Announcement
04 Mar 2026
In March 2026, the Commission adopted an EU Maritime Strategy to make the maritime sector across the bloc more competitive, resilient, sustainable, and secure. The Strategy was published on the same day as the EU's Port Strategy (see related state act).
Source
Number of interventions
5
0 certainly harmful
5 likely harmful
0 liberalising
Implementation date
No implementation date
Revocation date:
No revocation date
Recent update from 13 Mar 2026:
On 4 March 2026, the Commission adopted an EU Maritime Strategy to make the maritime sector across the bloc more competitive, resilient, sustainable, and secure. Among the various initiatives outli...
Recent update from 13 Mar 2026:
On 4 March 2026, the Commission adopted an EU Maritime Strategy to make the maritime sector across the bloc more competitive, resilient, sustainable, and secure. Among the various initiatives outli...
Recent update from 13 Mar 2026:
On 4 March 2026, the Commission adopted an EU Maritime Strategy to make the maritime sector across the bloc more competitive, resilient, sustainable, and secure. Among the various initiatives outli...
Recent update from 13 Mar 2026:
On 4 March 2026, the Commission adopted an EU Maritime Strategy to make the maritime sector across the bloc more competitive, resilient, sustainable, and secure. Among the various initiatives outli...
Recent update from 13 Mar 2026:
On 4 March 2026, the Commission adopted an EU Maritime Strategy to make the maritime sector across the bloc more competitive, resilient, sustainable, and secure. Among the different initiatives men...
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This Thread tracks harmful trade policy interventions affecting all products. Covering all types of interventions monitored by Global Trade Alert, it highlights how the yearly number of these measures has evolved over time.
Published: 04 Sep 2024
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