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After an attack on a ship, traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is slowed

Ship tracking data revealed that fewer vessels traversed the Strait of Hormuz Friday than they did earlier in the week. This was hours after an Iranian-operated vessel fired on a Taiwanese ship. U.N.'shipping 'agency temporarily suspended its voluntary scheme for evacuating hundreds of stranded vessels and thousands of seafarers out of the Gulf, after the ship was damaged by the attack near the Omani side.

Nevertheless, data from LSEG's and MarineTraffic's ship tracking showed that at least four oil tankers, including three very large crude carrier ships, each of which can carry a maximum 2 million barrels, had entered the Gulf on Friday to?load up oil.

Separate shipping data revealed that two supertankers loaded Iranian oil into the strait, and a tanker with 2,000,000 barrels of crude oil exited via the Omani side. This was confirmed by an analysis of Kpler.

After months of disruption due to the Iran conflict, oil buyers hoped that a ceasefire agreement was reached between Washington and Tehran. On Friday, crude prices fell by over 3%, setting the stage for steep weekly losses, as supply concerns eased. Meanwhile, top exporter Saudi Arabia resumed loadings into the Gulf, opening the door for more oil supply.

Prior to the start of the conflict, there were an average of 125 ships sailing each day. Taiwan's Evergreen Marine reported on Friday that its ship had been hit by an "unknown item" near Oman after U.S. officials said on Thursday that Iran fired on the vessel.

The attack has slowed down the plans for ships to be evacuated and transits to resume through the Strait of Hormuz. However, some transits are still expected, according to Jakob Larsen.

He added: "The situation highlights the importance of clear and unambiguous agreements between U.S.A. and Iran in regards to a resumed maritime traffic through the Strait." Kazem Gharibabadi, Iran's deputy?minister of foreign affairs, said that coordination with Tehran was necessary to ensure safe passage through strait.

Analysis from Kpler reveals that tanker traffic, including crude oil, oil 'products, and chemical tanks, increased to 13 transits in both directions on Friday, compared with 24 on 'Thursday, and 27 on a Wednesday. This is the highest number since the U.S. and Israeli strikes against Iran on February 28.

A separate analysis by?AXSMarine revealed that 62 transits were recorded on June 24 in both directions, including dry bulk vessels, the highest number of transits since the conflict began. AXSMarine reported this week that the total traffic on June 24 was 53% higher than the previous year's same-day count.

AXSMarine said that "Traffic is still not normalized to its full extent." (Reporting and editing by Jonathan Saul, Florence Tan and Alexander Smith).

(source: Reuters)