
Airspace U Suite: Redefining Accessible Air Travel for Everyone
Airbus unveiled the Airspace U Suite, a cabin concept that lets passengers with reduced mobility remain in their own powered wheelchair, secured directly to the aircraft floor. The design eliminates the traditional transfer to narrow aisle chairs, cutting damage risk for the estimated 10,000 U.S. wheelchairs damaged each year at costs up to $80 K per incident. A successful flight test in March 2026 demonstrated the restraint system in a real cruise phase, and the mock‑up will debut at the Aircraft Interiors Expo in April. Airbus aims for commercial delivery by 2032 after certification work with regulators.
Cumberland Council’s £75M Highways Project
Cumberland Council has launched a £75 million (≈ $96 million) framework for core highway surfacing work scheduled from April 2027 to March 2031, with a possible six‑year extension to 2033. The single‑supplier contract will cover inlay, overlay, full or partial reconstruction, road‑marking replacement and traffic‑management...

Expeditors’ Advisory – Damning Insight on Impact of War on T&L
Expeditors’ consulting arm, Onyx, released a stark advisory outlining how the US‑Iran‑Israel war is reshaping transport and logistics. The analysis highlights a $2 bn surge in shipping surcharges, freight‑rate spikes of up to 30%, and severe capacity constraints as the Strait...
Jordan and UAE Form Joint Venture to Build Freight Railway
Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have sealed a $2.3 bn joint‑venture to construct a 360 km freight railway linking the country’s major phosphate and potash mines with the Red Sea port of Aqaba. The new UAE‑Jordan Railway Company, backed by L’imad...

What Airlines Don’t Tell You About Ultra Long Flights: Qantas vs Air New Zealand
Airlines are rapidly adding ultra‑long‑haul routes as the Airbus A350 and Boeing 787 make nonstop flights between distant city pairs economically viable. Qantas and Air New Zealand illustrate the divergent outcomes: Qantas’ Perth‑London service struggles with high fuel costs and low load factors, while...

MSC’s ‘Blue Tick’ Scheme Creates Illusion of Ethically Sourced Fish, Study Claims
The Marine Stewardship Council’s (MSC) “blue tick” sustainability label is under fire after a study linked one‑in‑five MSC‑certified vessels to reported labour abuses. Researchers cross‑referencing International Transport Workers’ Federation (ITF) complaints found 80 abuse cases on 72 vessels across 25...

Navigating the Future: Financing, Innovation, and Sustainability in Global Shipping
At the CMA Shipping 2026 conference, a panel titled “The Business of Shipping” explored the intertwined challenges of financing, innovation, and sustainability in the maritime sector. Speakers highlighted the cyclical nature of asset values, noting that geopolitical events and macro‑economic...
One Big Thing Will Solve Rail’s Growth Problem, Says NS CEO
Norfolk Southern CEO Mark George said a merger with Union Pacific could finally break the rail industry's two‑decade growth slump. He highlighted that both carriers have seen freight volumes fall—NS down 11% and UP down 15%—as shippers shift to trucks....

Advantage Tankers Lines up VLCC Newbuild Brace in China
Geneva‑based Advantage Tankers has placed orders for two 307,000 dwt VLCCs with Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Co in China, marking a shift from its usual South Korean suppliers. The vessels, Advantage Venture and Advantage Voyager, are dual‑fuel‑ready and slated for delivery in...

China Passenger Vehicle Export Trends (Jan. - Feb. 2026): BYD Leads in Latin America丨Gasgoo Automotive Research Institute
China’s independent automakers BYD, Geely and Chery posted robust passenger‑vehicle exports in the Jan‑Feb 2026 window, each pursuing distinct global strategies. BYD led with 60,082 units to Central and South America and 40,919 to Europe, while Geely’s strongest market was...
Belgian Sovereign Wealth Fund Takes Full Control of Lineas
The European Commission approved Belgian sovereign wealth fund SFPIM’s move to acquire full control of Lineas, Europe’s largest privately‑owned rail freight operator. SFPIM, already holding 46.42% of the company, will replace French private‑equity owner Argos Wityu’s 53.58% stake. The deal...
Cape Town’s First MyCiTi E-Bus to Arrive in August
Cape Town will receive its first MyCiTi electric bus in August, followed by 13 more before year‑end, as part of a rollout of 30 Volvo BZRLE low‑floor e‑buses slated for delivery through June 2027. The buses feature bodies manufactured locally in...

