Cruise season opened in Seattle last Friday. The Norwegian Jade made the first call of the season at Pier 66, and if you were anywhere near the waterfront, you felt the shift. That particular energy — the one that arrives with the first big white ship of the year — is hard to describe to someone who hasn’t worked the water. It’s a combination of relief, anticipation, and the low hum of an economy clicking back into gear.
This week I want to do something a little different. Instead of just reporting what happened, I want to walk you through what our vessel traffic data is actually telling us and why the global picture matters for what we see on the Sound every day.
Because right now, the global picture is genuinely complicated.
The Cruise Season Nobody Expected to Be This Big
330 ship calls running through October 11. Last year’s Alaska cruise season brought 1.9 million passengers and 298 calls. Ya’ll, that’s a hella big meaningful jump.
Two cruise lines are making their Seattle debuts this season: MSC Cruises, out of Geneva, and Virgin Voyages, out of Florida. Both are adding Alaska itineraries for the first time. Sixteen ships will be based out of Seattle for the season. The Port estimates $1.2 billion in economic impact and 5,120 direct and indirect jobs supported by cruise activity.
That is a big number for the waterfront, for the longshoremen, for the restaurant owners around Pike Place, and for the maritime workforce throughout the region. The cruise industry has quietly become one of the most significant economic engines in the Puget Sound maritime economy, and it tends to get underestimated precisely because it looks like tourism rather than industry. It is both.
Worth noting for those of you who follow our vessel tracking data: the passenger arrival count in our year-to-date numbers looks soft right now – down five compared to last year through this week. Don’t read into that. It’s a pre-season artifact. The first ship of cruise season didn’t arrive until April 18. By this time next month, that number will look completely different.
Two Months of Hormuz, and What It Means Here
I’ve been writing about the Strait of Hormuz situation since February, when the U.S.-Israeli air campaign began and Iran moved to restrict tanker traffic through the strait. At its worst, crude oil prices surged toward $150 per barrel — the International Energy Agency called it the largest supply disruption in history, with global oil production falling more than 10 million barrels per day in March alone.
A two-week ceasefire took effect April 7-8, and oil has since come down to roughly $83 per barrel. But here’s the thing about that ceasefire: the ships haven’t come back. An estimated 400 loaded tankers are still trapped inside the Persian Gulf waiting to exit, with virtually no vessels willing to re-enter. Industry analysts from S&P Global Market Intelligence estimate it could take until July for flows to normalize, and that assumes the ceasefire holds, which is far from guaranteed.
In the meantime, shippers and their insurers are making rational decisions. You don’t put a $100 million VLCC into a shooting gallery on the promise of a fragile two-week truce.
So what does this mean for Puget Sound?
Look at the tanker numbers in this week’s data. Cherry Point is holding essentially flat year over year (+1), and Ferndale is up slightly (+4). In the context of a global energy disruption of this scale, that is actually a good story. Our refineries are successfully sourcing from the Pacific Rim — Alaska North Slope, Canadian crude, and Pacific producers — rather than relying on Middle Eastern grades that can no longer reliably move through the strait. We are geographically advantaged in a way that East Coast and Gulf refineries simply are not.
March Point is down significantly in overall arrivals (-14 for the port as a whole), though some of that likely reflects broader demand softening as elevated bunker costs get passed through to cargo customers. Worth watching.
One other Hormuz thread worth following: on March 17, the Administration waived the Jones Act for 60 days to facilitate alternative commodity routing — specifically petroleum and fertilizers that would normally move through the strait. That waiver just got extended another 90 days.
American Waterways Operators called it “a gut punch to American workers and should be terminated immediately.” Its impact on domestic coastal traffic, including movements in and out of Puget Sound ports, is something we’re monitoring closely.
The Tariff Picture: Vehicles Tell the Story
If you want to understand what tariffs are doing to Pacific Northwest trade right now, look at one number: vehicle carrier arrivals are up 16 compared to the same period last year.
Sixteen.
That is front-loading. Importers who move vehicles — cars, trucks, equipment — are racing to get product into the country before further tariff escalation makes it economically unworkable. We’ve seen this behavior in container trade before, but the magnitude of the vehicle surge is striking.
Here’s the broader context. About 90 percent of the Pacific Northwest’s trade is with Asia. China alone accounted for 40 percent of the region’s total trade volume as recently as 2024. With duties on Chinese goods running as high as 145 percent, that relationship is being stress-tested in real time.
