
Energy is rapidly moving from the background of port operations to the center of global trade strategy.
In a recent Forbes Business Council article – “Ports And Power: Why Energy Security Is Becoming A Port Strategy” – Morten Johansen, COO of DP World in the Americas, outlines how energy security is emerging as a defining factor for ports, supply chains, and nearshoring decisions.
The shift reflects a broader global trend. As volatility in energy markets increases and electrification accelerates across logistics, ports are facing new pressures – and new opportunities – to rethink how they power operations.
A Structural Shift in How Ports Compete
The article points to a clear evolution: ports are no longer competing on location and capacity alone.
Instead, three converging dynamics are reshaping the landscape:
Energy volatility is impacting trade reliability, with price swings and supply constraints affecting operations in real time
Electrification is accelerating across port equipment and infrastructure, increasing dependence on consistent, high-quality power
Grid limitations are emerging as a constraint, particularly as demand outpaces investment in energy infrastructure
Together, these forces are pushing energy strategy to the forefront of operational and investment decisions.
From Logistics Hubs to Energy-Enabled Ecosystems
As outlined in the piece, ports are evolving into more complex, integrated systems where managing energy is as critical as managing cargo.
This includes a growing focus on:
Diversifying energy sources, including on-site generation
Improving visibility into energy demand and usage
Supporting customers’ expectations around resilience and emissions
In this model, energy becomes a core enabler of both efficiency and decarbonization.
Why It Matters for Business Leaders
For companies evaluating supply chains, corridors, and nearshoring opportunities, energy is becoming a key decision factor.
The article highlights a shift in how leaders assess logistics ecosystems, placing greater emphasis on:
Reliability and resilience of power supply
Exposure to energy cost volatility
Ability to support long-term sustainability goals
In short, energy strategy is becoming inseparable from supply chain strategy.
Source: Access Newswire