← Back to Newsnews
Maritime Industry Briefing: FedEx Surcharges, Diesel Prices, LNG Shipping Orders
By MGN Editorial•February 18, 2026 at 09:31 PM
A roundup of recent maritime industry news including FedEx's e-commerce delivery strategy, rising diesel prices, new LNG-powered ship orders, and challenges with ocean carrier reliability.
## FedEx Doubles Down on Premium E-Commerce Deliveries
According to FreightWaves, FedEx is focusing its e-commerce delivery efforts on longer-haul, heavier, and higher-value parcels, rather than trying to compete with local couriers for small package delivery. The company is implementing new surcharges for e-commerce shipments, signaling that operating as a 'last-mile' provider for low-margin online orders is not a profitable model for FedEx.
'When it comes to e-commerce delivery, FedEx only wants longer-haul, heavy and high-value parcels because operating as a local courier for small packages isn't profitable,' the report states.
## Diesel Prices Continue Upward Trend
The benchmark price used for most fuel surcharges has risen for the fifth straight week, according to FreightWaves. This reflects the ongoing increase in diesel costs that has impacted the shipping and logistics industry.
'The benchmark price used for most fuel surcharges rose for the fifth straight week,' the report noted.
## CMA CGM Orders Six Dual-Fuel LNG Ships
In shipping news, the Journal of Commerce reports that French container line CMA CGM has ordered six new dual-fuel liquefied natural gas (LNG) vessels from an Indian shipyard.
'CEO Rodolphe Saadé said the deal deepened a strategic partnership between the carrier and India that has existed for almost 40 years, adding the liner would also expand its engagement in container manufacturing and ship recycling,' the article states.
## Capacity Control Hinders Ocean Reliability
The Journal of Commerce also reports that container lines' efforts to maintain high vessel utilization by removing functional capacity is actually weakening the overall network and increasing volatility in ocean reliability.
'The success of container lines in keeping vessel utilization high by removing functional capacity weakens the network and ups volatility in ocean reliability,' the report says.
#freight#fuel#shipping#LNG#container shipping#reliability
Related Articles
Maritime Industry Roundup: Shadow Fleet Fines, Shipping Acquisitions, and Fueling the Energy Transition
A roundup of recent maritime industry news, including France's actions against a suspected Russian 'shadow fleet' tanker, Hapag-Lloyd's acquisition of ZIM, and Morocco's role in shipping's energy transition.
Feb 19, 2026
Maritime Industry Briefing: Shipbreaking, LNG Carriers, Bunker Fuel Sales
A roundup of recent news on ship recycling, new LNG carrier orders, and bunker fuel sales in Panama.
Feb 19, 2026
Maritime Industry Briefing: Freight Outlook, Fleet Modernization, and Hospitality Trends
A roundup of recent news covering the freight market, aviation, and hospitality sectors in the maritime industry.
Feb 19, 2026
Maritime Industry Briefing: Acquisitions, Partnerships, and Solar Tech Advancements
A roundup of recent news in the maritime industry, including an acquisition in environmental services, a distribution partnership for glycolic acid, and a strategic solar technology agreement.
Feb 19, 2026
Maritime Industry Roundup: Offshore Surveys, LNG Vessel Designs, and Wood Handling Upgrades
A roundup of recent news covering offshore energy projects, LNG shipping technology, and supply chain infrastructure improvements in the maritime industry.
Feb 19, 2026