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Articles for July 2026
Why nuclear shipping is a pipe dream
Next-generation small modular reactors are just around the corner, and always will be, writes Declan Bush of Lloyd's List
Reassessing the Institute Time Clauses Hulls (1983)
Chris Kilbee, of MCO Average Adjusters and of the Association of Average Adjusters, argues there is a case for contemporary reform
The hidden risk in shipping is not technical - it is leadership blind spots
Irene Rosberg, of Blue MBA and of The Blue Board Leadership Programme at The Copenhagen Business School, argues that leaders across the marine sector need to step up if they do not want to fail their companies and people
Access control and operational resilience in modern ports
David Rock, at Abloy UK, discusses how controlling access is becoming ever more complex in modern ports
Anchorage or deviation? Additional premium disputes in cargo war risk insurance
Alexander Freeman and Richard Cooper, at Hill Dickinson, report on one of the biggest challenges in the recent Gulf conflict
The price of late visibility
Osher Perry, of ShipIn Systems, argues that the maritime industry's focus on what happens after an incident has come at the cost of preventing one
No minor offence: court extends US forfeiture reach on Iranian oil
While the political situation caused by the Gulf conflict remains uncertain, Benjamin Robinson, at Chalos & Co, reports on a recent court decision around the seizure of oil
Shipping does not have a shared language for weather risk - and the cost is rising
Craig West, at Weathernews, considers the increasing risk of bad weather and the need for better language to describe it
How AI is reshaping marine insurance
Lars Lange, secretary general, International Union of Marine Insurance, discusses the way in which the latest technology is impacting the marine market, with a warning that insurers need to move with some caution