Container arrivals in our data are essentially flat year over year (+4), which tells you that throughput is holding even as the individual port picture gets messier. Seattle is down 18 arrivals year to date, while Tacoma is essentially flat (+1). Some of that Seattle decline is noise, but some of it reflects genuine traffic shifts. The Northwest Seaport Alliance has been clear that it is not the time to pull back on service levels, even with softer volumes, and that’s the right call. The worst thing you can do in a volatile trade environment is reduce capacity and reliability exactly when shippers need stability.
The deeper structural concern is what comes next. Both Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd — the two largest container lines in the Gemini alliance — have guided for operating losses in 2026. Hapag-Lloyd closed full-year 2025 with EBIT down 62 percent from the prior year. These are not small companies absorbing small losses. When the major carriers start making network rationalization decisions under financial pressure (dropping port calls, consolidating rotations, reducing Pacific Northwest coverage) the effects land here, at our terminals, on our longshore workforce, in our supply chains.
That dynamic is worth watching very carefully over the next 60 to 90 days, as 2026-27 service contracts get finalized around the May 1 deadline.
The Arctic Is Getting Serious and Seattle Is Part of It
Two pieces of Coast Guard news landed this week that deserve more attention than they’ve received.
First: the Coast Guard confirmed a $323 million investment to modernize Base Seattle on Elliott Bay. The base will serve as the West Coast hub for the new heavy Polar Security Cutter icebreakers, with the first (USCGC Polar Sentinel) expected in 2030. This is a significant piece of infrastructure investment for the Seattle maritime economy, with contracting and labor activity that will flow from it for years.
Second: the Coast Guard announced that the first two new Arctic Security Cutters — medium icebreakers under contract with Finnish shipbuilder Rauma Marine Constructions — will be homeported in Alaska, with delivery expected by the end of 2028. Up to 11 Arctic Security Cutters are under contract, backed by roughly $3.5 billion in funding. Commandant Admiral Kevin Lunday described it as a decisive step to defend the northern border and counter Russian and Chinese Arctic influence.
I want to put this in context for a moment, because it matters for how we think about the long game in Pacific Northwest maritime. Russia operates roughly 40 icebreakers in the polar region and has been developing the Northern Sea Route as a potential dominant trade corridor between Asia and Europe. China is investing heavily in Arctic research and positioning. The United States has been embarrassingly behind for decades.
These are not academic observations. The Arctic is becoming a real maritime operating environment, and the Pacific Northwest, as the nearest major U.S. maritime gateway to the high north, sits at the center of whatever that future looks like. The investments being made at Base Seattle and the ASC homeporting decision in Alaska are the opening moves in a long strategic competition. The fact that we’re finally making them is worth noting.
What the Numbers Are Really Saying
Total berth arrivals are down 38 year over year (795 versus 833). Total pure arrivals (a better measure of actual vessel traffic volume) are essentially flat at +4. I wrote last week about the difference between these two metrics, but the short version is this: the same number of ships are coming into the region, they’re just touching berths differently. Fewer shifts, fewer recalls, possibly faster port operations.
The bigger story in the data is distribution. Aberdeen is up 8, Tacoma is flat, Cherry Point and Ferndale are holding. Everett is down 13, Seattle is down 18, March Point is down 14. Some of that distribution shift reflects the energy story because our northern refineries are sourcing differently. Some of it reflects broader trade softening showing up at the big container ports.
Aberdeen at +8 is quietly one of the more interesting data points. That port punches above its weight in certain commodity flows, and when it runs hot, it’s usually telling you something about bulk cargo demand.
The View From the Bridge
I spent a good part of this week thinking about something that doesn’t show up in vessel traffic data: the peculiar combination of forces acting on this region simultaneously.
We’re entering what should be an exceptionally strong cruise season while simultaneously watching the global energy market try to recover from its worst disruption since the 1970s oil shocks. We’re seeing vehicle imports surge on tariff fear while container lines guide for losses. We’re watching the federal government make its largest icebreaker investment in history while fighting about trade policy in ways that threaten the very trade lanes those icebreakers are meant to protect.
The Sound keeps moving. That’s what it does. But the currents running underneath the surface traffic are freaky right now, and if you work in maritime, in logistics, in port operations, or in any of the industries that depend on global trade moving through this region, you should be paying close attention to all of them at once.
That’s what we’re here for.
Data referenced in this post is drawn from MXPS vessel tracking systems through April 24, 2026.


