Introduction
The year 2025 marks a major shake-up in global shipping alliances, with new partnerships forming and old ones ending. These changes are significantly impacting West Coast ports like Oakland, as carriers realign their services. In 2024, Oakland was served by the three traditional alliances – 2M, THE Alliance, and Ocean Alliance – along with a few independent lines. By 2025, the alliance landscape has been redrawn: 2M has dissolved, THE Alliance restructured, Ocean Alliance extended, and mega-carriers like MSC are operating independently. Below is an in-depth analysis comparing 2024 vs. 2025 shipping services at the Port of Oakland, highlighting new alliance configurations, key service changes, and their implications for transpacific and transatlantic trade.
In summary, the alliance realignment in 2025 brings: (a) Premier Alliance (ONE/YM/HMM) and Gemini (Maersk/HL) replacing the old 2M/THE structures, (b) MSC as a powerful standalone, and (c) Ocean Alliance continuing with minimal Oakland emphasis but cooperating where strategic. Next, we examine how specific services have changed, and the net effect on Oakland’s routes and capacity.
The transpacific trade is Oakland’s lifeblood, and the 2025 alliance reshuffle brings a mix of positive developments and competitive pressure:
Traditionally, Oakland is not a primary hub for transatlantic services – East Coast ports handle that trade. However, 2025 brings notable changes:
Major carriers have made various statements about their network plans and how Oakland fits in:
The table below summarizes key container services calling at the Port of Oakland in 2024 and how they change in 2025, grouped by alliance or carrier. It highlights which alliance operates each service in each year and notes the major changes.
Service / Loop | 2024 Alliance & Operators | 2025 Alliance & Operators | Change/Notes |
Jaguar / TP2 (Asia–USWC) | 2M Alliance – Operated by MSC & Maersk. China (Shekou, Nansha) – LA/LB – Oakland msc.com |
Disbanded as joint service. MSC operates successor loop independently (maintains Oakland call); Maersk/Hapag (Gemini) launch a separate Asia–Oakland loop. |
2M split: Jaguar loop no longer shared. MSC retains it (new MSC-only service); Maersk now in Gemini covers Oakland via a new loop replacing Jaguar.
|
Maple / TP1 (Asia–PNW) | 2M Alliance – MSC & Maersk. China/Korea – Prince Rupert – Vancouver (no Oakland)linerlytica.com |
MSC independent service (PNW focus). Maersk/Hapag join Ocean Alliance on PNW routes via slot agreements; no direct Oakland call in this loop. |
2M merged Maple with another service in 2022linerlytica.com . By 2025, Maple persists as an MSC Canada service; remains irrelevant to Oakland. |
PS3 (Pendulum) – THE Alliance | THE Alliance (Hapag, ONE, Yang Ming, HMM). S.E. Asia (Vietnam, Singapore) – LA/LB – Oakland – Japan – back to Asiahapag-lloyd.com |
Premier Alliance (ONE, Yang Ming, HMM). Continues with similar rotation: S.E. Asia – LA – Oakland – Asia. (Hapag-Lloyd no longer in loop.) |
Alliance renamed: now operated without Hapag. Oakland call retained. Possibly larger ships deployed for reliability hapag-lloyd.com |
PS4 (Asia–USWC) – THE Alliance | THE Alliance. South China/Taiwan – LA/LB – Oakland – Taiwan hapag-lloyd.com |
Premier Alliance. South China – LA – Oakland (similar pattern; may adjust feeder leg). |
Continued under Premier. Little change in port rotation; alliance membership adjusted (no HL). Oakland still called weekly.
|
PS6 (Asia–USWC) – THE Alliance | THE Alliance. North China (Qingdao, Shanghai) – LA/LB – Oakland – Japanhapag-lloyd.com |
Premier Alliance. North China – LA – Oakland – Japan (maintained). |
Continued under Premier. Oakland call unchanged. Possibly increased capacity per vessel. |
PS7 (Asia–USWC) – THE Alliance | THE Alliance. S.E. Asia (Thailand) – LA/LB – Oakland – Hong Kong hapag-lloyd.com |
Premier Alliance. S.E. Asia – LA – Oakland – Asia (maintained). |
Continued under Premier. Oakland call unchanged. Service likely rebranded internally. |
FP1 Pendulum (EU–Asia–USWC) | THE Alliance. Northern Europe – Asia – LA – Oakland – Asia – back to Europehapag-lloyd.com |
Premier Alliance. Same pendulum route (Europe–Asia–USWC), now run by ONE/YM/HMM. |
Hapag-Lloyd’s exit: FP1 now run by Premier partners. Oakland remains integral mid-pendulum call hapag-lloyd.com |
EC1/All-Water (Asia–USEC) | THE Alliance. Asia – Panama – US East Coast (no Oakland) hapag-lloyd.com |
Premier Alliance. Asia – Panama – USEC (no Oakland). |
Unchanged (no Oakland) – included here to note Oakland had no direct all-water Asia-USEC in either year.
