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Sources say that oil and gas traders and majors have suspended shipments via Hormuz.

After the U.S. Trading sources said that Israel and Iran attacked each other, while Tehran announced it had shut down navigation.

One top executive of a major trading firm said, "Our ships will remain in port for several days." Satellite images of tanker trackers revealed that vessels were parked next to large ports such as Fujairah, United Arab Emirates and were not passing through Hormuz.

An official from the EU Naval mission Aspides? told that multiple vessels in the area received VHF transmissions from Iran's Revolutionary Guards that "no ships are allowed to cross the Strait of Hormuz".

The British Navy stated that Iran's orders are not legally binding, and advised ships to transit with caution.

Shipbroker Poten & Partners warned clients that although vessel traffic in the Strait of Hormuz is not entirely stopped, it has been disrupted.

The U.S. Navy warned against navigation of the entire 'Gulf of Oman', the North Arabian Sea, the Strait of Hormuz, and all of the Gulf of Oman.

According to an advisory seen on Saturday, Greece's Shipping Ministry advised vessels to avoid the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, as well as the Strait of Hormuz.

Around 20% of the world's oil, including that produced by Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE), Iraq, Kuwait, and Iran, is transported through Hormuz, along with large quantities of LNG from Qatar.

Laura Page, from the consultancy?Kpler said that 14 LNG tankers showed signs of slowing, U-turning, or stopping around or in the Strait. She added that this number was likely to rise and pose risks for Qatari LNG exports.

Hapag-Lloyd, a German container shipping group, has announced that it will'suspend all vessel transits through the Strait of Hormuz' until further notice. The company warned that services calling on Gulf ports may be affected by delays, rerouting, or schedule adjustments.

Maersk, a Danish shipping company, said on its website in an update that was not dated that it coordinated with security partners for all operations in both the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. However cargo acceptance in the Middle East remained available.

The French shipping company?CMA CGM has said that it told its vessels in the Gulf or heading there to seek shelter when the United States and Israel attacked Iran. Reporting by Dmitri Zahdannikov and Marwa Rashad; Editing and editing by Aidan Lewis and Kevin Liffey; Louise Heavens, Edmund Klamann, and Edmund Klamann.

(source: Reuters)