
The event, themed “Steering Sustainability Through Changes”, attracted over 1,300 leaders and experts from across the global maritime value chain.
At the opening ceremony, John Lee, Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, affirmed the city’s role as a stable, reliable and dynamic maritime hub in an era defined by climate change, geopolitical shifts and rapid technological innovation.
He highlighted Hong Kong’s advantages—its common-law jurisdiction, free-port status, low-tax regime and proximity to mainland China’s green-fuel supply chain—as key to the transformation of shipping into low-carbon, digitally enabled operation.
Leung Chun-ying, Vice-Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, said Hong Kong must embrace China’s new round of opening-up and assume the role of “super-connector” between global shipping enterprises and mainland markets.
He argued that the city should become an origin and incubator for emerging maritime industries and rules, including green-shipping corridors, smart logistics and financing innovation.
The forum’s agenda spanned shipping markets, port and logistics infrastructure, maritime law and insurance, decarbonisation pathways and digital transformation.
One session announced the launch of national standards for life-cycle greenhouse-gas intensity of marine fuels and verification frameworks, signalling a concrete step toward the industry’s net-zero ambitions.
The Hong Kong government, represented by Transport and Logistics Secretary Mable Chan, took the opportunity to unveil policy measures: the establishment of the Hong Kong Shipowners Mutual Assurance Association; extension of tax concessions to high-value maritime services and commodity trading; and development of a “rail-sea-land-river” intermodal cargo network linking inland China with global supply chains.
The gathering reinforced Hong Kong’s strategy to leverage its clustering of maritime finance, law, ship-management and port services, while pushing into green bunkering, smart shipping and deepened integration with the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area.
With the industry under pressure from shifting trade flows and regulatory demands, the forum underscored that sustained collaboration, innovation and investment are now imperatives for shipping’s next era.
Hong Kong Maritime Week continues through 22 November with more than fifty events across the ecosystem, consolidating the city’s positioning as a global maritime capital and a leading platform for the sector’s green and digital transformations.
































