The math starts upstream: dwell and demurrage before arrival
Tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have carriers routing around the Cape of Good Hope instead of transiting Suez. That routing adds roughly 14 days to an India-Europe voyage compared to the Suez path. For Canadian importers sourcing containers from Indian manufacturers or Gulf ports, the impact is immediate: longer dwell at the terminal of origin.
Container free time clauses typically run 5–7 days after the bill of lading is issued. By day 14, you're already deep into demurrage charges at the origin port. The carrier isn't absorbing that cost; the importer eats it. We've seen forwarders absorb origin demurrage and pass it through as a surcharge, but increasingly importers are pushing back and asking for detention waivers when carriers miss schedule. These rarely stick, but the negotiation takes time.
By the time the PARS (Pre-Arrival Review System) release hits your broker and the container arrives at Port of Montreal or Vancouver, the detention bill has already landed somewhere in your supply chain. That's not a customs issue, not a dock-timing issue—that's a transit-time issue baked into the ocean contract. When you renew ocean service agreements this quarter, that math needs to be in the renewal conversation.
Dock-door crunch: when three ships arrive the same week
Longer transits compress schedules in another way. Ships run on published sailing schedules. When delays push multiple shipments 14 days to the right on the calendar, you end up with three or four containers from different sailings arriving at Port of Montreal in the same operational window. Your warehouse isn't sized for that bunching. FENGYE LOGISTICS operates seven dock doors in Montreal. On a normal week we're turning containers at dock-to-stock within 48 hours. When we're absorbing a surge from delayed arrivals, that window gets crushed.
Cross-dock cutoffs are usually around 14:00 for next-day outbound delivery. When dock capacity is maxed by late arrivals, cargo that should cross-dock tomorrow sits overnight in our sufferance warehouse. In-bond handling fees kick in. Our published rate sits at roughly $12 to $40 per skid depending on service tier—re-palletizing, pick-pack labor, consolidation for final-mile. That overnight hold turns a quick cross-dock into a full-service storage event, and costs climb fast.
Cold-chain SLAs are tightening, reefer handling is getting squeezed
If your shipment is temperature-controlled (pharmaceuticals, fresh produce, biologics), longer dwell is now a compliance issue. Reefer containers carry strict SLAs: time within acceptable temperature range, no deviation beyond ±2°C, and full chain-of-custody logging.
Longer transits mean reefer units are running their compressors for extra days. That increases the risk of temperature deviation, especially during port dwell when containers are stacked and airflow is compromised. We're now staggering reefer unloads to prevent dock congestion and ensuring pre-cooling tunnels are booked before cargo arrives. If a reefer shipment pops a temperature flag during our intake inspection, we need to escalate fast: either re-cool or trigger a rejection SOP that cascades back to your supplier.
The cost of a temperature deviation on a $50,000 pharma shipment can be a total loss. That's not a dock cost; that's a supply-chain design cost. If your suppliers are on Indian pharma parks and you're routing through Suez normally, you're already running tight SLAs. Cape routing adds 14 days of risk. Talk to your cold-chain provider about shorter reefer cutoffs, and build a buffer into your qualification process if you're onboarding new refrigerated SKUs from Asia right now.
Container free time is being consumed in transit, not at the dock
Ocean carriers offer container free time as an incentive to move cargo fast. A typical free-time window is 5–7 days from bill of lading issuance. When your transit time was 20 days via Suez, free time was consumed during the voyage and cleared by the time the ship arrived. With Cape routing at 34 days, free time is half-gone before the container even hits Port of Montreal.
By the time your broker sends the PARS release and our warehouse pulls the container from the terminal, you're already paying detention charges. That cost is hidden in the landed cost of your goods. When you negotiate ocean service rates for Q3 and Q4, ask your forwarder about detention-suspension clauses: if the carrier delays arrival beyond the bill's promised date, detention stops running for every day beyond that threshold. Most carriers won't agree, but the push-back is building because importers are tired of eating schedule-failure costs.
Time-sensitive goods are shifting to air freight
We're seeing importers split their sourcing strategies. Bulk orders, planned inventory, standard goods stay ocean. Time-sensitive items—fast-moving consumer goods, seasonal inventory, pharmaceutical short-supply items—are moving to air freight. Air freight costs roughly 3–5 times more than ocean but arrives in 2–3 days instead of 3–4 weeks. That premium is now penciling out when the alternative is extended warehouse holding, late delivery fees, or stockouts.
The flip side: importers hedging with larger safety stock. If transits are unreliable, you carry extra inventory to buffer the risk. That inventory needs warehouse space. Warehouse rates in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal have tightened. We're at near-full occupancy at FENGYE LOGISTICS. Clients are paying premium rates because they're absorbing Hormuz-driven delays by holding more stock. That's a cost that doesn't show up in the ocean rate but shows up in working capital and warehouse spend.
Your in-bond storage exposure is climbing
If your goods are landing at a sufferance warehouse like ours for assessment and final release, longer container dwell means longer in-bond holding. Container free time applies to the carrier; in-bond storage fees are separate. We charge daily storage, handling, and yard fees. The longer your shipment sits pending customs processing or consolidation into a final shipment, the higher your in-bond costs.
Check your current in-bond SLA with your warehouse partner. If it was negotiated when 20-day transits were normal, renegotiate now. Factor in potential 25–30-day transits and price accordingly. Overstocking at the warehouse because your import velocity has dropped isn't a warehouse problem; it's an upstream planning problem. But your warehouse fees will reflect it.
Drayage window and detention charging
Drayage detention starts charging by the hour after container free time expires. When multiple ships arrive bunched, drayage drivers are queued and free-time windows compress. Even a 2-hour delay in pickup adds detention charges to your shipment. Talk to your drayage partner now about peak-period surcharges and prioritization. Some carriers are implementing Hormuz-route surcharges already, so review any new drayage contracts for escalation clauses tied to carrier delays.
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What to do this quarter
Review your ocean contracts. Renegotiate detention-suspension and schedule-reliability clauses if your agreements were signed before Q2 2026. Separate time-sensitive goods into air-freight logistics; bulk orders stay ocean but price in extended dwell. Pre-book warehousing and distribution services if you're increasing safety stock; warehouse capacity is tight. For reefer shipments, confirm cold-chain SOP with your provider and budget for temperature-deviation risk. Talk to your drayage partner about capacity and detention exposure in the next 60–90 days.
Monitor Transport Canada's port congestion and modal reports for real-time delays at Port of Montreal and Vancouver. If customs processing delays extend beyond 3 working days, escalate to your broker and negotiate release priority with CBSA. Track Port of Montreal's terminal congestion updates — they publish weekly capacity forecasts. Use that data to time your imports.
We're running tighter margins all around. The dock windows are real, and the math gets recalculated month to month. What worked in Q1 won't work in Q3 when Hormuz tensions stay hot and carriers keep routing around the Cape.
Originally published at https://www.fywarehouse.com/news/hormuz-tensions-are-rewriting-import-timelines-at-the-dock-90d19c7b.
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