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Ships stuck in Hormuz cause a strain on the shipping industry

Even if the U.S. Even if the?U.S.

The renewed hostilities of the three-month conflict test a fragile ceasefire, while about 20,000 sailors and hundreds of ships remain trapped in the area with Hormuz mostly closed.

V.Group manages 800 vessels and has 13 stuck in the Gulf, half of which are tankers. Rene Kofod Olsen, the group CEO of one of the top ship management specialists in the world, confirmed this.

He said this during the Posidonia Shipping Week in Athens.

"But, you still have kinetic activity." Kofold-Olsen was referring to missile or drone strikes.

He said that for traffic to return at pre-war levels when 125 ships passed through Hormuz on average daily, "ship operators" would need a solid assurance of safe passage. The international community should be involved in this.

Kofod Olsen stated, "I do not believe that global shipping will be able to pass through the Strait of Hormuz in a meaningful way before these things are guaranteed."

The shipping executives who met in Athens stated that the tensions were increasing as the conflict intensified. While crews in Gulf received supplies, it was still possible to rotate the teams within the region.

Alex Gregg Smith, President for Marine and Offshore at Bureau Veritas' top ship safety certifier, said that "Ship Owners are forced to operate within irregular frameworks which can be difficult for the industry and difficult for insurers."

It puts pressure on the owners' operations."

Dwain HUTCHINSON, the managing director of the Bahamas' maritime registry, said that there were 14 "Bahamas"-flagged vessels with more than 900 "seafarers" on board in the Gulf. This included smaller offshore ships which normally operate in the area.

The flag registry didn't restrict ships from entering the region, even though their safety and well-being was the number one priority.

He said: "We believe that is an owner's decision, and we hope they will review and weigh the risks and make a balanced decision to operate in the area."

Evangelos Marinakis said that his group was "lucky enough" to not have any vessels in the Gulf on the day the conflict began.

"In the event of a tragedy, we would not be able take this risk," he said at the TradeWinds Ship Owners' Forum in Athens. (Reporting and editing by Tomaszjanowski)

(source: Reuters)