A temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran may allow limited commercial transit through the critical Strait of Hormuz, but Maersk is proceeding cautiously with risk assessments as the shipping industry watches for clarity on duration and scope.
A temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran has opened a narrow window for potential maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most critical chokepoints, though major carriers remain wary about committing vessels to the passage.
Maersk said Monday it is closely monitoring developments in the Middle East and welcome the ceasefire announcement while emphasizing that "full maritime certainty is not yet assured." The Danish carrier said any decision to transit the Strait of Hormuz will depend on continuous risk assessments, security monitoring, and guidance from relevant authorities.
"The safety of our seafarers, vessels and cargo remains Maersk's top priority," the carrier stated in its operational update.
The Strait of Hormuz, which separates Iran from Oman, handles roughly 21 percent of the world's traded petroleum and remains one of shipping's most strategically sensitive passages. Tensions in the region have forced carriers in recent months to weigh the risks of transiting the strait against the costs and delays of alternative routes around Africa, adding weeks to voyage times and significantly raising operational expenses.
Maersk's measured tone reflects broader industry uncertainty about the ceasefire's duration and stability. The carrier noted that "information is still scarce" and visibility remains low as the situation continues to evolve. Even with a temporary reprieve, shippers and carriers cannot assume normal operations will resume immediately, the company suggested.
To hedge against ongoing regional volatility, Maersk is expanding landside alternatives across the Gulf. The carrier said it is continuing to expand multimodal transport solutions connecting origins in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, the UAE, Qatar, and Iraq through landbridge routes.
These solutions include carrier haulage services from Upper Gulf ports—Dammam, Jubail, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, UAE, and Oman—routed through Jeddah Port on the Red Sea. Iraqi cargo can transit via Aqaba Port in Jordan, while UAE shipments can move through a landbridge connection via Sohar and Salalah in Oman. These alternatives, while longer overland, bypass Hormuz entirely and offer shippers a degree of predictability absent from the strait.
The expansion underscores how regional tensions have forced carriers and freight forwarders to rethink Gulf logistics. Landbridge solutions add cost but eliminate the unpredictability of transits through contested waters. For time-sensitive shipments, however, the Hormuz route remains economically attractive if conditions permit.
Maersk's cautious posture is likely to be mirrored across the industry. Other major carriers have not yet signaled plans to resume regular Hormuz transits. The ambiguity around the ceasefire's scope—Maersk noted it may only allow transit "for a limited time"—means carriers must weigh short-term savings against the risk of vessels caught in a passage that could close again abruptly.
For shippers, the ceasefire offers hope for faster transit times and lower fuel surcharges on Asia-Europe routes, though the benefit may be limited if carriers move cautiously. Supply chain planners should expect continued elevated shipping costs and extended lead times until the geopolitical situation stabilizes and carriers gain confidence in unrestricted Hormuz access.
Maersk said it will provide further updates as clarity improves. "The ceasefire is a positive step, but volatility persists," the carrier stated.