U.S. exporters are navigating a volatile Q2 landscape shaped by blank sailings, shifting port dynamics, and economic uncertainty. Carriers are strategically cutting capacity to stabilize rates and strengthen contract leverage - leaving exporters with fewer bookings and a higher risk of rolled cargo. East Coast volumes are surging, especially in Savannah, as freight diverts from congested or unreliable West and Gulf gateways.
Meanwhile, global chokepoints like the Panama Canal and Red Sea, along with looming labor unrest, are injecting new uncertainty into routing. If import demand rebounds in Q2/Q3, carriers may prioritize repositioning empty containers to Asia - sidelining U.S. ag exports and creating inland equipment shortages. Carbon efficiency mandates are also slowing vessels and reducing schedule flexibility.
Smart exporters are leveraging predictive tools, reassessing inland ramps and gateways, and renegotiating for flexibility.
The message is clear: those who prepare now will outperform those who wait.
68 blank sailings. New tariff rumblings from the White House. For U.S. exporters of containerized agriculture, food, and commodities, April isn't just about planting season - it's about supply chain risk season.
The 68 blank sailings reported for the Transpacific, Transatlantic, and Asia-Europe trades from Weeks 14-18 (March 31-May 4, 2025) were not executed in one day. These cancellations are distributed over a five-week period and reflect weekly planned blank sailings by ocean carriers across the major East-West trades.
Multiple services, alliances, and port rotations were affected, each with its own schedule adjustments.
The “68 sailings” figure is a snapshot reported by Drewry as of March 28, 2025 (according to the JOC.com article “April blank sailings ramp up amid push to finalize long-term contracts”) reflecting how many individual weekly sailings were scheduled to be canceled across that window. Each typically represents a full loop cancellation, not isolated vessel issues. As a result, exporters are experiencing cumulative impacts that differ by week and lane. Meanwhile, whispers of new tariffs could reignite retaliatory trade measures not seen since the 2018-2020 trade war.
The convergence of these two forces should put every U.S. exporter and ag supply chain manager on high alert.
Recent data from JOC and eeSea suggest these blank sailings aren’t only a response to weak demand. Carriers are:
This means exporters aren’t just dealing with a temporary dip in demand - they’re navigating a deliberate, strategic capacity squeeze that affects vessel availability, inland flows, and booking reliability.
The Port of Savannah reported a 22.5% YoY increase in container throughput in March 2025, absorbing diverted cargo from West and Gulf Coast ports facing congestion or carrier omissions (GPA/eeSea, 2025). While Savannah has handled the surge well so far, exporters should be aware that:
Several broader forces are converging that may further disrupt vessel schedules, container availability, and inland logistics:
(Source: Harrell, 2024a)
This isn’t just a logistics issue. It’s a strategic one. Between blank sailings and tariff volatility, U.S. ag exporters face both operational delays and demand-side shocks. Learning from the 2018-2020 playbook, the exporters who weathered it best were those who:
If April is the start of another wave of disruption, now is the time to act - not react.
Want help building a visibility strategy to reduce risk across your inland ramps and export bookings? Let’s connect. I’m happy to walk through what top-performing exporters are doing right now.
#agexports #supplychainrisk #raildisruption #blanksailings #exportlogistics #tradelanes #visibility #vesselschedules
Angell, M. (2025, April 1). April blank sailings ramp up amid push to finalize long-term contracts. Journal of Commerce. https://www.joc.com/article/april-blank-sailings-ramp-up-amid-push-to-finalize-long-term-contracts-5974802
Congressional Research Service. (2019). China’s retaliatory tariffs on U.S. agriculture: In brief (Report No. R45929). https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R45929
Harrell, V. (2024a). A Comprehensive Framework for Managing Inland Ramp and Vessel Schedule Disruptions for U.S. Exporters. TradeLanes.
Harrell, V. (2024b). Rail Visibility Explained: A Comprehensive Guide for U.S. Exporters of Agriculture, Food, and Commodities. TradeLanes.
Sea-Intelligence. (2019). Schedule Reliability in 2018. Sunday Spotlight, Issue 397.
eeSea. (2025, April 2). A tumultuous start to 2025: Global reliability. https://app.eesea.com/news/a-tumultuous-start-to-2025-global-reliability-eesea-schedule-reliability-scorecard
GPA/eeSea. (2025, April 3). GPA grows March container trade 22.5 percent. https://app.eesea.com/news/gpa-grows-march-container-trade-225-percent