Saturday, March 28, 2026

The living sea


The Living Sea celebrates the beauty, power, and importance of the ocean.
Underscored by the music of Sting and narrated by Meryl Streep, the motion picture explores our relationship with the sea.
Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary/Short Subject (1995).
A film produced by MacGillivray Freeman Films.

Friday, March 27, 2026

China’s nuclear icebreaker marks a new phase in Arctic shipping strategy


From Federica Shipping Brief

China’s Arctic strategy is entering a new phase — one defined less by symbolic research presence and more by hard maritime capability.

In December, the state-run 708 Research Institute unveiled a conceptual design for a nuclear-powered, bull-nosed icebreaker capable of breaking through floes up to 2.5 metres thick.
Officially described as a “multirole” cargo and polar tourism vessel, the ship is intended to serve as a prototype for China’s emerging polar fleet.

While framed in commercial and research terms, the development is best understood within the broader context of shipping security, trade resilience and long-term commodity access.


A new conceptual design of a nuclear-powered multirole icebreaker developed by China State Shipbuilding Corp.
[Photo provided to China Daily]

The industrial base: dual-use capacity

The strategic signal lies not only in the ship itself, but in who is building it.

The yard responsible for China’s first indigenous icebreaker also delivered the aircraft carrier Fujian, now operated by the People’s Liberation Army Navy.
That yard falls under China State Shipbuilding Corporation (CSSC), one of the world’s largest shipbuilding conglomerates.

For maritime observers, this matters.

Icebreakers are not simply commercial assets.
They are sovereignty tools— enabling year-round access, hydrographic mapping, escort capability and sustained presence in contested or infrastructure-poor waters.

A nuclear-powered platform, in particular, signals endurance and strategic commitment rather than seasonal experimentation.

The trade logic: distance, diversification, and redundancy

Beijing’s 2018 Arctic policy introduced the concept of a “Polar Silk Road.”
The core argument is geographic: Arctic routes, particularly via Russia’s Northern Sea Route (NSR), can cut voyage distances between northern China and northern Europe by 30–40% compared to the Suez Canal corridor.

In September, the container vessel Istanbul Bridge sailed from Ningbo to Felixstowe via the NSR — described in Chinese state media as the opening of a “China-Europe Arctic Express.”

From a freight economics perspective, however, several realities remain:
  • Seasonality limits predictable scheduling.
  • Ice-class premiums and insurance costs erode distance savings.
  • Search-and-rescue and port infrastructure remain underdeveloped.
  • Sanctions exposure and geopolitical risk complicate Western-facing trade.
For southern Chinese exporters, Suez often remains operationally faster despite longer nautical miles.

In other words, the Arctic is not yet a Suez replacement.
It is a strategic hedge — a redundancy option in a fragmented global trade system increasingly shaped by chokepoint risk.

Commodities: energy, minerals and Arctic logistics


Where the Arctic becomes more structurally significant is in commodities.

China has expanded investments in Russia’s north, including coal developments near Murmansk and port infrastructure in Arkhangelsk.
State shipping giant COSCO Shipping is widely expected to anchor logistics activity through Arctic gateways.

The Arctic offers three strategic commodity levers:
  • Hydrocarbons — LNG and offshore oil potential.
  • Critical minerals and rare earths — increasingly central to energy transition supply chains.
  • Alternative export corridors for Russian volumes, particularly as sanctions reshape global flows.
As Arctic ice coverage declines, extraction and shipping windows expand.
Over time, that shifts the economics of upstream investment and midstream transport.

Governance and geopolitical friction

China describes itself as a “near-Arctic state,” a classification rejected by several Arctic governments. The eight Arctic states have historically limited formal governance roles to themselves.

Meanwhile, Washington has earmarked $9bn for icebreakers and polar infrastructure to maintain US leadership in the region.
NATO-controlled territories — including Canada and Greenland — sit astride key North Atlantic access points.

Yet analysts note important nuance:
  • Chinese naval patrols with Russia have increased near Alaska.
  • There has not yet been a confirmed Chinese military vessel operating in the central Arctic Ocean.
  • The Northern Sea Route’s narrow passages and short seasons limit military utility in a conflict scenario.
What this means for shipping and commodity markets

For maritime and commodity participants, the Arctic is no longer a theoretical trade lane. It is an emerging strategic variable.

