Geopolitics tops executive training agenda in Shipping

COPENHAGEN : Geopolitics has become the leading focus of executive maritime education, reflecting a decisive shift in how senior leaders assess risk, capital and long-term strategy.

Copenhagen Business School’s Ms Rosberg, Programme Director of the Blue MBA and Blue Board Leadership, reports that geopolitical insight is now the most requested subject across her executive portfolio. Demand has risen sharply over the past 18 months as global instability reshapes commercial predictability.

“Leaders are asking different questions,” said Ms Rosberg. “They want clarity on sanctions exposure, trade fragmentation, regional power shifts and the implications for capital, insurance and operations. Political decisions now influence balance sheets, asset valuation and strategic direction.”

Ongoing conflicts, protectionist policies, energy security pressures and strategic rivalry between major economies are altering established trade patterns. These forces are influencing fleet deployment, chartering strategies, financing structures and insurance conditions.

The two-day Geopolitics workshop on 18-19 February 2026, which is offered by the Blue MBA Association as a part of a series of long-life-learning courses for the maritime industry, became a strong draw within the Blue Programme. Participants include shipowners, insurers, regulators and maritime service providers seeking disciplined frameworks for analysing uncertainty rather than responding reactively to events.

“Risk no longer sits neatly within technical or regulatory categories,” said Ms Rosberg. “It is shaped by political alignment, national policy and shifting alliances. Leadership must reflect that reality. Boards are now expected to demonstrate foresight, judgement and accountability in environments where volatility is structural.”

The surge in demand reflects a wider evolution in maritime leadership development, moving beyond operational management towards strategic governance. Executive education is increasingly focused on equipping decision-makers to identify systemic exposure, assess secondary consequences and safeguard long-term value.

“Shipping operates at the centre of global commerce,” she said. “Failure to understand geopolitical dynamics is no longer a knowledge gap. It is a strategic risk.”

In today’s environment, geopolitical competence is not an optional enhancement to maritime leadership. It is a prerequisite.