INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF FREIGHT FORWARDERS ASSOCIATIONS (FIATA) 國際貨運代理協會聯合會 Updated 12 Mar 2026 · Middle East Security Alert: Legal & Insurance Guidance for Freight Forwarders
The ongoing escalation of geopolitical
tensions in the Middle East is having a direct and growing impact on
international freight operations. Disruptions to maritime traffic through the
Strait of Hormuz, and disruptions to regional airspaces are affecting transit
times, freight costs, carrier schedules, and insurance conditions across global
supply chains.
To support Members in
navigating this complex environment, FIATA's Advisory Body on Legal Matters,
with the support of FIATA Headquarters, has published a dedicated Middle East Security Situation – Contractual and Insurance
Considerations for Freight Forwarders: FIATA Legal & Insurance Briefing What the briefing covers The briefing provides practical guidance on
the key legal, contractual, and insurance considerations freight forwarders
need to be aware of right now, including: · Carrier contractual rights — how carriers may reroute, suspend, or terminate voyages, and what
this means for your obligations and exposure · Recovery of additional costs — war-risk surcharges, deviation costs, and how to
ensure your contracts allow you to pass these through to customers · Force majeure provisions — understanding when and how these apply, and the steps needed to
invoke them correctly · Your contracting role
— the differing implications for forwarders acting as contractual carriers
versus those acting as agents · Insurance gaps
— why standard cargo policies may not cover war risks or delay losses, and what
to check immediately · Operational risks
— practical guidance on abandoned cargo, demurrage and detention exposure, and
lien rights
A practical
risk-management checklist is included to help your team take immediate,
targeted action.
Act now The situation is evolving rapidly. Routes,
surcharges, and carrier operational measures may change at short notice. FIATA
strongly encourages all Members to review the briefing, assess the impact on
current and upcoming shipments, and ensure that customers are informed promptly
of any developments affecting their cargo.
FIATA members are encouraged to make use of the FIATA Model Rules, the FIATA Multimodal Transport Bill of Lading (FBL and eFBL),
and the FIATA Best Practice Guides, including those on Maritime Contracting, Contract Management, Abandoned Goods, and Demurrage and Detention, which provide practical tools for
managing disruptions in international transport operations.
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