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PortEconomics
  • October 18th, 2025
PortEconomics
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    Geopolitical risks and port-related carbon emissions: evidence and policy implications

    Geopolitical risks and port-related carbon emissions: evidence and policy implications

    Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

    Investments and financing challenges of the EU’s port managing bodies; findings from a comprehensive survey

    Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents:  Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

    Evaluating customer satisfaction with clearing and forwarding agents: Kuwait Shuwaikh Port

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    Digital technologies for efficient and resilient sea-land logistics

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    Stakeholders’ attitudes toward container terminal automation

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    Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit

    Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit

    When will we admit that maritime transport will not be decarbonised by 2050?

    When will we admit that maritime transport will not be decarbonised by 2050?

    Digital technologies for efficient and resilient sea-land logistics

    Digital technologies for efficient and resilient sea-land logistics

    The World Ports Tracker in TOC Europe

    The World Ports Tracker in TOC Europe

    Newly-upgraded IAPH World Ports Tracker identifies major sustainability and market trends

    Newly-upgraded IAPH World Ports Tracker identifies major sustainability and market trends

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    Portgraphic: Top-15 EU container ports in H1 2025

    Portgraphic: Top-15 EU container ports in H1 2025

    PhD posts in the area of ports and energy transition

    PhD posts in the area of ports and energy transition

    PortEconomics members among best-performing scholars globally

    PortEconomics members among best-performing scholars globally

    Accessibility or connectivity: why is it correct to say that in the Caribbean the main logistics problem is connectivity?

    Accessibility or connectivity: why is it correct to say that in the Caribbean the main logistics problem is connectivity?

    Cruise Port-City Compass

    Cruise Port-City Compass

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    Portgraphic: Top-15 EU container ports in H1 2025

    Portgraphic: Top-15 EU container ports in H1 2025

    Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

    Portgraphic: fleet capacity (owned/chartered) of container shipping lines

    In a tight spot: American ports in global supply chains

    In a tight spot: American ports in global supply chains

    Cruise industry in 2025 at a glance

    Cruise industry in 2025 at a glance

    The box that makes the world go around: container terminals and global trade

    The box that makes the world go around: container terminals and global trade

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White Paper calls for collaborative and sector-driven action for increased transparency, integrity & governance in seaportsCategory

White Paper calls for collaborative and sector-driven action for increased transparency, integrity & governance in seaports

October 31st, 2022 Category, European Port Policy, Featured, PortStudies, Thematic Area, Uncategorized

READ ALSO

Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit
Port reform: World Bank publishes the third edition of its port reform toolkit
Stakeholders’ attitudes toward container terminal automation
Stakeholders’ attitudes toward container terminal automation
Newly-upgraded IAPH World Ports Tracker identifies major sustainability and market trends
Newly-upgraded IAPH World Ports Tracker identifies major sustainability and market trends
Geopolitical risks and port-related carbon emissions: evidence and policy implications
Geopolitical risks and port-related carbon emissions: evidence and policy implications

White Paper on port integrity reveals insights into the importance of port integrity commitments for better maritime supply chains, the development of the Global Port Integrity Platform (GPIP), the challenges encountered during the research process and some findings on port integrity commitment levels. The discussion details and justifies the call for collaborative and sector-driven action for increased transparency and integrity in ports and a better overall operating environment.

The Maritime Anti-corruption Network (MACN) launched the Global Port Integrity Platform (GPIP) in 2022, which measures Port Integrity worldwide. The platform is the first of its kind and builds on MACN’s Anonymous Incident Data and on Port Integrity Commitments giving further context and depth to integrity challenges in seaports.

The Port Integrity Commitments were developed by a core team of researchers including PortEconomics members Thanos Pallis, Gordon Wilmsmeier, Paraskevi Kladaki, and Luisa Spaggiari, who started with 100 ports and have further expanded the database to reach over 200 ports. Their insights have facilitated the promotion of Port Integrity and Collective Action by identifying gaps in transparency and governance in seaports globally.

The research team has now published a Whitepaper detailing the development of GPIP, the challenges encountered during the research process and some findings on Port Integrity Commitment levels. The results aim to push for collaborative and sector-driven action for increased transparency, integrity and, thereby, governance in seaports.

You might freely download the White Paper here: Pallis T., Kladaki E. and Wilmsmeier G. (2022). Towards a Global Port Integrity Platform: A contribution to better maritime supply chains. Copenhagen: The Maritime Anti-Corruption Network (MACN), ISBN: ISBN 978-87-974224-0-3.

The White Paper

Transparency and integrity in the governance of economic activities have emerged as common expectations in response to an increased focus of businesses, regulators and legislators on ethics and the proper functioning of institutions and the economy. The two concepts are gradually and rightly seen as moral and political imperatives related to goals such as accountability, inclusivity, legitimacy, justification, good governance, and socially responsible outcomes.

Both are also linked with the improved performance of an industry, sector, or firm. Additionally, they reflect client and consumer preferences; the wider public ascribes increasing importance to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors when making transactions or investment decisions. Private entities and public organisations’ growing recognition that good behaviour is good for business is another contributor to business integrity prioritisation.

Shipping and port services are no exception to greater transparency and integrity expectations. Shipping companies, shippers, freight forwarders, agents, and all other stakeholders involved in maritime trade are increasingly interested in securing the conditions that would enable economic transactions governed by integrity.

The White Paper details the progress of the Maritime Anti-Corruption Network (MACN) Global Port Integrity Platform (GPIP) and how it contributes to lower corruption-related risks in maritime transport and, thus, better maritime supply chains.

The document – authored by Thanos Pallis, Evie Kladaki and Gordon Wilmsmeier and published by the Maritime Anti-Corruption Network (MACN) – elaborates on the endorsed approach in measuring the current port integrity commitments as a concerted effort to create a dialogue between stakeholders, governments, and other institutions on progressing a related agenda and corrective actions that would enhance the integrity of the entire system.

The importance of two interrelated concepts, namely transparency and integrity in transactions associated with the realisation of maritime trade, set the scene dedicated section.

Thus, the document details how the MACN GPIP was developed, how it monitors the integrity commitments of ports, and how the findings on port commitments and the reporting of corruption incidents are visualised and dis- seminated to the members of MACN. This section also discusses the experiences, the challenges realised, and the potential identified during the data collection for building the GPIP port commitment database.

The White Paper concludes with a discussion of the next steps for the MACN GPIP initiative and how its expansion would further contribute to a global approach and a better understanding of port integrity, thus, better maritime transport and trade.

Next article Integration of rail freight with dry ports: A route for seaport regionalisation
Previous article London Gateway: the steady private development of a ‘port business ecosystem’

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