The Dockflow Dispatch

Dockflow

Maritime logistics moves 90% of everything you own - but for most freight forwarders and supply chain teams, it still runs on Excel, WhatsApp, and gut feeling. The Dockflow Dispatch is the show for the people responsible for freight, whether you're a freight forwarder chasing ETAs at midnight, an ops manager firefighting demurrage charges, or a C-level executive at a logistics company trying to understand where technology is taking your industry. Every week, the Dockflow team breaks down what's changing in maritime logistics - from AI and real-time container tracking to port congestion, carbon regulations, and the forces making supply chains harder (or easier) to run. Some episodes are deep dives into a specific industry topic. Others are conversations with the operators, founders, and veterans who've lived through the industry's biggest shifts. No hype. No fluff. Just honest insight from people who work in freight every day. Brought to you by Dockflow - the logistics enablement platform trusted by freight forwarders and shippers across Europe. New episodes every week.

Episodes

  1. 24 APR

    When Ships Go Down - The Tech Behind Maritime Rescue and Recovery

    In April 2026, the Port of Antwerp had three maritime incidents in ten days: an oil spill from the MSC Denmark VI that shut down the entire Scheldt, a barge that punched a hole through the hull of the Silver Sun car carrier, and the inland vessel Sola Gratia sinking 18 meters deep near the Royerssluis after a steering failure. Pauline and Michiel dig into what happens after the headline. They walk through the actual response chain — multibeam sonar scans that map a wreck before any diver goes in, the rigid five-step salvage process (survey → seal → fuel removal → cargo removal → lift), floating cranes like the Hebo Lift 10 that raised the Bayesian superyacht, and why oil containment booms fail above 0.7 knots of current while skimmers only recover about 10% of spilled oil. They also look at prevention: why 45% of marine casualties in Europe happen in port areas despite the Scheldt having one of the world's most sophisticated vessel traffic services, the gap in safety mandates between seagoing and inland vessels, and where AI is starting to help — from LSTM models that predict collisions 20 minutes out to Orca AI's SeaPod digital watchkeeper. Three takeaways for forwarders: Port disruptions cascade in hours but recover in weeks. The salvage sequence is rigid — you can't speed it up.The inland waterway tech gap is your blind spot. Mixed-traffic ports are where collision risk concentrates.Understand the response chain, not just the headline. Current speed, boom placement, and lock status tell you more about your actual disruption window than any news photo.

    23 min
  2. 6 MAR

    The Hormuz Shutdown: Operational Playbook for Freight Forwarders

    On March 1, 2026, five vessels were struck inside the Strait of Hormuz. The Safeen Prestige, a 1,700 TEU container ship, caught fire. The crew abandoned ship. Within 48 hours, every major carrier had pulled out: MSC, Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, CMA CGM, ONE. All Gulf bookings suspended simultaneously. That's 170 containerships. 450,000 boxes. Frozen. In this episode, Pauline Van Ostaeyen and Michiel Gabriëls run the operational playbook for freight forwarders with active Gulf trade. Not a geopolitical analysis. A crisis checklist. The Strait of Hormuz is not the Red Sea. The Persian Gulf is a cul-de-sac. There is no Cape reroute. The ports of Jebel Ali, Shuaiba, Khalifa Bin Salman, and Qatar all suspended operations. War-risk P&I cover ended at midnight on March 5. That deadline has passed. They walk through the surcharge reality: $800 to $4,000 per box, effective March 2, every carrier, no exceptions. Every quote issued before that date is now wrong. And cargo is going to Salalah, Khor Fakkan, Sohar, Duqm, and in some cases Colombo. They cover the carrier advisory pages to watch, the four-part client message that turns a crisis into a trust-building moment, and why one of the industry's best-connected analysts described the outlook this week as "flying blind." Plus three moves for this week: audit your Gulf portfolio before your clients call, reissue every affected quote with the war risk surcharge as a named line item, and get on the phone (not email) to confirm where your in-transit cargo actually is right now. The strait is closed. The cargo isn't lost. The forwarder who knows the difference wins the relationship.

    21 min

About

Maritime logistics moves 90% of everything you own - but for most freight forwarders and supply chain teams, it still runs on Excel, WhatsApp, and gut feeling. The Dockflow Dispatch is the show for the people responsible for freight, whether you're a freight forwarder chasing ETAs at midnight, an ops manager firefighting demurrage charges, or a C-level executive at a logistics company trying to understand where technology is taking your industry. Every week, the Dockflow team breaks down what's changing in maritime logistics - from AI and real-time container tracking to port congestion, carbon regulations, and the forces making supply chains harder (or easier) to run. Some episodes are deep dives into a specific industry topic. Others are conversations with the operators, founders, and veterans who've lived through the industry's biggest shifts. No hype. No fluff. Just honest insight from people who work in freight every day. Brought to you by Dockflow - the logistics enablement platform trusted by freight forwarders and shippers across Europe. New episodes every week.