TheMaritime.net
Dry Bulk Freight Index2,490 -1.3%Capesize3,538 -2.8%Panamax2,124 +0.7%Dirty Tanker Index1,935 +1.1%Supramax1,668 -0.1%Clean Tanker Index1,280 -1.4%Handysize947 +0.2%Dry Bulk Freight Index2,490 -1.3%Capesize3,538 -2.8%Panamax2,124 +0.7%Dirty Tanker Index1,935 +1.1%Supramax1,668 -0.1%Clean Tanker Index1,280 -1.4%Handysize947 +0.2%Dry Bulk Freight Index2,490 -1.3%Capesize3,538 -2.8%Panamax2,124 +0.7%Dirty Tanker Index1,935 +1.1%Supramax1,668 -0.1%Clean Tanker Index1,280 -1.4%Handysize947 +0.2%Dry Bulk Freight Index2,490 -1.3%Capesize3,538 -2.8%Panamax2,124 +0.7%Dirty Tanker Index1,935 +1.1%Supramax1,668 -0.1%Clean Tanker Index1,280 -1.4%Handysize947 +0.2%Dry Bulk Freight Index2,490 -1.3%Capesize3,538 -2.8%Panamax2,124 +0.7%Dirty Tanker Index1,935 +1.1%Supramax1,668 -0.1%Clean Tanker Index1,280 -1.4%Handysize947 +0.2%Dry Bulk Freight Index2,490 -1.3%Capesize3,538 -2.8%Panamax2,124 +0.7%Dirty Tanker Index1,935 +1.1%Supramax1,668 -0.1%Clean Tanker Index1,280 -1.4%Handysize947 +0.2%
Reference

Maritime Glossary

The core terms of chartering, sale & purchase, operations and compliance — defined plainly, and linked to the page where we actually measure each one.

58terms defined

A working glossary of the core terms used across chartering, sale & purchase, ship operations and maritime compliance — written in plain English, with each concept linked to the page on TheMaritime where we actually measure it.

These are concise reference definitions, not legal advice. Where a term refers to a regulation (MARPOL, the IMO carbon rules, COLREGs) we describe the instrument as it is publicly defined; where it refers to a market metric we publish, we link straight to the live figure.

This is the curated primer — the core terms, in plain English. For the full A–Z of maritime terms and abbreviations, see the Dictionary.

Open the Dictionary

Chartering & Commercial

Vessel & Tonnage

Aframax

A crude/product tanker of roughly 80,000–120,000 DWT, the largest size historically rated by the Average Freight Rate Assessment scale.

Air Draught

The vertical distance from the waterline to the highest point of the ship — what must clear under bridges and cranes.

Ballast

Seawater carried in tanks to keep an unladen ship stable and properly trimmed — and the term for a non-revenue, empty leg.

Capesize

A large dry-bulk carrier (typically 100,000+ DWT) too big for the Panama and Suez canals, routing around the Capes.

Deadweight TonnageDWT

The total weight a ship can carry — cargo plus fuel, stores, crew and water — at her load line, in metric tonnes.

Draught

The vertical distance from the waterline to the bottom of the keel — how deep the ship sits in the water.

Gross TonnageGT

A dimensionless measure of a ship’s total internal volume, used for regulation, manning and port-due calculations.

Kamsarmax

A dry-bulk carrier of about 80,000–85,000 DWT, sized to the maximum length that can load at the port of Kamsar in Guinea.

Laden

A ship carrying cargo — the revenue-earning leg of a voyage, the opposite of ballast.

Load Line

The marks on a ship’s hull showing the maximum permitted loading draught for different water densities and seasons.

Net TonnageNT

A volume-based measure of the space available for cargo and passengers, derived from gross tonnage.

Panamax

A ship sized to the dimensional limits of the original Panama Canal locks — about 65,000–80,000 DWT for bulkers.

Suezmax

A crude tanker (about 120,000–200,000 DWT) sized to the maximum that can transit the Suez Canal fully laden.

Very Large Crude CarrierVLCC

A crude oil tanker of roughly 200,000–320,000 DWT — the backbone of long-haul Middle East–to–Asia oil transport.

Cargo & Operations

Markets & Pricing

Regulation & Compliance

Carbon Intensity IndicatorCII

An IMO operational measure of how much CO₂ a ship emits per unit of transport work, graded A–E each year.

Classification Society

An organisation that sets technical standards for ship construction and surveys vessels against them throughout their life.

COLREGs

The international "rules of the road" governing how ships navigate to avoid collisions at sea.

Energy Efficiency Design IndexEEDI

An IMO design standard that caps the CO₂ emitted per unit of transport capacity for newly built ships.

Energy Efficiency Existing Ship IndexEEXI

A one-time IMO design-efficiency standard that existing ships must meet, the in-service counterpart of the EEDI for new ships.

Flag State

The country in which a ship is registered, whose laws she sails under and which is responsible for her regulatory oversight.

International Maritime OrganizationIMO

The United Nations agency that sets global rules for ship safety, security and pollution prevention.

ISM Code

The IMO safety-management standard requiring shipping companies to operate a documented Safety Management System.

MARPOL

The IMO convention preventing pollution from ships — oil, chemicals, sewage, garbage and air emissions across six annexes.

Memorandum of UnderstandingMOU

A regional agreement coordinating port-state-control inspections — e.g. the Paris and Tokyo MOUs.

Port State ControlPSC

Inspection of foreign ships in national ports to verify they meet international safety and environmental standards.

Scrubber

An exhaust gas cleaning system that removes sulphur oxides from a ship’s emissions, letting her burn cheaper high-sulphur fuel.

Very Low Sulphur Fuel OilVLSFO

Marine fuel with no more than 0.50% sulphur, the compliant fuel for most waters under the IMO 2020 sulphur cap.

Risk & Sanctions

About these definitions. These are concise, plain-English reference definitions of standard shipping concepts — our own explanations, and not legal advice. Where a term maps to a regulation we describe the public instrument; where it maps to a metric we publish, we link to the live figure. Looking for a broader nautical word list? See the maritime dictionary.

Glossary last reviewed: June 2026.