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Chinese container ship one of few vessels to cross Hormuz in deadlock over open waterway

Data showed that a Chinese-operated ship was "among the few" to cross the Strait 'Hormuz? in the last 24 hours. This comes as the uncertainty about reopening this critical waterway grows, with the talks between the U.S.A. and Iran at a standstill. Prior to the start of the war against Iran on February 28, the average daily shipping through the strait was 125-140 passages. As a result of the conflict, 20,000 sailors are still stranded on hundreds of ships in the?Gulf.

According to an analysis based on ship tracking data, there were 10 ships per day that entered and left the strait. This included cargo vessels, as well as other ships like chemical and liquefied petroleum tankers. Crude oil tankers only accounted for a small percentage of total traffic. Analysis based on data from ship tracking.

According to data analytics specialist SynMax, the Chinese-flagged Zhong Gu Nan Chan small container ship crossed the Strait within the last 24 hours.

On Thursday, a SynMax analysis of separate Kpler data revealed that most of the other 10 vessels were dry bulk or container ships entering the Gulf of Oman. Only one Iran-linked oil tanker crossed into the Gulf of Oman.

There is a fragile ceasefire in place, but no major breakthrough has occurred in the?peace effort. The U.S. blocking of Iranian ports, and Tehran's control of the Strait of Hormuz - a vital global oil supply route - complicates negotiations, which are mediated by Pakistan.

Fearnleys, a shipbroker, said this week that they had been disappointed in the past by indications of a possible deal.

"We definitely need the waterways opened, not only for the shipping industry but also for the global economy. Meanwhile, the market is more or less the same. Reporting by Jonathan Saul, Editing by Chiara Rodriguez

(source: Reuters)