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Salalah Port Suspended After Security Incident; Middle East Refinery Crisis Escalates Global Fuel Disruptions

By MGN Maritime JournalistMarch 30, 2026 at 10:02 AM

A security incident at Oman's Port of Salalah forced operational suspension through at least mid-April, while Middle East refinery disruptions tied to regional conflict are cascading into ground freight surcharges across North America.

Maersk suspended operations at Port of Salalah in Oman following a security incident that damaged container terminal infrastructure, the carrier announced March 30. Operations are expected to remain halted for up to 48 hours pending port authority guidance, with damaged cranes and underwater obstructions currently under assessment by specialists and divers. No Maersk crew, vessels, or cargo were affected in the incident. The carrier characterized the damage as localized and unlikely to significantly constrain overall terminal capacity once operations resume. However, all vessels currently en route to Salalah will experience operational delays as the suspension takes effect. Salalah, located on Oman's Arabian Sea coast, is a critical transshipment hub for Indian Ocean trade and serves as a key waypoint for container traffic between Asia and Europe. Disruptions at the port ripple through regional supply chains that depend on its connectivity. ## Broader Supply Chain Stress The port suspension coincides with accelerating supply chain disruptions stemming from the ongoing Middle East conflict. Maersk's separate announcement on March 30 detailed how regional refinery shutdowns and reduced-capacity operations are crippling fuel availability across the Arabian Peninsula and beyond. "Many refineries within the region are either offline or operating at reduced capacity, and export ability is very limited," Maersk stated, citing the impact on global fuel supply and inland logistics across North America and other regions. The fuel market squeeze is now manifesting in carrier surcharges. Maersk is implementing a temporary fuel price adjustment for ground freight transportation in Canada, effective April 10 for non-FMC shipments and April 18 for FMC-regulated moves. The adjustment applies to customers whose contracts include fuel pass-through provisions, using Canadian government diesel price indices and weighted rail fuel benchmarks (14% for truck moves, 12% for rail). While characterized as temporary, the adjustment underscores how port-level incidents and upstream energy market shocks translate into immediate cost pressures for shippers and logistics providers. ## Industry Implications The Salalah incident and fuel market disruptions highlight persistent vulnerabilities in global maritime supply chains. Salalah's role as a regional hub means delays can affect routing decisions across the Indian Ocean trade—carriers may reroute around the port if suspension extends or if authorities impose further restrictions. Refinery disruptions across the Gulf region remain a structural constraint. Even with Salalah resuming operations, elevated fuel costs and intermittent supply issues will continue driving surcharges across all transportation modes. Ground freight operators in North America, Europe, and other markets face similar fuel adjustment pressures as energy market volatility spreads downstream. For importers and exporters reliant on Middle East transit corridors, the combination of port operational risk and elevated energy costs reinforces the case for supply chain diversification and forward-booking strategies to lock in fuel terms before additional surcharge phases take effect.

Source: Maersk

#Salalah#Oman#port operations#Middle East conflict#fuel market#supply chain disruption#Maersk#Indian Ocean#ground freight

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