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Maritime Industry Briefing: Boskalis Commissions Major Cable Layer as IEA Warns of Historic Oil Supply Crunch

By MGN EditorialMay 18, 2026 at 04:06 PM

Royal Boskalis Westminster orders a 24,000-ton cable lay vessel to capitalise on surging offshore energy demand, while the IEA warns that the Strait of Hormuz crisis is driving one of the most severe oil market disruptions in modern history.

## Boskalis Bets Big on Subsea Power Infrastructure Dutch offshore contractor Royal Boskalis Westminster N.V. has announced plans to construct a new 24,000-ton Cable Lay Vessel (CLV), signalling strong confidence in the long-term growth of subsea power cable installation work, according to gCaptain. The vessel order reflects accelerating global investment in offshore wind farms, interconnectors, and broader subsea energy grid infrastructure. As governments and utilities push to expand renewable energy capacity and cross-border power links, demand for specialised cable-laying tonnage has intensified, placing a premium on vessels capable of handling large-diameter, high-voltage cables across deep and challenging sea conditions. Boskalis, one of the world's leading dredging and offshore energy contractors, is positioning itself to capture a significant share of this growing market. At 24,000 tons, the new CLV will rank among the largest vessels of its type globally, offering the capacity and operational flexibility required for major long-distance cable projects. Full technical specifications and delivery timelines have not yet been disclosed, but the investment underscores the company's strategic pivot toward the offshore energy transition sector. The move aligns with a broader industry trend, with several major contractors and shipowners expanding their cable-lay fleets in anticipation of a multi-decade pipeline of offshore energy projects across Europe, Asia-Pacific, and North America. --- ## IEA Warns of Record Oil Inventory Drawdowns Amid Hormuz Crisis In a stark assessment of global energy markets, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned that the ongoing Strait of Hormuz crisis is triggering one of the most severe oil supply disruptions in modern history, with global oil inventories declining at a record pace, gCaptain reports. The Strait of Hormuz, through which approximately 20% of the world's seaborne oil trade transits, has been at the centre of escalating geopolitical tensions. The IEA's warning highlights the acute vulnerability of global energy supply chains to disruptions in this critical chokepoint, with demand now outpacing available supply at an alarming rate. For the maritime industry, the implications are significant. Tanker operators are navigating heightened security risks and route diversions, while the drawdown in inventories is likely to sustain elevated freight rates on key crude and product tanker trades. Refiners and energy traders are closely monitoring the situation as the prospect of prolonged supply tightness raises concerns about energy security across importing nations. The IEA's intervention adds urgency to diplomatic efforts to stabilise the region, though analysts caution that any resolution may take time to translate into a meaningful recovery in global inventory levels. --- *Sources: gCaptain. This briefing is compiled from publicly available maritime industry news feeds.*

Source: gCaptain

#cable lay vessel#Boskalis#offshore energy#subsea infrastructure#Strait of Hormuz#oil supply#IEA#tanker market#offshore wind#energy security

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