Boeing Delivers Three 777Fs in March
Boeing delivered three new‑build 777F freighters in March 2026, raising the year‑to‑date total to eight. Two aircraft went to Emirates and one to MSC Air Cargo, adding to earlier deliveries for Silk Way West, CES Leasing, Qatar Airways and National Airlines....

Geneva Broker Lightship Reshuffles Top Team
Geneva‑based broker Lightship announced a top‑team reshuffle to fuel the next phase of growth in the dry‑bulk market. Long‑time chief executive Sune Fladberg was promoted to vice chairman, shifting his focus to long‑term strategy and business development. Industry veteran Mark...

Deliverect Streamlines Quick-Commerce Operations for Asda
Deliverect, the Belgian food‑tech unicorn, has signed a partnership with UK supermarket Asda to streamline its quick‑commerce operations. The platform consolidates orders from on‑demand delivery services such as Uber Eats, Just Eat and Deliveroo into a single workflow, giving Asda...
18 Ways to Break Through Global Supply Chain Complexity
The article outlines 18 actionable strategies for global supply‑chain leaders to navigate mounting tariff volatility, export controls and geopolitical risk. A recent Supreme Court decision replaced broad IEEPA tariffs with a 10% temporary duty under the Trade Act of 1974,...

Akasa Heads to Hanoi as Iran War Freezes Gulf Expansion Plans
Akasa Air has shelved its planned Gulf expansion after the Iran war disrupted routes and raised operating costs. Instead, the carrier will launch direct Mumbai‑Hanoi flights on September 4, adding Hanoi as its seventh international city with four weekly services. The...

BIFA Parts with Smart Freight Centre on Emissions Training
The British International Freight Association (BIFA) has partnered with Smart Freight Centre (SFC) to provide emissions‑reporting training for its members. The SFC Academy will offer discounted courses covering the GLEC Framework, market‑based measures, and road‑freight electrification. The collaboration responds to...

Nippon Express and Nikon Sign SAF Agreement
Japanese logistics firm Nippon Express and camera maker Nikon have renewed a Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) agreement for air cargo shipments, marking the second consecutive year of collaboration. The deal leverages Nippon’s NX‑GREEN SAF program to issue CO₂‑reduction certificates for...

IoT Fleet Management: Telematics, Tracking and Operational Optimization
Connected technologies are transforming fleet management from basic tracking into a data‑driven discipline that blends telematics, connectivity and analytics. Modern IoT fleet systems use sensors, GNSS and cellular or LPWAN links to stream real‑time vehicle, driver and cargo data to...
RAW Charging Powers up One of the Largest EV Charging Hubs in the Midlands at Leamington Spa Shopping Park
RAW Charging has activated a 17‑bay electric‑vehicle charging hub at Leamington Spa Shopping Park, featuring six AC fast bays and eleven 150 kW ultra‑rapid DC bays. The site, the largest EV hub in the Midlands, serves a high‑footfall retail and leisure...

Hitachi to Develop Portugal’s Second Translator Tech for ETCS Trains on Legacy Lines
Hitachi Rail has secured a contract from Infraestruturas de Portugal to build the country’s second Specific Transmission Module (STM), a translator that lets ETCS‑equipped trains run on legacy Convel signalling. About 69% of Portugal’s 2,500‑km network still uses Convel, so...
LAX's Long-Awaited Train to Hit the Rails as Testing Begins
Los Angeles International Airport’s 2.25‑mile Automated People Mover will begin driver‑less, empty‑train testing next week, marking the first operational run after years of delays. The $5.5 billion project, started in 2019, was originally slated for a 2023 opening and is now...
Great British Railways HQ Shortlisted to Two Derby Locations
Great British Railways (GBR) has narrowed its headquarters search to two Derby sites – the brownfield Becketwell redevelopment and the existing Midland House railway building. Derby was selected in 2023 for its rail heritage, central location and existing industry presence....

