The recent announcement of a first-phase ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has brought cautious optimism across the global shipping industry, raising hopes that the long-disrupted Suez Canal corridor may finally begin its recovery.
Under the deal announced on October 8, 2025, Israel agreed to withdraw its forces to designated lines inside Gaza, while Hamas committed to releasing all remaining hostages as part of a prisoner-exchange arrangement. Implementation is expected to begin within 72 hours of Israeli Cabinet approval, a timeline that could swiftly ease regional instability and restore confidence in the Red Sea trade route.
Over the past year, escalating insecurity in nearby waters have taken a heavy toll on one of the world’s most important maritime arteries. The Suez Canal Authority reports that just 32 ships per day now pass through the canal on average, down sharply from around 75 vessels per day before the conflict. Supertankers, once a regular presence, “hardly use the waterway,” according to the authority.
The decline has been compounded by Houthi attacks on merchant shipping in the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea, which have forced global carriers to divert traffic away from the region. The ocean route for container ships and tankers has seen traffic drop by as much as 60% in recent months, as the Yemen-based group resumed attacks on Western-linked vessels earlier this year.
In response, major international carriers began rerouting their Asia-Europe and Asia-US services around the Cape of Good Hope, adding up to two weeks to some voyages and substantially increasing fuel and insurance costs. These disruptions sent the Suez Canal Authority’s toll revenues plunging by more than 60% in 2024, equating to a loss of $6–$7 billion, following record revenues of $10.25 billion in 2023.
The latest ceasefire agreement has changed the tone. Reports that the Houthis have indicated they will no longer attack Western ships amid the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas have further strengthened expectations for a regional stabilization. If those commitments hold, the restoration of regular shipping through the Suez Canal could accelerate significantly.
Maritime insurers are already reassessing war-risk premiums, and shipowners are signaling readiness to reconsider their routing decisions. A gradual return to the Suez-Red Sea corridor could help restore balance in global shipping networks, cut voyage times, and ease cost pressures on carriers and shippers alike.
Analysts project that if the truce endures and the Red Sea corridor remains secure, Suez Canal traffic could rebound sharply in 2025, potentially reaching pre-war levels by mid-year. The recovery would play a key role in stabilizing international freight rates and reducing transit delays.
Still, industry leaders remain cautious. The ceasefire is only the first stage of a broader framework, and its success will depend on consistent implementation and regional cooperation. Any breakdown in talks or renewed hostilities could quickly reverse recent gains.
For now, the industry is watching closely, hopeful that this fragile peace will hold, that the Red Sea will reopen to full commercial use, and that the Suez Canal can once again serve as the backbone of global east-west trade.