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Fewer vessels travel through Hormuz as US, Iran continue strikes

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 9:31 PM

SINGAPORE, July 16 (Reuters) – Fewer vessels travelled through the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday, the first day ​after the U.S. reimposed its ‌naval blockade on Iranian ports with both countries escalating strikes across the Gulf, shipping data showed.

Seven vessels crossed the strait on Wednesday, ‌mostly ​on the Iranian ⁠route, down from 13 ⁠the previous day, Kpler data showed.

Hostilities have intensified since Iran said late on Saturday it had closed the ​Strait of Hormuz. Military operations are keeping ships from travelling through ⁠the waterway, which carried ⁠about a fifth of global ​oil and gas shipments before the war.

On ​Wednesday, four empty vessels entered the ‌Gulf, including three small oil tankers and a dry bulk carrier for grains, the data showed. The three ⁠vessels that exited the strait on Wednesday carried liquefied petroleum gas, coal and fuel oil.

On ⁠Tuesday, ‌a Suezmax tanker carrying 1 ⁠million barrels of Saudi crude ​exited ‌the strait with its transponder ​switched off, ⁠Kpler data showed.

There were no Very Large Crude Carrier or liquefied natural gas tankers passing through the strait on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Florence Tan; Editing by ​Kate Mayberry)