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The Greek-operated oil tanker is one of the few vessels that have crossed the Strait of Hormuz

Ship tracking data on Friday showed that a Greek-operated oil tanker crossed the Strait of Hormuz and sailed to India from the Gulf this Friday, one of only a few "crude" ships through the waterway during the week.

The U.S. and Israeli war against Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, stranding thousands of ships. This has caused a disruption in energy supplies that is unprecedented.

According to Kpler, the Liberia flagged suezmax tanker Karolos was sailing toward the port of Sikka in western India on Friday after crossing the Strait of Hormuz last May 14.

Kpler analysis revealed that the vessel's maximum load was reached after it?called at Basra Oil Terminal on May 10th.

SynMax, a data analytics specialist, also discovered that the vessel's draft?increased" on May 14 indicating that it had taken cargo.

Dynacom, the Greek-based manager of Karolos and one of the most prominent Greek players that shipped oil through the Strait after the War began on February 28 did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Separately, a crude oil tanker with a Panama flag, managed by the Japanese?refining company Eneos, passed through this strait on Thursday, according to ship tracking data provided by LSEG.

FEW CROSSINGS THROUGH THE STRAIT

The Strait of Hormuz, which was a conduit for 20 percent of the world's oil supplies before the Iran war began, had 125 to 140 passages per day.

According to SynMax, nine ships entered the Gulf of Oman through Hormuz in the past 24 hours. They were mostly small cargo or dry-bulk ships bound for Iran.

The data shows that seven ships, including two oil tankers from Gulf ports, left Hormuz for destinations on the other side around Oman.

On Thursday, there were around 10 vessels that passed through the waterway.

Iran's State TV reported on Friday that 30 ships had crossed the Strait of Hormuz in both directions, and that this number is "set to increase".

U.S. president Donald Trump said that his patience was running out with Iran and that Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed that Tehran had to reopen the strait during their discussions in Beijing.

Concerns have grown over the ships and crews trapped in the Strait. The Marshall Islands Shipping Registry, one of the largest flag states in the world, announced this week that the threat level for merchant ships remained at the highest levels ever seen in the region.

The International Transport Workers' Federation, a leading maritime union, said this week that "more than 20,000 seafarers remain trapped in the Strait of Hormuz. They are facing fear and anxiety, being cut off from family members, and often running out of fuel, food and water." Reporting by Jonathan Saul and Renee Maltezou; editing by Barbara Lewis

(source: Reuters)