← Back to Newsports
Major Port Operators Expand Infrastructure Amid Record Performance and Red Sea Recovery
By MGN Editorial•March 31, 2026 at 09:18 PM
Global port operators are accelerating capacity investments, with DP World expanding Jeddah terminal equipment and AD Ports Group reporting record 2025 revenue as Red Sea shipping activity normalizes.
Port operators worldwide are investing heavily in infrastructure upgrades and capacity expansion, signaling confidence in sustained growth across key shipping corridors.
DP World has installed three new semi-automated quay cranes at its Jeddah Islamic Port terminal in Saudi Arabia, bolstering the facility's ability to handle ultra-large container vessels. The expansion comes as shipping activity returns to the Red Sea following disruptions, making the investment timely for a region repositioning itself as a critical trade artery between Europe, Asia, and Africa.
"This capacity enhancement enables more efficient handling of the world's largest container vessels," according to industry sources, reflecting the terminal's strategic importance in supporting normalized Red Sea trade routes.
Elsewhere in the region, AD Ports Group—the Abu Dhabi–based trade and logistics enabler—released its 2025 annual report showing record revenue and profit performance. The report emphasized the Group's work "curating connectivity" across key trade corridors and geographies, complemented by optimization of its asset portfolio and balance sheet management. The results underscore sustained demand for port services and logistics infrastructure across the Middle East and beyond.
Simultaneously, Columbia Shipmanagement expanded its regional footprint by opening a larger office space in Turkey to support its Middle East operations. The new premises will operate jointly with Italmar Horizon Turkey, a collaboration between Columbia Group and Italmar Group, reflecting the region's attractiveness to international maritime service providers.
These investments reflect broader confidence in shipping market fundamentals and the strategic importance of infrastructure in capturing growing trade volumes, particularly as supply chains adapt and diversify away from traditional choke points.
#port infrastructure#Red Sea shipping#container terminals#capacity expansion#Middle East ports#DP World#AD Ports Group
Related Articles
Port Houston Secures $48M Federal Grant for Bayport Container Terminal Expansion
Port Houston received a $48 million federal grant to expand capacity at Bayport Container Terminal, enhancing truck flow and positioning the port for continued cargo growth.
May 2, 2026
Maritime & Freight Industry Briefing: Port Operations, Cargo Security, and Market Recovery in Focus
Industry shifts in port chassis operations, rising cyber cargo theft threats, and signals of freight market recovery shape the maritime and logistics landscape as operations head into summer.
May 2, 2026
MGN Completes Global Port Database Update: 2,773 Ports Refreshed
Maritime Global Network has completed updating all 2,773 port profiles in its global directory with current contact details, coordinates, and authority information.
May 2, 2026
MSC and Tradepoint Begin Construction on First Major Private US Container Terminal in Decades
A joint venture between Mediterranean Shipping Company and Tradepoint is moving forward with development of Baltimore's Sparrows Point Container Terminal, marking a landmark investment in US port infrastructure after a 14-year redevelopment of the former steel mill site.
May 2, 2026
Maritime Industry Briefing: Port Operations, Market Recovery, and Geopolitical Headwinds Shape Week Ahead
STG emerges from bankruptcy amid intermodal recovery while breakbulk sector faces uncertainty; NY-NJ port enforces new accountability measures for empty container traffic.
Apr 28, 2026