International trade is undergoing one of the greatest transformations of recent decades. The model based on common rules and agreements, regulatory stability, and sustained expansion of global exchange is being replaced by a scenario dominated by geopolitics, selective protectionism, and the fragmentation of supply chains.
In this new context, maritime transport, the backbone of global trade, has become one of the main indicators of this changing era. It’s a reality that may be more or less agreeable, but it’s the situation we now face. What for years was a system geared towards efficiency, cost reduction, and logistical optimization is now constrained by political decisions, strategic tensions, and security factors that profoundly alter trade flows. Globalization, as we knew it, has entered a phase of structural review.
One of the clearest symptoms of this shift is the weakening of the World Trade Organization’s multilateral framework. The European Union itself has called into question the ” most favored nation ” (MFN) principle, a fundamental pillar of the system, especially within the WTO, implicitly acknowledging that the system no longer guarantees a level playing field. The massive use of industrial subsidies, disguised regulatory barriers, and asymmetric trade policies have eroded confidence in free trade. Brussels, a traditional champion of multilateralism, is gradually beginning to accept that access to its market must be conditional on genuine reciprocity, transparency, and a level playing field. Otherwise, it will collapse.
This shift coincides with and is heavily influenced by new US trade strategies, where tariffs have become the central tool of its foreign policy. Under the current administration, trade is being used as an instrument of geopolitical pressure, from Canada to China and the European Union. The result is a more fragmented, highly unpredictable trade environment, subject to geopolitical logic. International trade has become the primary negotiating tool. Failing to understand or accept this leads to significant and dangerous competitive disadvantages.
Geopolitics as the driving force of maritime trade
The direct consequence of this shift is that business decisions no longer respond solely to economic criteria. Security of supply, political affinity, institutional stability, and control of strategic routes increasingly influence the configuration of maritime flows. The rise of nearshoring , friend-shoring , and regional agreements is a clear manifestation of this phenomenon. Supply chains are shortening, becoming more regionalized, and are designed with resilience rather than efficiency in mind. Decision-making in this context also carries significant risks. The fragmentation and consolidation of markets into blocs either opens up or closes off options that are subsequently difficult to regain. Maintaining a neutral stance does not guarantee commercial loyalty either.
All of this represents a profound transformation for maritime transport, because it entails a fundamental reconfiguration of routes, services, and fleet strategies. Traffic no longer grows uniformly, but rather concentrates in certain corridors, while others lose relevance.
Overcapacity and the collapse of freight rates
To this geopolitical context has recently been added a decisive factor: the structural overcapacity of the global fleet. During the post-pandemic boom, shipping companies ordered a record number of new vessels, anticipating a demand that ultimately failed to materialize. The result is an oversupply that is putting significant downward pressure on freight rates. Forecasts from the consultancy Drewry point to an average drop of 17% by 2026, with declines exceeding 20% on Asia-Europe routes. The entry into service of large container ships, coupled with the slowdown in global trade, has created an imbalance that will take years to correct. Shipping companies have begun to react with canceled calls, reduced speeds, reorganized services, and, in some cases, the early scrapping of vessels. However, the magnitude of the excess capacity suggests a prolonged cycle of pressure on margins.
The Red Sea and the end of operational predictability
The Red Sea crisis has become the prime example of how geopolitics shapes maritime transport today. Although some shipping companies attempted to resume transit through the Suez Canal, persistent insecurity has forced many to once again divert their routes around the Cape of Good Hope. This constant back and forth has increased transit times, operating costs, and logistical complexity. Beyond the economic impact, the biggest problem is the loss of predictability: itineraries change, port calls are altered, and schedules become unreliable. And this uncertainty is the worst thing that can happen to importers and producers. Paradoxically, this is why many shippers now prefer longer but stable routes to shorter journeys subject to constant changes. At least this stability guarantees continuity in a fluctuating market. Reliability has become a strategic value, even more important than the price of the service.
In this new environment, ports can no longer be limited to being transit infrastructure, as this entails enormous risk due to the inherent volatility of trade, pressure on margins, and the reconfiguration of shipping routes. New port management strategies must be developed, based on the constant variations in short- and medium-term geopolitical factors. Major shipping companies reconfigure their policies and objectives based on the conclusions of their strategy and geopolitics departments, which constantly analyze any market changes that could affect them in the short term. Ports must follow the same approach. The response of these infrastructures should focus on traffic diversification, high intermodal integration, the capacity to offer the best services in their region, high value-added services, regulatory and institutional stability, and the adaptability of their supply chains. All of this must be underpinned by a robust and highly reliable digital management framework.
Ports are rapidly gaining global importance due to new geostrategic circumstances. Global powers vying for commercial supremacy have not hesitated to invest significant amounts of public funds in their maritime and port policies to maintain their leadership and avoid falling behind in the development of new shipping routes.
With the end of the free market, everything is structured through geopolitics, and port infrastructure is the key element. Now more than ever, ports require investment, modernization, flexibility, security, geostrategic foresight, and preparation for the new environment in which they operate, because traffic volume is no longer everything.
Maritime trade has entered a new phase. Globalization based on efficiency, low cost, and predictability has given way to a model marked by geopolitics, security, and fragmentation. Falling freight rates, fleet overcapacity, instability on key routes like the Red Sea, and the return of protectionism are symptoms of a profound and lasting change. For shipping companies, ports, and logistics operators, the challenge is clear: to understand that global trade is no longer governed solely by the market, but by the balance of power. And in this new landscape, ports and their strategy are as important as operational efficiency. The strategic future lies in ports and maritime trade, making them a primary target for major powers because everything revolves around them.
Would Greenland generate the same interest if the melting ice weren’t opening up all the ports and shipping routes around it in the short term? But we’ll analyze this topic in future articles.
