BSS
  25 Jun 2026, 20:50

Hormuz traffic sees sharp uptick but not back to normal

LONDON, June 25, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Strait of Hormuz traffic has increased 
sharply, but remains at roughly half its peacetime level, officials said on 
Thursday as stranded sailors made their way out of the waterway.

Seventy confirmed crossings were recorded on Wednesday, according to an X 
post by analytics firm Kpler.

This marked the highest number of vessels in a day since Iran shut the Strait 
of Hormuz on March 1 in retaliation for US-Israeli strikes.

At least 56 commodity vessels -- including tankers carrying oil, gas, and dry 
bulk such as fertilisers -- crossed on Wednesday, Kpler's tracking platform 
showed.

On Thursday, 15 commodity vessels crossed by midday, according to Kpler -- 
more than the average of 10 daily crossings between March 1 and June 14, when 
Iran and the US agreed to a memorandum of understanding to start discussing 
an end to the war.

For the first time since March 1, dry bulk tanker traffic through the 
waterway on Wednesday reached its 2025 level, with 22 crossings according to 
maritime tracker AXSMarine.

The traffic increase comes as some of the 11,000 seafarers who had been stuck 
in the Gulf because of the war continued to sail out of the key passageway.

A UN-led plan to evacuate the mariners got under way on Tuesday evening.

Two Maersk vessels exited the Gulf on Wednesday evening and Thursday morning, 
the shipping company told AFP, adding that three of its vessels remained 
stuck.

Since June 15, traffic has been steadily increasing through the strait, which 
normally sees around a fifth of the world's oil and gas exports.

Ships exiting the Gulf are using many different routes, creating confusion 
and signalling that traffic has not returned to its pre-war state, when ships 
passed through a toll-free corridor at the centre of the waterway, experts 
say.

"Iran continues to tightly manage the northern routes, issuing what we've 
heard are selective permits and phasing of agreements," shipping journal 
Lloyd's List editor-in-chief Richard Meade said in a briefing on Thursday.

Tehran warned on Thursday against any crossings of the Strait of Hormuz 
without its authorisation, saying vessels not complying "will be dealt with".

"Non-Iranian vessels relying on the southern Omani corridor under US Navy 
monitoring should not mistake this for any kind of normalcy," Meade said.

European minesweeping vessels headed to the region to remove the mines 
blocking safe navigation in the strait's main corridor have passed through 
the Red Sea, Britain's navy said in a statement on Tuesday.