Stock Surge Lifts Used Car Retail Value to £52.6m
Dealer Auction reported that used‑car retail value surged to £52.6 million (about $66.8 million) in March, up from £42 million the month before. Fresh‑stock listings jumped 20 %, driving nearly 80,000 bids and adding roughly $12.7 million in retail uplift. The sub‑£10,000 segment saw the...

Euroseas Locks in 60% Rate Jump for Feeder Vessel
Euroseas has secured a new time charter for its 3,100‑teu feeder vessel EM Kea at $30,000 per day, a roughly 60% increase over the prior $19,000 rate. The contract runs for a minimum of 36 months starting July 14, 2026, with an optional...
AIR Announces First Flight of Its Heavylift UAS
Israel‑based AIR has completed the maiden flight of its production Cargo‑Heavy Lift unmanned aircraft, a VTOL platform capable of lifting roughly 550 lb. The system, built around next‑generation motors, advanced batteries and mature avionics, is designed for autonomous logistics with minimal...

What Will You Learn At A Defensive Driving Course (That Could Also Save Money On Your Insurance)?
Defensive driving courses teach techniques like the five‑step Scan‑Identify‑Predict‑Decide‑Execute process and the three‑second following‑distance rule, improving situational awareness for everyday motorists. The National Safety Council and state‑approved programs offer both online and in‑person classes, with typical online fees around $25...

Perdana Petroleum Wins AHTS Vessel Contracts From Petronas
Perdana Petroleum’s wholly owned unit, Perdana Nautika, received work orders on April 8 to supply two anchor handling tug and supply (AHTS) vessels to Petronas Carigali. The charters span 303 days and 224 days, each with an optional 40‑day extension, and...

Greater Bay Airlines to Reportedly Suspend Bangkok Flights From Mid-May to September
Greater Bay Airlines announced it will suspend most Hong Kong‑Bangkok flights from mid‑May through September 2026, citing surging global oil prices and market volatility. The airline also flagged limited service reductions on selected Taipei routes. Only two flights in early...
Why a Single Bypass Method Isn’t Enough
PrePass® promotes a dual‑method weigh‑station bypass that combines mobile‑app screening with transponder technology. The mobile app expands coverage quickly, while transponders guarantee reliable skips at high‑traffic, staffed sites. Together they enable fleets to capture the full benchmark‑based savings of roughly...

Japan Shipbuilding Slots Vanish Amid Order Surge
Japan’s shipyards are effectively booked through 2029, with a three‑and‑a‑half‑year backlog of orders, driven largely by bulk carriers. The Japan Ship Exporters’ Association reports that almost 75% of the pending work is bulk‑carrier construction, leaving virtually no capacity for new...
US Automakers Fear EU Safety, Emissions Rules Endanger Tariff Deal
The American Automotive Policy Council warned that draft changes to the EU’s Individual Vehicle Approval (IVA) rules could block U.S. pickup trucks such as the Chevrolet Silverado, Ford F‑150 and Ram 1500 from entering Europe, threatening the 2025 U.S.–EU tariff...
Amazon Launches First Logistics Hub In China
Amazon has opened its first smart warehouse in Shenzhen, branding it as a Global Warehousing and Distribution centre that promises up to a 45% cost reduction for Chinese merchants shipping to the United States. The hub consolidates storage, customs clearance,...

How the MV Estonia Disaster Reshaped Passenger Ship Safety
The 1994 sinking of the ro‑ro ferry MV Estonia, which claimed 852 of the 989 people aboard, exposed critical flaws in passenger‑ship stability assessments. The tragedy sparked a continent‑wide research effort and resulted in the Stockholm Agreement, obligating ferries to...

On the Up: ITA Airways Joins the Star Alliance but Will Growth Dilute Its Italian Identity?
ITA Airways officially joined the Star Alliance at a gala in Rome, cementing its partnership with the Lufthansa Group, which owns a 41% stake. The carrier reported its first full‑year net profit in 2025, €209 million (about $228 million), and has relaunched...
Renault Korea to Produce BEVs From 2028
Renault Korea announced that its Busan plant will begin local production of battery electric vehicles in 2028, following the launch of its first software-defined vehicle in 2027 equipped with AI‑based OpenR Panorama Level 2++ autonomy. The subsidiary plans to introduce a...

