Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “politics”
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Federal Maritime Commission Reauthorization Act of 2025, 2025, United States Congress
A rare moment of unanimity rippled through the U.S. House today as lawmakers from both parties lined up behind the Federal Maritime Commission Reauthorization Act of 2025, a piece of legislation that quietly carries heavyweight implications for global trade, maritime power, and the rules that govern the oceans American commerce depends on. Introduced earlier this year by John Garamendi and advanced with key provisions authored by Dusty Johnson, the bill had already cleared the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee in September, but the unanimous floor vote gives it a different kind of momentum.
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Brussels Softens the 2035 Combustion Engine Line, and the Signal Is the Story
A subtle but meaningful shift is emerging from Brussels around one of Europe’s most symbolic transport policies. According to discussions now circulating at the level of the European Commission, the long-promised 2035 cutoff—intended to end the sale of new cars with CO₂-emitting combustion engines—may no longer be treated as a hard edge. Instead of an absolute stop, policymakers are considering a framework that would allow carmakers to continue producing a limited number of petrol and diesel vehicles beyond that date.
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MSC’s Ambition Meets Brussels: The Barcelona Terminal Deal Under Scrutiny
Something is happening in European logistics right now: one of the world’s biggest container carriers, MSC, is no longer satisfied with just moving goods across oceans — now it wants to own more of the land where those journeys begin and end. That ambition just hit a regulatory wall. This week, news broke that the European Commission is preparing a deeper investigation into MSC’s joint bid with BlackRock to acquire one of Hutchison Ports’ major terminals in Barcelona.
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Maersk Returning to Red Sea Trade Lane Signals Major Turning Point
There’s a certain shift in tone circulating through the industry right now—subtle, but noticeable to anyone watching vessel traffic patterns and freight indices. Maersk has confirmed that it plans to resume operations through the Red Sea and Suez Canal “as soon as conditions allow,” following nearly two years of rerouting vessels around the Cape of Good Hope due to maritime security risks linked to Houthi activity in the Bab-al-Mandab strait. The language remains cautious, but the intent is clear: the world’s second-largest container carrier is preparing for a phased return to one of global shipping’s most critical corridors.