|
Atlantic Loop 5 (AL5) | (None – service not in operation in 2024). Former AL5 suspended in prior years. | Premier Alliance (Yang Ming, ONE, HMM) – NEW in 2025porttechnology.org North Europe – Panama – LA – Oakland – Panama – North Europe. (HMM main operator; OOCL slotstheloadstar.com.) |
New Service: Direct Europe–Oakland via Panama introduced in Feb 2025porttechnology.org No 2024 equivalent. Fills transatlantic gap; multi-alliance cooperation. |
Transpacific New Loop (Gemini) | (None – Gemini not existent in 2024). Maersk’s Oakland presence was via 2M Jaguar. | Gemini Cooperation (Maersk & Hapag-Lloyd) – NEW in 2025. Asia (likely China/Vietnam) – LA – Oakland (exact rotation TBA). |
New Alliance Service: Replaces 2M’s Jaguar for Maersk. Ensures Gemini covers Oakland post-2M. Expected Feb 2025 launch.
|
Ocean Alliance PNW loops | Ocean Alliance (CMA, COSCO, Evergreen). Multiple services to Seattle, Tacoma, Vancouver (Oakland not included). |
Ocean Alliance – PNW network tweaked. New PNW5 service added (Ningbo–Shanghai–Vancouver–Seattle)theloadstar.com Oakland still excluded from core OA transpac loops. |
Similar – Ocean Alliance core services continue to bypass Oakland (focus on LA/LB & PNW)theloadstar.com
PNW5 is new but does not involve Oakland. |
Ocean Alliance Transpac SW | Ocean Alliance. Limited Oakland call: CMA CGM’s Golden Gate Bridge (Asia–Oakland) was terminatedtheloadstar.com ; other OA loops to LA only. |
Ocean Alliance. No dedicated Asia–Oakland loop. Oakland served indirectly via cooperation (see ATW below). |
Oakland call dropped from Ocean Alliance’s own loops (since Golden Gate ended). Instead, OA carriers use Premier’s AL5/“ATW” for Oakland access.
|
ATW (All-Water Transatlantic) | (None as separate service; corresponds to AL5). | Collaborative – Operated by HMM (Premier) with OOCL/CMA slot-sharingtheloadstar.com Same rotation as AL5: Europe – Oakland via Panama. |
Reintroduced via AL5 – Essentially AL5 viewed from OA side. Oakland call newly available to OOCL/CMA CGM customers via slotstheloadstar.com |
MSC “Orient”/Sentosa (Asia–USWC) | 2M Alliance (TP6/TP8 etc). Possibly combined in 2024 loops to LA/LB (with minimal Oakland role). | MSC Independent. MSC reorganized its Asia–USWC loops. Oakland call expected on one of MSC’s core strings (e.g. Orient may include OAK). |
Restructured: MSC’s independent network might rename/adjust these services. Oakland likely on one MSC core loop (aside from Jaguar successor).
|
ZIM Pacific (ZX service) | Slot agreements – ZIM took space on 2M or THE Alliance services to Oakland (no standalone loop in 2024). | Slot agreements – ZIM to use MSC or Premier Alliance loops for Oakland. (No independent ZIM loop to OAK announced for 2025.) |
No direct change: ZIM continues to rely on partnerships for Oakland coverage, now leaning on MSC (per 2025 MSC-ZIM deal)supplychaindive.com.
|
Matson CLX (China–Oakland) | Independent (Matson). Ningbo – Shanghai – Long Beach – Oakland – Honolulu (fast service). |
Independent (Matson). Same service continues. |
No change (outside alliance system). Oakland call remains on Matson’s niche express service. |
Sources: Port alliance announcements and service schedules
Oakland’s fortunes are on the upswing in 2025 as the reshaping of ocean alliances brings new services and more frequent calls. Comparing 2024 to 2025: Oakland shifts from being a secondary call on a limited number of alliance loops to a critical port included in almost every carrier network. The dissolution of 2M and creation of Gemini and Premier Alliance have led to duplicate coverage and new loops, increasing Oakland’s weekly service count. Meanwhile, the Ocean Alliance’s commitment via slot-sharing and Evergreen’s terminal investments ensure that even carriers outside the new alliances keep an Oakland foothold.
For transpacific trade, these changes mean better coverage, more competition, and potentially improved schedule reliability for Oakland-bound cargo. For transatlantic trade, the new AL5 service puts Oakland on the map for Europe–US shipping in a way not seen in years. Challenges remain – vessel scheduling between Southern California and Oakland, Panama Canal constraints, and the need to efficiently handle more volume – but the overall impact is decidedly positive. Major carriers including Maersk, MSC, CMA CGM, and Evergreen have all reiterated their commitment to Oakland through service announcements and operational moves.
In essence, Oakland in 2025 is benefiting from the alliance reshuffle: it will handle more services with roughly equivalent capacity per service, translating to growth in options without overwhelming the port. Shippers should take note of new routings (like Europe via Panama) and the entrance of new alliance products when planning their logistics. The Port of Oakland, in turn, is seizing this moment to solidify its status as a key West Coast gateway bridging both transpacific and now transatlantic trades. With alliances realigned, Oakland stands to gain volume and connectivity – a welcome development for the regional economy and a significant change from the patterns of 2024.