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Facts about Strait of Hormuz shipping blockade London, March 30 (AFP) Mar 30, 2026 Here are the latest key facts and figures about the blockage of the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial shipping route virtually paralysed by the Middle East war. Around a fifth of global crude oil and liquefied natural gas passes through the waterway in peacetime. The war erupted on February 28 when the United States and Israel began bombing Iran, prompting Tehran to retaliate with strikes across the region and sharply restrict access to the strait.
The ship was 22 nautical miles northeast of the Ras Tanura port in Saudi Arabia, according to the British maritime security agency UKMTO and maritime security firm Vanguard Tech. Iran's Revolutionary Guards previously claimed to have attacked the vessel on March 11, identifying it as an Israeli ship, in a press release published by the ISNA news agency. Monday's was the first such incident, attack or suspicious activity reported by the UKMTO since March 22. Since March 1, 2026, 25 commercial vessels, including 11 tankers, have been attacked or reported incidents in the Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz or the Gulf of Oman, according to the UKMTO. Drones struck fuel tanks at Oman's Salalah port on Saturday, injuring one worker and disrupting operations but hitting no vessels.
A further four remained missing and 10 were injured. Around 20,000 seafarers are affected in the region, according to the IMO.
From March 1 to 30 as of 1700 GMT Monday, commodities carriers made just 196 crossings, according to Kpler data -- a decrease of 95 percent from peacetime. Of these, 120 were by oil tankers and gas carriers and most were travelling east out of the strait.
It interpreted their passage as "signalling a potential shift in conditions for commercial shipping".
Four vessels were liquified petroleum gas tankers and the rest were liquid tankers. The channel in peacetime sees around 120 daily transits, according to shipping industry intelligence site Lloyd's List.
Of those, 298 were tankers, including 10 very large gas carriers and 55 very large crude carriers.
Leading shipping journal Lloyd's List last week said at least 34 ships had been tracked using it. The Revolutionary Guards said the route was closed to vessels travelling to and from ports linked to Iran's "enemies".
Of the crossings by oil and gas tankers, 62 percent were by vessels under sanctions. lmc/rlp/rl |
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