Maersk Shifts Northern Star Service to Yangshan Port in Shanghai

A.P. Moller-Maersk is reinstating calls at the Yangshan deep water port as part of a strategic update to its Northern Star service. By shifting the call from the Port of Shanghai (Waigaoqiao) to Yangshan, Maersk aims to improve overall network reliability and transhipment efficiency for cargo moving through the region.

The Updated Port Rotation

The revised Northern Star service enhances connectivity between key Asian hubs and Oceania. Under the new schedule, the service will follow this rotation:

  • Shanghai (Yangshan), China

  • Hong Kong

  • Brisbane, Australia

  • Auckland, New Zealand

  • Nelson, New Zealand

  • Timaru, New Zealand

  • Port Chalmers, New Zealand

  • Napier, New Zealand

  • Tauranga, New Zealand

The change officially takes effect on May 3, 2026. The first vessel to execute the new Yangshan call will be the Maersk Innoshima, operating on northbound voyage 613N and southbound voyage 619S.

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This routing adjustment aligns with a broader industry trend among major ocean carriers. Operators are increasingly optimizing their port calls by shifting traffic toward major deep water gateway terminals like Yangshan.

By utilizing these advanced facilities, carriers can better accommodate larger vessels, improve schedule reliability, and build stronger transhipment links across their regional trade networks.

By Kiyaan Singh

Kiyaan Singh is the editor of EximHQ, covering global trade, shipping, ports, logistics infrastructure, export-import policy, shipping lines, port operations, and supply-chain developments. His reporting tracks the companies, routes, policies, investments, and people shaping international commerce and maritime logistics.