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Maersk Discontinues Med-Canada Express Service, Shifts to Transshipment Model

By MGN Maritime JournalistMarch 31, 2026 at 04:02 PM

Maersk will phase out the Med–Canada Express service on July 1, 2026, redirecting cargo between South Europe and Canada through European transshipment hubs to optimize network efficiency.

Maersk announced it will discontinue the Med–Canada Express (MCX) service effective July 1, 2026, marking another consolidation in direct transatlantic connectivity as the world's largest container shipping line continues restructuring its network. The decision reflects Maersk's broader strategy to balance service coverage with operational efficiency. Rather than maintaining a dedicated service on the South Europe–Canada trade lane, the carrier will route cargo via transshipment hubs in Europe—a model that reduces frequency but maintains geographic coverage across the route. "As part of our continuous efforts to optimize our network and ensure reliable service offerings, we are reviewing our connectivity between South Europe and Canada," Maersk said in its announcement. The company emphasized that transshipment via European hubs will "maintain connectivity between South Europe and North America while ensuring network efficiency and service reliability." The final westbound sailing under the MCX banner will be the Barcelona Express/626W, with the final eastbound sailing as Dachan Bay Express/627E. Until the July 1 phase-out date, the service will continue normal operations and accepting bookings. **Supply Chain Implications** For shippers on the South Europe–Canada lane—which handles automotive components, machinery, chemicals, and general breakbulk cargo—the shift introduces additional transit time and handling requirements. Transshipment adds 3–7 days to typical transit windows and requires coordination at intermediate European ports, primarily Rotterdam, Hamburg, or Mediterranean gateways. The move reflects a contraction in dedicated services between Europe and Canada, a trade lane that has experienced volatile demand patterns during the post-pandemic recovery. Maersk's decision follows broader industry trends toward hub-and-spoke networks rather than point-to-point services, allowing carriers to consolidate cargo volumes and optimize vessel utilization. Canadian shippers and importers dependent on direct Mediterranean connectivity will need to reassess supply chain configurations. Those requiring expedited service may face higher costs or route cargo through U.S. gateways—typically New York or Halifax—and cross-dock to Canadian destinations. **Market Context** The discontinuation comes as liner shipping capacity remains pressured and carriers continue right-sizing networks to match post-2023 demand levels. Maersk has been aggressive in service rationalization, reflecting both competitive pressure and the reality that some niche trade lanes cannot sustain standalone operations at scale. The transshipment alternative offers flexibility: customers with variable shipment volumes can shift between dedicated services and consolidation options without losing coverage. However, this requires advance planning and may increase costs for time-sensitive shipments. Customers requiring support on the South Europe–Canada trade should contact their Maersk sales representative to discuss alternative routing tailored to specific requirements. The carrier emphasized that all existing bookings through June 30, 2026, will be honored under MCX scheduling. The phase-out is effective immediately for new bookings; customers should finalize South Europe–Canada routing plans before the July 1 deadline to avoid congestion and delays as volumes shift to transshipment networks.

Source: Maersk

#Maersk#container shipping#transatlantic#service discontinuation#supply chain#Europe-Canada trade#transshipment

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