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French-owned CMA CGM container ship passes Strait of Hormuz, data shows

By Thomson Reuters Apr 3, 2026 | 7:06 AM

By Nerijus Adomaitis and Dominique Vidalon

PARIS, April 3 (Reuters) – A container ship belonging to French shipping group CMA CGM has passed through the Strait of Hormuz, MarineTraffic vessel tracking data shows, in a sign ​that Iran may not consider France a hostile nation.

The Malta-flagged Kribi, ‌owned by CMA CGM, crossed the Strait on April 2. It is the first French-owned vessel to make it through the channel since U.S.-Israeli attacks began on Iran at the end of February.

Until the war led to the effective closure of the Strait, it was the ‌route ​for about a fifth of global oil and liquefied ⁠natural gas supplies.

It was not ⁠immediately clear how the vessel, which the data shows is sailing south along the coast of Oman, secured safe passage. CMA CGM did not respond to a request for comment. President Emmanuel Macron’s office did not immediately ​respond to a request for comment on whether his government had brokered the ships’ passage.

FRANCE HAS FOUND FAVOUR WITH IRAN?

The vessel passed through on Thursday, ⁠the day that Macron said it would be ⁠unrealistic to launch a military operation to open the Strait, ​and that only diplomatic efforts would work.

“This Strait must be reopened because it ​is strategic for energy flows, fertilisers and international trade, but it can ‌only be done in consultation with Iran,” he said.

Macron has worked with European and other allies to build a coalition to guarantee free passage through Hormuz once hostilities have stopped.

French diplomats have also spent the last week working to soften ⁠a resolution at the United Nations Security Council that would have enabled forceful action in the Strait of Hormuz.

VESSEL CHANGES TO ‘OWNER FRANCE’

LSEG shipping data showed that on ⁠Thursday the vessel changed its ‌Automatic Identification System destination to “Owner France” before entering Iran’s ⁠territorial waters in the Strait, signalling to Iranian authorities ​the nationality ‌of its owner.

Ships have previously used similar tactics to ​assert neutrality when ⁠transiting conflict zones. Several Chinese vessels that have passed through the Strait also set their destinations to “Chinese owner & crew”.

The ship had originally been bound for Pointe-Noire in the Republic of the Congo.

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon, John Irish and Michael Rose in Paris and Nerijus Adomaitis in Oslo, Writing by Gabriel Stargardter, editing by Inti ​Landauro and Barbara Lewis)