Three implications stand out:
  • Route optionality will become a core element of supply-chain resilience.
  • China–Russia energy integration in the Arctic will deepen, particularly around LNG and minerals.
  • Icebreaking capacity will increasingly define access, influence and commercial advantage in polar waters.
The Arctic will not displace Suez in the near term.
But with nuclear-powered icebreakers, port investments and state-backed shipping, Beijing is positioning for a long-term structural presence in northern trade routes.

For markets, the key question is not whether the Arctic will matter — but when its economics begin to align with its geopolitics.
 
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Thursday, March 26, 2026

France & misc. (SHOM) layer update in the GeoGarage platform

Saint Jean de Luz bay, 'the most beautiful of the world' :
new chart 32421 replacing 7431
see GeoGarage news : 222 raster charts updated (including 7 new editions) + 6 new charts
 
 
 A beautiful nautical chart of the Bay of Saint-Jean-de-Luz, 
surveyed in 1876 by the hydrographic engineer Bouquet de La Grye.
The map shows the Socoa lighthouse, the semaphore station, the fort, the Untxin River, Ciboure, Bordagain, the customs house, the town hall, the railway station, the hospital, the Pointe de Sainte-Barbe, and the Dauria rock.
The lights and lighthouses are watercolored in yellow with a red dot.

 

Aleksander Doba kayaked solo across the Atlantic Ocean three times

Aleksander Doba kayaked solo across the Atlantic Ocean, covering roughly 5,400 kilometers under his own power, ns the only person to kayak the Atlantic solo three separate times, totaling over 18,000 miles, with his last crossing completed in 2017 at the age of 70.
In 2021, while climbing Mount Kilimanjaro, he successfully reached the summit.
After asking for a brief rest before taking a photo, he sat down on a rock and peacefully “fell asleep,” passing away at the top of Africa.


On February 22, Aleksander Doba made the last few strides to the top of Kilimanjaro, a pleased 74-year-old man, waving to fellow climbers with his envy-inducing muscular arms, a smile beaming from behind the curls of a wild beard.
He shouted his happiness for achieving his goal of climbing this mountain with the enchanting name.
Doba took a look around, admiring the view from the world’s highest freestanding mountain, sat down on a nearby rock, and died.

While it’s perhaps not entirely surprising that a man of that age would die of HAPE (high altitude pulmonary edema) at such an altitude, it might surprise many who knew him that after all Doba had been through, hiking to the top of Kilimanjaro would kill him.
Some might have been surprised that anything could.

Late in life, Doba paddled solo across the Atlantic Ocean three times.
He was 64 years old his first time.
He was 70 during his final crossing in 2017.
He holds a bushel of world records for his almost unbelievable paddles.
He should hold more for his beard.

His wife’s homemade jams were possibly the secret to his success.
Each time he’d step out of his kayak on shaky feet after one of his mammoth crossings, fresh after facing giant waves, relentless sun, broken equipment, and a body rendered into jerky from salt air, with reporters standing by for a juicy quote about man against nature and the perils of the sea, Doba would hold up a jar of his wife’s jam and praise her efforts for that particular batch.
It was the performance booster that kept the man going.


Doba completing his second trans-Atlantic crossing.
Photo: Iwona Bednarczyk-Jolley
 
As the ship lingered, the captain confused, Doba shouted Polish curses at the crew and they took a hint.

Doba was born in 1946 in Swarzędz, Poland, smack in the middle of the country.
Access to the sea was nonexistent, but he had rivers and he used them.
Doba loved whitewater kayaking as a youngster in Poland and took it seriously, competing in whitewater slalom events.
He was invited as a young man to join a kayaking club, enthusiastically accepted, and set about paddling all the way from the middle of the country to the Baltic Sea, an illegal act in the Communist country.
He feigned confusion when halted by soldiers, explaining he had no idea how far he’d paddled, he was just out for a river cruise.

In his 30s, he took an interest in big-water kayaking, eyeing Russia’s massive Lake Baikal, which he circumnavigated successfully.
In 1989, he kayaked the length of the Baltic Sea’s shoreline, spending 100 days on the water.
Later, he paddled more than 5,300 kilometers from rivers in Poland to the open sea and the Arctic Circle.
Once, on that trip, he was pitched overboard, and washed up on a beach; he awoke shocked to find himself lying alive on the sand, with no idea how he got there.
 
The Olo, Doba’s 2010 kayak.
Photo: Wikipedia


Still, Doba had no reason to plot a trip across the Atlantic, let alone three such trips.
After all, he had a pleasant life as a chemical engineer in Poland, and plenty of homemade jam to eat back at home.

In 2003, Doba was advising a fellow paddler about how to tackle the Baltic Sea.
The two men got to talking, and eventually, they’d decided, forget the Baltic, they were going to cross the entire Atlantic.

