Greg Miller
Senior Maritime Reporter
Greg Miller is a senior maritime reporter for Lloyd’s List, based in New York. He is an award-winning journalist who has covered ocean shipping for the past two decades – five years for FreightWaves and American Shipper, and 15 years for Fairplay. He has extensive knowledge of container, crude, products, dry bulk, LNG and LPG markets, as well as shipping finance, regulation and technology.
Prior to his work for Fairplay, he served as senior editor of Cruise Industry News in New York for seven years, and editor in chief of the Virgin Islands Business Journal in St. Thomas for five years. He is a graduate of Cornell University, where he was a columnist for the Cornell Daily Sun.
Latest From Greg Miller
Panama Canal rebound continues as transits rise again in April
An increasing number of VLGCs are transporting US LPG to Asia via the neopanamx locks, while the panamax locks are seeing more chemical tankers, dry bulk ships, and general cargo vessels
‘Euronav 2.0’ bolsters dividend payout as transformation continues
The new incarnation of Euronav has reported its first quarterly results as a diversified shipowner focused on sustainable-fuel newbuildings. There was no earnings surprise, but shares are rising in the wake of its latest dividend plan
Shipping’s crystal ball: The low-demand, low-rate, high-cost 2050 scenario
Danish Ship Finance believes structurally declining demand and continued high newbuilding costs will force shipping to embrace more long-term contracts and tap more institutional money in the decades ahead
MSC fires back at FMC’s ‘astonishing’ and ‘unprecedented’ $63m penalty demand
Mediterranean Shipping Company argues that the FMC enforcement bureau has gone too far — way too far — in seeking a record $63m penalty for the carrier’s alleged behaviour during the supply chain crisis. It calls for a much smaller fine of $2m-$3m
‘Power-hungry’ AI data centres and the future of LNG shipping demand
LNG shipping rates and LNG commodity prices are currently low, but the future demand outlook for electricity — and natural gas — has been jumpstarted by artificial intelligence data centres
Changes afoot in Mexico and Canada, the largest crude exporters to US Gulf
The recent drop in Mexican crude exports looks likely to be brief, but a new refinery will dampen exports more consistently. In Canada, crude from the TMX pipeline should start loading on aframaxes in mid-May