After nearly two years of sectarian violence that reshaped regional shipping patterns and disrupted global supply chains, major ocean carriers are beginning to restore services on a critical Middle East trade route. The gradual return to the Red Sea and Suez Canal could translate into lower freight rates for shippers moving cargo from Asia to the United States and Europe.
This week, scheduled container services via the Red Sea and Suez Canal are set to resume, marking a notable step toward normalization after an extended period of geopolitical instability. For the global shipping industry, the move signals cautious confidence that risks in the region have diminished enough to support a limited resumption of traffic.
The reconfiguration of service connecting Asia and the US reflects a conservative and measured approach. Initially, smaller vessels are being deployed outside of alliance networks, a strategy widely expected to be adopted by other container lines as they gradually reintroduce capacity into an uneven and still-fragile operating environment.
This incremental capacity return could place additional downward pressure on already softening ocean freight rates. While some carriers, including France-based CMA CGM, largely maintained Red Sea operations throughout the Houthi attacks, others have historically taken a more risk-averse stance before committing to a broader return.
Xeneta data indicates that at least two container vessels have transited the Red Sea in recent weeks as part of quiet risk-assessment efforts by carriers. Some sailings originally scheduled to route around the Cape of Good Hope were instead redirected through the Red Sea, with satellite tracking temporarily disabled, an indication that operators were testing conditions before making any formal service announcements.
Since late 2023, Houthi rebels based in Yemen have targeted Red Sea shipping in response to the conflict in Gaza, prompting widespread vessel diversions and extended transit times around southern Africa. These diversions effectively removed capacity from the global market, tightening supply and supporting elevated freight rates throughout much of 2024.
According to market analysts, the recent successful transits reduced perceived operational risk and supported decisions to reintroduce services through the Suez Canal. However, a rapid or large-scale return is not expected. The restoration of full schedules via the Suez route could take three to five months, depending on carrier strategies, and the transition period may be marked by schedule volatility, port congestion, and temporary service disruptions for shippers.
The timing of the return to Red Sea and Suez Canal routings is particularly important as annual contract negotiations between carriers and shippers are currently in progress. Extended diversions around Africa significantly reduced effective capacity in the global market, helping support higher freight rates throughout 2024. A broader shift back to shorter Suez transits would reverse this trend by restoring capacity and rebalancing supply and demand.
According to industry analysis, a large-scale return to the Suez Canal could release approximately 6-8% of global container shipping capacity back into the market, a development that would place meaningful downward pressure on freight rates. With global container volumes reaching roughly 183 million TEUs in 2024, this would equate to nearly 2 million TEUs of capacity returning to circulation.
Spot market data already reflects softening conditions. Average spot rates from the Far East are down 43% year over year into the US East Coast and 30% into North Europe. Long-term contract rates are expected to trend back toward pre-Red Sea crisis levels seen in late 2023, even without a rapid or full return to Red Sea transits.
For shippers, this evolving situation presents both opportunity and complexity. While increased capacity and easing rates may offer cost relief, the transition period is likely to involve schedule changes, uneven transit times, and localized congestion. Working closely with experienced freight forwarding partners will be key to navigating route options, managing risk, and securing competitive rates as the market recalibrates.
At Translindo, we continue to monitor carrier developments and rate trends across all major trade lanes. Our team works closely with shipping lines and overseas partners to provide clients with timely guidance, flexible routing options, and customized logistics solutions.

