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Unusual LNG vessel cruises through Red Sea amid Houthi attacks, data programs

The first melted natural gas (LNG) tanker given that January is cruising through the Red Sea, just days after Yemenbased Houthi militants sank their 2nd vessel in attacks started last November.

The vessel, Asya Energy, passed Yemen, taking a trip through the Bab al-Mandab Strait on Tuesday, shiptracking data from LSEG and Kpler showed, the exact same week that the 2nd ship thought to have been hit by the militants sank.

Asya Energy is the very first LNG tanker to sail through the Strait since January, when LNG trips through the Red Sea were suspended in the middle of repeated rocket attacks, said LSEG analyst Olumide Ajayi.

Data showed the ship was bring freight, he included.

The majority of LNG tankers have prevented the path after the Houthis' duplicated drone and missile strikes in the Red Sea region. They call the attacks, since broadened to other busy waterways, acts of solidarity with Palestinians in Israel's war in Gaza.

The Suez Canal links the Red Sea to the Mediterranean, producing the shortest shipping route between Europe and Asia, and is connected to the Gulf of Aden by the Bab al-Mandab Strait between Yemen and Djibouti.

Palau-flagged Asya Energy is heading for Gibraltar, Kpler data programs. It formerly called at the Sohar port in Oman, LSEG information revealed.

It was not immediately clear who had chartered the ship.

Nur International Shipping handles the ship, which is owned by Lule One Solutions, Equasis data revealed, with both business based in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

Nur Global Shipping did not right away react to a demand for comment when called on LinkedIn.

could not discover contact info for Lule One Services.

The Asya Energy may soon end up being the very first vessel to take the Red Sea passage because Jan. 12 after lingering the coast of Oman considering that mid-January, said Ana Subasic, gas and LNG analyst at information and analytics company Kpler.

At present, automatic recognition system (AIS) signal feed to our platform reveals the ballast vessel has set a course towards the Gibraltar checkpoint, although ... it is prematurely to be making an accurate forecast, she stated.

We are keeping an extremely close eye on it and waiting on more ad-hoc raw signals or market sources to feed in.

Leading market groups have actually called for immediate action in the Red Sea to stop attacks on merchant shipping by the Houthis, whose first ship sunk was the British-owned Rubymar, on March 2, about 2 weeks after being struck by missiles.

(source: Reuters)