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Panama Canal transit increased by 2.8% in January despite tensions

According to a report by the Panama Canal Authority, which was seen on Friday, there has been a 2.8% rise in vessel 'transits' in the first four months of the fiscal year.

According to the report, most of the traffic increase was registered by tankers transporting energy products such as liquefied gas (LNG), dry bulk carriers and car carriers.

This growth represents?114 more transits than the same period a previous year, to?a maximum of 4,156 vessels during the four-month span. The report states that the demand remained?solid?despite increased global trade volatility and new tariffs.

The report said that "Tanker (transits)," a measure of the volume of goods transported, increased 11.2%. This was due to an increase in shipments from United States, due to a higher demand from South Korea, Mexico and Guatemala for fuels and Methanol, as a result from trade agreements and tariff reductions.

Analysts predict that more vessels will be passing through Panama carrying U.S. LNG to reach?destinations? in Asia if the Strait of Hormuz?problems persist amid the U.S. - Iran conflict. This is already forcing vessel reroutes.

The Panama Canal is "operating in a reliable and stable manner" despite geopolitical uncertainty, increasing steadily the number of transits daily and maintaining predictable service levels for our clients," it said.

After the U.S. - Iran conflict, the authority didn't provide specific statistics but stated that it was monitoring maritime trade.

(source: Reuters)