While the ongoing conflict in Iran is geographically concentrated in the Middle East, its effects are rippling across Europe’s logistics and transport networks. Rising oil and gas prices, disruptions to maritime routes, and delays in air freight are driving up operational costs and creating more unpredictability for road carriers in already unpredictable times.
For European hauliers already operating on thin margins, the combination of higher fuel costs, fluctuating freight volumes, and port congestion is intensifying pressures and threatening profitability, forcing companies to rethink supply chains and adopt more resilient strategies.
Maritime Transport Disruptions
The effect of the Iranian conflict is not limited to road transport via fuel price hikes. Other means of freight operations globally are bound to bear the consequences of US and Israel’s military endeavour too.
Ocean shipping, responsible for 90% of global trade volume, is looking with concern at the events in the Persian Gulf. Container ships have been forced to avoid the area due to safety risks and war-risk insurance concerns. With Dubai Port being the ninth largest in the world – that is a significant market loss for many exporters globally.
Furthermore, the on-going conflict yet again puts the strain on the Red Sea/Suez Canal route. In the last two years the maritime corridor was avoided by the majority of global ocean liners due to the threat of Houthi militia in Yemen. Although recent weeks saw many liners return, test or consider returning to the Canal, these hopes could be dashed by the latest eruption of the conflict. Few liners will risk sailing past the strategic Bab al Mandab Strait (the gateway to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal) right next to the Houthi controlled parts of Yemen. Which means liners will continue travelling the longer route around Cape of Good Hope keeping travel costs elevated in comparison to the shorter Egyptian route.
European ports thus might soon be facing operational challenges such as irregular vessel arrivals, sudden surges in container volumes, equipment imbalances (including shortages of empty containers), and potential periods of congestion. These disruptions have a directl effect on road freight transport, as trucking operations rely on predictable and stable container flows. When maritime schedules become irregular, trucks often experience longer waiting times at ports, which reduces their productivity because fewer trips can be completed each day. In addition, companies may incur higher demurrage and detention charges, while intermodal operators face planning inefficiencies due to the uncertainty surrounding cargo availability and port operations.
Air Freight Challenges
Air transport is also expected to take a serious hit due to the latest Gulf crisis. Especially considering the importance of Dubai and Qatar hubs for air operations. One must not forget that the air space over Russia is already closed or limited to some operators, which also serious limits the choice of air routes from Europe to the Far East. Airspace closures across parts of the Middle East — including the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, and Iran — have already disrupted air cargo operations, which are vital for high-value and time-sensitive goods like electronics and pharmaceuticals. Reduced cargo flights and rerouted air routes increase costs and extend transit times for global air freight.
Impact on Just-in-Time Manufacturing
These issues have a particularly strong effect on just-in-time manufacturing systems. Because these production systems depend on precise and reliable supply chains, delays in maritime or air transport can quickly cascade into factory operations. Manufacturers in Germany and Central Europe depend on smooth inbound cargo flows through major gateways such as the Port of Rotterdam and the Port of Hamburg. When disruptions occur at these ports, the effects quickly spread inland, creating bottlenecks in road transport networks and complicating logistics operations throughout the region.
Normally, if critical parts fail to arrive on schedule, production lines may slow down or stop entirely, companies are forced to rely on emergency air freight to maintain production, which significantly increases costs. Now if the air transport is also not available, they are facing a standstill. Truck transport volumes can fluctuate unpredictably, while demand for warehousing may surge as companies attempt to build safety stock to protect themselves from further disruptions.
Mitigation Strategies
To mitigate the uncertainty created by the latest Iran conflict, many European firms may move away from strict just-in-time supply chains toward more resilient “just-in-case” strategies. Which many have been doing for years now since the pandemic supply chain crises. This involves increasing buffer inventories to ensure production can continue even if shipments are delayed, diversifying suppliers to reduce dependence on single regions, nearshoring part of their production closer to European markets, and maintaining strategic reserves of critical raw materials and components. These adjustments can improve supply-chain resilience but also reshape logistics patterns across Europe.
In the short term, such strategies are likely to increase warehousing and distribution activity, as companies store larger inventories and move goods more frequently between storage facilities and production sites. This may lead to more domestic truck movements and greater demand for regional transport services.
Over the longer term, supply chains could become more regionalized and less globalised. That means reducing reliance on long-haul imports and increasing intra-European freight flows instead. While these changes can improve stability, they also come with economic costs: building larger inventories ties up capital and raises storage expenses, which can contribute to broader inflationary pressures.
Role of Digital Freight Platforms
Digital freight platforms like CargoON can be very helpful to carriers in this time of crisis. When conflicts disturb trade routes, increase energy price volatility, or disrupt maritime transport, road freight markets often face unpredictable demand, capacity shortages, and operational uncertainty. Digital platforms help reduce these challenges by improving transparency, flexibility, and efficiency across logistics networks.
One major advantage is better access to transport capacity. CargoON connects shippers, forwarders, and carriers within a large ecosystem of verified transport companies across Europe. This enables logistics operators to quickly find alternative carriers or secure additional capacity when freight flows change.
Another key benefit is improved visibility and coordination of transport operations. Tools such as real-time shipment tracking, automated freight allocation, and centralized communication help companies monitor delays and respond quickly to disruptions. This is especially important during geopolitical crises, when uncertainty around arrival times, port congestion, or fuel costs complicates planning.
Digital platforms can also improve efficiency at warehouses and terminals. Features like dock scheduling reduce truck waiting times and congestion, while automated documentation lowers administrative workload. As a result, logistics teams can focus more on managing disruptions than on routine processes.
Overall, digital freight platforms strengthen the resilience of road transport by enabling faster carrier sourcing, better communication, and more data-driven decisions, helping companies adapt more effectively to unstable market conditions.
Conclusions
For road hauliers, the market situation following the outbreak of the Iran conflict remains uncertain. European road transport is not at the frontline of the conflict — but it sits at the receiving end of every shock that passes through global trade.If geopolitical tensions weaken industrial output, freight volumes may decline, increasing competition between carriers and putting downward pressure on freight rates. Combined with rising operating costs such as fuel, this creates a challenging environment for transport companies, which must manage both higher expenses and unstable demand.