Good morning, nice people. Our top story of the day dives into how the war didn’t stop MENA air cargo, but briefly disrupted the Gulf’s hub-and-spoke model. There’s another dose of (actual) good news on the aviation front: the UAE airspace restrictions imposed at the start of the conflict have now been lifted. Fares in the UAE may ease as capacity returns, though long-haul routes to the US, Canada, and Europe will take longer to normalize, with pricing not expected to settle until August.
Plus: Diplomacy and logistics are moving in parallel. Tehran is currently reviewing Washington’s response to its latest peace proposal — a reported 14-point framework to end hostilities and lift the naval blockade — while US President Donald Trump says US forces will begin guiding stranded vessels through Hormuz today. With many ships running low on supplies, he’s framed the move — named “Project Freedom” — as a humanitarian effort, though specifics remain scarce.
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PROJECTS — AD Ports Group and Azerbaijan’s Azcon Holding signed an MoU to explore joint investments in ports, shipping, and digital trade hubs in Azerbaijan, according to a statement. The agreement targets infrastructure development to link Central Asian trade flows more tightly with European markets via the Middle Corridor.
UAE 💚Azerbaijan: The two countries’ trade and economic partnership agreement officiallyentered into force on 15 April. The Cepa aims to eliminate or reduce tariffs on 95% of goods and includes a dedicated services chapter designed to stimulate supply-chain integration.
The UAE has been expanding its reach across the Middle Corridor — this month, it signed a strategicagreement with Romania’s National Company Maritime Ports Administration to modernize the Port of Constanța, which is a European gateway for cargo from the Caspian Sea and Central Asia.
ENERGY — Global energy majors are turning to Canadian producers as Middle East disruptions force a rethink of “safe barrels” — with companies including Shell, TotalEnergies, ConocoPhillips, Equinor, and BP re-evaluating potential acquisition targets, Reuters reports, citing sources it says are familiar with the matter. Investment banks have recently been tasked with identifying and lining up suitable candidates.
A re-entry: A decade-long foreign retreat from the Alberta oil sands — Canada’s largest oil-producing region — is reversing as policy turns more supportive under Prime Minister Mark Carney, war-driven risk steers investors toward safer jurisdictions, and new crude and gas export routes come online.
Why this matters: The shift toward Canada chips away at the Gulf’s role as the default swing supplier. The region still dominates, but the calculus is changing: supply security is now priced alongside cost. Barrels outside the conflict zone — even if heavier and more expensive — are increasingly treated as a strategic hedge. And hedges, by definition, dilute the core position.
Market watch
Oil prices dipped this morning after US President Donald Trump pledged aid for ships in Hormuz — but stayed above USD 100 without a US-Iran agreement, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures slipped USD 0.06 to trade at USD 108.11 / bbl by 04.00 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) declined USD 0.44 to USD 101.50 / bbl.
From Opec+ land: Seven Opec+ producers agreed yesterday to increase production by 188k bbl / d in June 2026, according to an Opec statement. The decision was agreed upon by Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria, and Oman during a virtual meeting on 3 May.
A UAE-sized hole? The 188k bbl / d increase marks a step down from May’s 206k bbl / d hike — and could reflect the alliance’s new math after the UAE formally exited Opec and Opec+ on May 1. Strip Abu Dhabi's barrels out of the unwinding schedule and the remaining seven are effectively maintaining the same pace, just with fewer hands on deck.
Proceeding with caution: The group stressed it will retain “full flexibility” to increase, pause, or reverse the phaseout of the voluntary cuts depending on market conditions, including reversing previously implemented adjustments from November 2023.
The Drewry World Container Index slipped 1% at USD 2,216 per 40-ft container last week,
Extending its decline for a third straight week, according to the latest index readings. The pullback came as transpacific and Asia-Europe rates eased, with Shanghai-Genoa and Shanghai-Rotterdam both down (1%), with rates still under pressure from excess capacity and weak demand, even as carriers manage blank sailing and push emergency fuel and peak-season surcharges on some lanes.
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