Toyota, Isuzu Agree to Co-Develop Hydrogen Fuel Cell Light Truck
Toyota Motor Corp. and Isuzu Motors have signed an agreement to co‑develop and mass‑produce a hydrogen fuel‑cell light‑truck based on Isuzu’s N‑series electric platform. The vehicle will use Toyota’s third‑generation fuel‑cell system and is targeted for commercial delivery use, where...
Executive Workshop: Modernising Supply Chains with AI
HSO is hosting a "Modernising Supply Chains with AI + Agents" executive workshop on 9 July 2026 at Microsoft’s London campus. The event targets supply‑chain and operations leaders who struggle to locate practical AI use cases—39 % of UK firms report this gap. Over a...
Indonesian Vehicle Sales Fall 14% in March
Indonesian vehicle sales fell 14% in March 2026, slipping to 61,271 units versus 71,099 a year earlier, largely due to the extended Eid holidays. Despite the dip, the first‑quarter market grew 2% to 209,021 units, driven by a surge in...
Germany: Stadler to Supply 14 TINA Trams to Görlitz & Zwickau
Stadler secured a contract to supply 14 low‑floor TINA trams—eight for Görlitz and six for Zwickau—with commissioning slated for 2028. The order expands the TINA platform to eight European cities, underscoring its growing market footprint. Each 30‑metre vehicle features fully...

FS Logistix Launches North-South ‘Smart Train’ Pilot
Italian state‑owned freight operator FS Logistix has launched a ‘smart train’ pilot on the 1,000‑kilometre Milan‑Catania corridor. Approximately 700 intermodal wagons have been fitted with PJM’s WaggonTracker, delivering live data on brake performance, load stability, train composition and derailment detection....

UK Could Face Gaps on Supermarket Shelves by Summer if Iran War Continues
UK ministers are preparing for a ‘reasonable worst‑case scenario’ as the Iran‑Israel conflict threatens to keep the Strait of Hormuz closed, potentially disrupting carbon‑dioxide supplies essential for food processing. The government’s Exercise Turnstone, run by the Cobra emergency committee, includes...

A Railroad And Reservoirs
The Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad built a 3‑ft narrow‑gauge line through the Black Canyon in 1882, a risky venture that cost the equivalent of $5.26 million per mile today. The line spurred the rise of the rail town Cimarron,...

Middle East Conflict to Redesign Container Trade Flows
Container lines are rapidly reconfiguring routes to bypass Gulf chokepoints after the Middle East conflict escalated, according to Drewry analysis. Higher war‑risk insurance costs and volatile fuel prices are prompting carriers to seek alternatives to the Strait of Hormuz, Bab...
Ford's Skunkworks EV Tech Will Make It Into Hybrids Too
Ford’s secretive skunkworks EV team is channeling its latest electric‑powertrain breakthroughs into the automaker’s upcoming hybrid lineup. By leveraging the low‑cost drive units developed for a forthcoming $30,000 mid‑size electric pickup, Ford aims to make its hybrids more efficient and...

Collect&Go Pilots Autonomous EV for Urban Grocery Deliveries
Collect&Go, in partnership with Telenet Business, has launched Belgium’s first pilot of an unmanned electric vehicle delivering groceries on public roads in Leuven. The vehicle, remotely operated over a dedicated 5G link and equipped with radar and cameras, will run...

The End of the Hormuz Bargain
The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil and large volumes of LNG, fertilizer and key feedstocks travel, is no longer a neutral corridor. Escalating Middle‑East tensions and unilateral toll demands have prompted many...

‘Rail Freight Should Not Doubt Its Importance’, Says Port of Rotterdam COO
The Port of Rotterdam’s COO, Berte Simons, reaffirmed rail freight’s strategic role and announced major investments to accelerate a modal shift from road and barge. A new railway yard, Maasvlakte Zuid, is scheduled for completion in 2027 to serve the...

"We Nearly Hit Them": American Airlines Pilot Slams Brakes To Avoid CLT Ops Truck
American Airlines pilots slammed the brakes on a taxiway at Charlotte Douglas International Airport after a ground operations truck cut directly in front of the aircraft. The near‑miss follows a spate of similar incidents, including a Frontier jet at LAX...