Analyst
Analyst Lars Jensen told the TPM 26 conference that the Middle‑East war, which has shut the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz, poses a problem for container shipping but falls short of pandemic‑scale disruption. He emphasized that while the conflict will...

AI, Analytics, and Automation: The New Currents in Maritime Operations
Maritime operations are shifting from paper‑based, manual processes to integrated, data‑driven platforms powered by AI, analytics, and automation. The global maritime digitization market, valued at $176 billion in 2023, is projected to more than double to $361 billion by 2030, driven by...
GTT Receives Samsung Heavy Industries Order for LNG Carrier Tank Design
GTT announced that Samsung Heavy Industries has placed an order for the design of a new LNG carrier’s cryogenic tanks in Q1 2026. The vessel will carry 180,000 m³ of LNG and will use GTT’s Mark III Flex membrane containment system. Delivery of the...
Antalya Selected to Host Routes Europe 2027
Antalya was announced at ITB Berlin on March 4 2026 as the host city for Routes Europe 2027, the 20th edition of the continent‑wide aviation summit. The event will be staged at Fraport TAV Antalya Airport, which completed a €865 million expansion in April 2025, boosting...
Panel’s Message: In Order to Survive Tough Trucking Market, Don’t Overlook Data
At the TCA annual convention, mid‑size carrier executives emphasized that data and benchmarking are essential to survive the current freight recession. They praised the TCA Profitability Program (TPP) for delivering granular cost insights, from lumper payments to driver‑level profit statements....

Skyryse Plans ‘Universal’ Autoland for Helicopters, Airplanes
Aviation automation firm Skyryse announced a universal emergency autoland capability for both helicopters and airplanes, integrated into its SkyOS flight operating system. The feature leverages SkyOS’s fly‑by‑wire architecture and onboard sensors to autonomously manage approach, descent, and touchdown after a...

Windward Daily Brief March 5: Conflict Reaches Indian Ocean as Hormuz Remains Shut
The Strait of Hormuz remained effectively shut on March 4, with only five vessels recorded, while traffic through Bab el‑Mandeb surged to 23 crossings, outpacing recent averages. Suez Canal activity fell to 23 transits, below trend levels, and diversions around the...

The Simple Flying Podcast Episode 282: Iran Aviation Crisis, United Airlines Boeing 787 Emergency At LAX
Episode 282 of the Simple Flying Podcast, hosted by Tom Boon and Channing Reid, reviews the week’s top aviation stories. The discussion covers the escalating Iran aviation crisis, United Airlines’ emergency Boeing 787‑9 ground stop at LAX, and Airbus’s A380 test‑bed...
Not Going, Bananas: Ramzan Ripe Time for Most-Exported Fruit but Iran War a Spoiler
India’s banana exports, worth roughly ₹3,500 crore annually, are being hit by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The blockage has stranded 1,500–2,000 containers, valued at up to ₹200 crore, just as Maharashtra ramps up shipments for Ramzan demand across the...
Middle East War Disrupts U.S. B2B Ecommerce Supply Chains
Escalating conflict between Iran, Israel and the United States is disrupting key air and maritime corridors in the Persian Gulf, notably the Strait of Hormuz. The disruptions are lengthening transit times, raising freight costs, and forcing carriers like DHL to...

'Not Dead': Subaru Exec Says There's Lots Going On Behind The Scenes At The Performance Brand
Subaru’s performance division, STI, is confirmed alive as Australian GM Scott Lawrence told Drive the brand isn’t dead and hinted at a new model in development. Recent concept unveilings, including the electric Performance‑E and the more production‑ready Performance‑B, have sparked...

Bridge Collapse Disrupts DRC’s Key Copper Export Route
Severe flooding caused a bridge collapse near the Kasumbalesa border crossing, halting the main copper export corridor between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia. The blockage stopped trucks carrying copper and cobalt, threatening the flow of these critical minerals...

Seafarers Maintain the Right to Refuse to Sail Through Mideast Gulf Region
Seafarers can now refuse to sail through the Middle East Gulf after the threat level was raised to its highest, according to the International Transport Workers’ Federation and the International Bargaining Forum. The agreement allows crew to decline voyages in...