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Maritime Industry Briefing: Digital Trade Transparency and Fenix Resources Enters Shipping

By MGN EditorialJune 22, 2026 at 06:00 AM

This week's maritime briefing covers the EU's push for digital product passports reshaping global supply chains, and Australian iron ore producer Fenix Resources forming a strategic bulk shipping partnership with Mira Bulk.

## Supply Chains Enter the Era of Verified Transparency Global supply chains are undergoing a fundamental transformation as regulatory and technological forces converge to demand greater accountability at every stage of trade, according to analysis published by Splash247. Writing for Splash247, supply chain strategist Wolfgang Lehmacher highlights the growing significance of digital product passports (DPPs) — structured, verifiable records that travel with goods throughout their lifecycle. The shift is being accelerated by the European Union's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), which came into force with formal emissions-based obligations for importers of carbon-intensive goods on January 1, 2026. The implications for maritime trade are substantial. Shipping, as the backbone of global goods movement, sits at the intersection of these new compliance requirements. Vessel operators, freight forwarders, and port operators handling carbon-intensive cargoes — including steel, aluminium, cement, and fertilisers — will increasingly need to provide auditable emissions data as part of the documentation chain. Lehmacher's framing of supply chains as 'truth chains' underscores a broader industry shift: transparency is no longer a voluntary differentiator but a regulatory prerequisite. For maritime stakeholders, investment in digital infrastructure and emissions tracking systems is becoming a commercial necessity rather than an aspiration. --- ## Fenix Resources Moves Downstream with Mira Bulk Shipping Partnership Australian iron ore producer Fenix Resources is deepening its control over the logistics chain by entering a strategic shipping partnership with dry bulk operator Mira Bulk, Splash247 reports. The ASX-listed miner announced the formation of the Fenix-Mira joint venture, a move designed to reduce freight costs and support the company's ongoing production ramp-up at its Iron Ridge operation in Western Australia. By securing dedicated bulk shipping capacity, Fenix aims to insulate itself from spot market freight rate volatility — a persistent challenge for smaller producers competing for vessel availability against larger mining majors. The partnership reflects a broader trend among mid-tier commodity producers seeking greater vertical integration across their supply chains. Controlling freight arrangements not only improves cost predictability but can also enhance relationships with end customers by offering more reliable delivery schedules. Mira Bulk, as the operational shipping partner, brings dry bulk expertise to the arrangement, while Fenix contributes cargo volume and commercial direction. Financial terms of the partnership were not disclosed. For the dry bulk shipping sector, the deal illustrates continued appetite among cargo owners to move beyond purely transactional freight relationships, particularly as iron ore trade flows from Australian producers to Asian steel mills remain a cornerstone of the Capesize and Supramax markets. --- *Sources: Splash247*

Source: Splash247

#dry bulk#iron ore#digital product passport#CBAM#supply chain#Fenix Resources#Mira Bulk#EU trade regulation#freight costs#shipping partnerships

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