Federal regulators licensed the first-ever offshore liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminal on Wednesday, a historic milestone for American energy exports. The $5 billion project, spearheaded by Houston-based Delfin Midstream, was licensed by the Maritime Administration and received Department of Energy export approval for a total of three planned vessels, according to FreightWaves.
LNG Export Milestone
The South Korean-built platforms will be located 40 miles off the coast of Cameron Parish, Louisiana. Production is projected to begin by 2030, eventually ramping up to an export capacity of 1.8 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day. This approval marks the first time the U.S. has authorized an offshore LNG export facility, potentially opening new routes for American natural gas to global markets.
LTL Market Reacts to Amazon's Expansion
In a separate development, Amazon announced on Wednesday it is expanding its less-than-truckload (LTL) service to all businesses. The news sent shares of publicly traded LTL carriers 5% lower, according to FreightWaves. However, industry analysts urge calm, noting that Amazon's asset-light model poses no immediate threat to established LTL giants that possess specialized heavy-pallet infrastructure. Analysts describe Amazon's container-pool model as more akin to a brokerage play, primarily competing in the economy three-to-four-day subsegment rather than premium service lanes.
Countervailing Duties Protect U.S. Trailer Makers
The U.S. Commerce Department last week determined that China and Mexico have unfairly subsidized their trailer export sectors, imposing preliminary countervailing duties to protect domestic manufacturers. The duties are:
| Country | Preliminary Duty Rate |
|---|---|
| China | Up to 100.7% |
| Mexico | Up to 2% |
U.S. Customs and Border Protection will now require importers of both finished and semi-finished dry vans to post immediate cash deposits at these rates, according to FreightWaves. This is expected to bring relief to U.S. builders including Wabash National, Great Dane, and Stoughton Trailers.
Cargo Fraud Surges 30% Year-Over-Year
Overhaul, a supply chain risk management firm, reported that deceptive pickup and identity-theft schemes surged more than 30% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2026. David Warrick, Overhaul's executive vice president of strategy, described these schemes as cyber-enabled hijackings that are highly coordinated operations run by international cartels using carrier impersonations and forged credentials. Warrick warned that the actual scale is severely underreported, estimating that for every single reported supply chain theft, an additional four to six crimes go completely unrecorded.
Upcoming Industry Events
FreightWaves also highlighted two upcoming events: the Supply Chain AI Symposium and the F3: Future of Freight Festival in Chattanooga, Tennessee, featuring keynotes and the FreightTech and Shipper of Choice awards.