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Shipping traffic through Hormuz remains muted with no US-Iran deal in sight, data shows

Shipping traffic through Hormuz remains muted with no US-Iran deal in sight, data shows

ReutersMon, April 27, 2026 at 11:42 AM UTC

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Vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, Musandam, Oman, April 27, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer

LONDON, April 27 (Reuters) - At least seven ships - mainly dry bulk vessels - have crossed the ‌Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 ‌hours, in line with muted activity in recent days, shipping ​data showed on Monday, while talks between Iran and the United States have stalled.

The vessels included ships leaving from Iraqi ports and one dry bulk vessel ‌from an Iranian ⁠port, according to ship tracking data from Kpler and separate satellite analysis from ⁠data analytics specialists SynMax.

Shipping traffic passing through the crucial waterway at the entrance to the Gulf during ​an uneasy ​ceasefire between Washington and ​Tehran represents a fraction ‌of the average 140 daily passages before the Iran war began on February 28.

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The U.S. Central Command has redirected 37 vessels since a blockade was imposed on Iran on April 13, the military ‌said on April 25.

Six Iranian ​tankers returned to Iranian ports ​and sailed back ​through Hormuz in recent days with ‌some 10.5 million barrels of ​oil, according ​to satellite analysis from TankerTrackers.com.

Around four million barrels of Iranian oil onboard tankers sailed through the ​U.S. blockade ‌on April 24, according to separate satellite analysis ​from TankerTrackers.com.

(Reporting by Jonathan SaulEditing by David ​Goodman and Bernadette Baum)

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