Maritime Companies Directory
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STEARNS Inc.
Manufacturer of personal flotation devices and flotation coveralls for commercial use.
Superior Industries
Superior Industries is a leading manufacturer of innovative bulk material handling equipment. Superior provides their customers with the most cost effective and durable conveying solutions, customized for any application.
TECH GROUP INC
OnSite Specialists Machining and Heat Treatin
TECH GROUP INC (dba Mactech and Stresstech)
Specialty on site portable field machining and heat treating equipment ands services
Tech Group, Inc.
Manufacturer and Distributor
Thern, Inc.
Thern, Inc. is a major designer and manufacturer of products for lifting, moving, pulling and other load handling functions.
Tioga Air Heaters
Tioga Air heater manufacuters indirect-fired heating and ventilaitng equipment which are used for winterization of offshore drilling platforms and other marine applications
U.S. Coast Guard
Government/Military
Waytek, Inc.
Waytek offers over 5,000 electrical wiring products for the marine and wire harness industries. Most orders ship same day they are placed. Quality Products. Great Service. Low Prices.
World Trade Network, Ltd.
International Distributors of ALL MARINE ELECTRONICS and SPARE PARTS
Maritime News
Op/Ed: Arctic Ice is a U.S Shipbuilding Thermostat – Let’s Turn Up the Heat
In December of 2025, the U.S. Coast Guard announced the award of two contracts to build up to six Arctic Security Cutter (ASC) icebreakers. The announcement declaring the vessels would be built between the United States and Finland in a major step forward for America’s national security in the Arctic region. The decision process encompassed more than the security of the Arctic passage. It announces a major shift in the U.S. Shipbuilding process. A second round of contracts were approved February 11, 2026 involving Davie in Canada and its recently purchased shipyard facility in Port Arthur, Texas under a similar agreement and process.
Container Shipping Consolidation Continues with $4.2B ZIM Acquisition
In a move that further reshapes the global liner landscape, Hapag-Lloyd has agreed to acquire ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd. in an all-cash transaction valued at approximately $4.2 billion, the companies announced today.Under the terms of the merger agreement, Hapag-Lloyd will acquire ZIM for $35.00 per share in cash, representing a 58% premium to ZIM’s prior-day closing stock price, a 90% premium to its 90-day VWAP, and a 126% premium to its unaffected share price of $15.50 in August 2025 prior to market speculation.
India Seizes Iran-linked US-Sanctioned Tankers
India has seized three U.S.-sanctioned tanker ships linked to Iran this month and stepped up surveillance in its maritime zone to curb illicit trade, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said on Monday.India aims to prevent its waters from being used for ship-to-ship transfers that obscure the origin of oil cargoes, the source added.The seizures and heightened surveillance follow an improvement in U.S.-India relations. Washington earlier this month announced it will cut import tariffs on Indian goods to 18% from 50%, as New Delhi has agreed to stop Russian oil imports.
Trump Administration Unveils Details of Maritime Action Plan
Often debated and long-awaited, The White House released its long-anticipated America’s Maritime Action Plan (MAP), a 40+ page blueprint aimed at what it calls a new “Maritime Golden Age” for the United States.The document, developed under Executive Order 14269, lays out a four-pillar strategy to rebuild domestic shipbuilding capacity, expand the U.S.-flag fleet, reform maritime workforce development, and strengthen industrial resilience. For U.S. shipbuilders, vessel owners and maritime suppliers, the plan signals potentially historic investment — paired with significant structural reform.What It Means for U.S.
Exports to China Fall to Lowest Output in Three Years
Exports from the Port of Los Angeles, the busiest U.S. gateway for ocean trade, fell 8% in January to the lowest monthly output in nearly three years, Executive Director Gene Seroka said on Tuesday."Exports to China look dismal," Seroka said after the Port of Los Angeles handled 104,297 20-foot equivalent units (TEUs) of loaded export containers in January.President Trump's aggressive use of tariffs has upended global trade and retaliatory trade duties from China and other nations have hit U.S. exporters like farmers particularly hard.