Ghana to Brazil.

Their plan was to take separate kayaks, but lash them together at night so they wouldn’t drift apart.
Some time later they headed out from the Ghanian coast, visions of glory illuminating their watery path.

They didn’t make it two days before they were washed up on a lonely beach, their plan in tatters.
But Doba was hooked on the idea and plotted his return, this time without a fellow paddler to consider.

“With my hand on my heart, it wasn’t my idea,” Mr.
Doba told the NYT Magazine in 2018.
“I was infected with a virus.”
 
Doba during his second Atlantic crossing. Photo: Nicola Muirhead 
 
That paddling virus compelled Doba to embark on his solo paddle in 2010 at the age of 64.
He’d spent ten years designing and testing his kayak, the Olo.
When it was ready, he transported it to Senegal, carefully packed the hold with jam, freeze dried goulash, and homemade wine, and shoved off, the bow pointed at Brazil.

99 days later, Doba arrived in South America.
His skin was flayed from the sun and the salt and the ever-present moisture from the steaming hot tropical ocean.
He had conjunctivitis.
His fingernails and toenails had long since rebelled from the torture he put them through and peeled off somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic.
So had his clothes, in fact.
The constant wetness was impossible to dry, so he paddled most of the way stark naked.

But, he survived, and immediately started plotting another trip, but at a slightly higher latitude.

Three years later, Doba was ready to cross the Atlantic again, this time preparing to depart Europe from Portugal, with a planned arrival in Florida.
His wife, unhappy with this obsession, refused to drive him to the airport so he could fly to Portugal to begin his trip.
She still gave him jam.

This trip was smooth paddling for the first few months until Doba noticed his satellite phone had konked out.
Unwilling to lose that precious line to the outside world, he signaled for help using the SOS function on his SPOT device.
A Greek tanker eventually tracked him down, and drew its massive bulk alongside to offer rescue.
Doba tried to communicate that he simply wanted assistance with his phone and communication, though there was a significant language barrier.
Doba rebuffed the ropes thrown over the side by the crew, and waved away the hulking tanker.
As the ship lingered, the captain confused, Doba shouted Polish curses at the crew and they took a hint.
Doba continued paddling west.

You may notice a theme here, one of irreverence, charm, of a man tickled to be alone, at sea, baffled at his own accomplishments, defiant of authority and those who would tell him “no.” Doba cherished the sights and experiences he enjoyed at sea.
He paddled with sea turtles, was astonished to have whales drift alongside his craft, wished upon shooting stars in impossibly starlit skies, far from any source of light.
 
Doba, interviewed at a trade show, 2016.
Photo: Ptak Warsaw Expo


His final crossing was in 2017, at 70 years old.
This time, he headed east, departing from New Jersey for France.
The trip took 110 days, and, an old hand at this now, Doba again paddled naked, dined on fresh fish he caught, and savored the attention when he arrived in Europe, a Polish national hero.

There are statues of Doba in his native country.
Selfies taken with Doba are treasured by his fellow Poles who encountered him near his home.
He was active giving lectures and eager to share his stories with adventure-seekers.
He was thrilled to be hiking Kilimanjaro, telling an interviewer: “Kayaks did not dissuade me from other forms of exploring the world.”

Doba would hold up a jar of his wife’s jam and praise her efforts for that particular batch.
It was the performance booster that kept the man going.

As Doba ascended the mountain on his last day on Earth, he passed a Polish climber, who was excited to come face to face with a national celebrity.
“I wished him luck in reaching the summit,” said Boguslaw Wawrzyniak.
“Then I asked the local guides with him, ‘Do you know who this man is?’ And they said: ‘Yes.
We know who this is. He is the king of the ocean.’”

“He said many times that he didn’t want to die in his bed,” said Doba’s son Czeslaw.
“From what we gather, he was euphoric to reach the summit. Then he sat down and fell asleep.”

To sit down happily atop Kilimanjaro, one of the seven summits, 20,000 feet into the sky, to rest your weary and battle-scarred 74-year-old bones, there to expire from effort, is, perhaps, not at all a bad way to pass from this world to whatever comes next.

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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

5 facts about the Gulf war that make it an energy and shipping conflict


From The Shipping Brief by Federica Maiorano

The conflict unfolding around the Strait of Hormuz is rapidly evolving beyond a conventional military confrontation.

What is emerging instead is something more consequential for global markets: an energy and logistics crisis centered on the Gulf’s infrastructure and maritime chokepoints.

The region sits at the heart of the global hydrocarbon system, and the escalation we are now seeing reveals how fragile that system can be when geopolitics intersects with physical supply chains.

Below are five structural realities shaping the conflict and its implications for energy and shipping markets.

1. Energy infrastructure has become a primary battlefield

One of the clearest signals from the conflict so far is that energy infrastructure is no longer a secondary target — it is central to the strategy.

Facilities such as Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura Refinery and the massive LNG export complex at Ras Laffan Industrial City illustrate the scale of what is at stake.

These sites are not just industrial facilities; they are nodes in the global energy system.

The Gulf region accounts for roughly:
  • ~20% of global oil supply
  • ~20% of global LNG supply
Disrupting even a portion of this capacity can quickly ripple through energy markets.

What makes this phase of the conflict particularly striking is how inexpensive the tools of disruption have become.
Drone strikes and asymmetric attacks can threaten assets that took decades and hundreds of billions of dollars to build.

This creates a profound imbalance: cheap weapons targeting extremely expensive infrastructure.

2. Shipping activity has effectively collapsed

The second front in this conflict is maritime.

The Strait of Hormuz is one of the most critical shipping routes in the world. Roughly 20 million barrels of oil per daynormally transit this narrow waterway, alongside large volumes of LNG and other commodities.

But in recent days, commercial traffic has dropped sharply.
Some maritime intelligence reports suggest very few international vessels are crossing the Strait, apart from Iranian shipping.

This disruption extends far beyond hydrocarbons.

Several other commodity supply chains rely heavily on the Strait, including:
  • aluminium exports from the Gulf
  • fertiliser feedstocks such as urea and sulphur
  • petrochemicals
  • other bulk commodities
The consequences are already visible across the shipping market.
War risk insurance premiums have surged, freight risk has increased dramatically, and many shipowners are reassessing whether the route is commercially viable under current conditions.

Iranian officials have further escalated tensions by warning that “not a single litre of oil” would leave the Gulf while attacks against Iran continue.

If enforced, such a strategy would effectively weaponize one of the world’s most important maritime chokepoints.
 


3. Storage and logistics constraints are creating a cascading crisis


A less visible but equally important dimension of the crisis is logistics bottlenecks within the producing countries themselves.

If exports are blocked, oil producers eventually face a simple physical constraint: they run out of storage capacity.

Tank farms fill quickly when production continues but tankers cannot load.
Once storage reaches its limits, producers have no choice but to shut in production.

Countries such as Iraq are particularly vulnerable to this dynamic because their storage capacity is limited relative to production levels.

Even where alternative export routes exist, they offer only partial relief.

Saudi Arabia can divert some crude through the East–West Pipeline, which transports oil to terminals on the Red Sea.
The UAE has a similar bypass route through the Habshan–Fujairah Pipeline, allowing exports to reach the Gulf of Oman.

But these pipelines cannot replace the full capacity of the Strait.
At best, they allow a fraction of normal export volumesto continue moving.

The result is a cascading supply problem: once exports slow, production reductions often follow.

4. Kharg Island is the strategic wildcard

Amid all the escalation, one location remains conspicuously untouched: Kharg Island Oil Terminal.

Kharg Island in the GeoGarage platform (UKHO nautical raster chart)
 
This small island handles around 90% of Iran’s crude exports and is one of the most strategically sensitive pieces of energy infrastructure in the region.

So far, the United States and Israel appear to have deliberately avoided targeting it.

The reason is straightforward: striking Kharg would likely trigger a far broader escalation.

Such an attack could provoke:
  • retaliatory strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure
  • a severe disruption to regional oil exports
  • a significant shock to global energy markets
In other words, Kharg Island represents a strategic red line.

As long as it remains untouched, there is still some containment in the conflict.
But if that line were crossed, the consequences for global energy markets could be profound.

5. The global energy system is structurally fragile

Taken together, these developments highlight a deeper structural reality.

The global energy system depends on a small number of highly concentrated infrastructure hubs and maritime chokepoints.

When those assets become exposed to geopolitical conflict, the system can be destabilized far more easily than many market participants assume.

Low-cost asymmetric warfare — whether drones, sabotage, or maritime disruption — now has the potential to:
  • damage critical infrastructure
  • halt shipping routes
  • destabilize commodity flows
  • move global prices
The Gulf conflict is therefore not just a regional war.
It is also a stress test for the architecture of the global energy and shipping system.

And the results so far suggest that architecture may be far more fragile than markets once believed.


 
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