Three Asia-bound liquefied natural gas tankers, with their transponders disabled, have passed the Strait of Hormuz but the transit timing remains unclear, Reuters reported Thursday, citing ship-tracking data from LSEG and Kpler.
Two of the tankers loaded in Qatar were previously detected west of the Strait on June 1 and April 30 respectively. On Wednesday, they were tracked again with one moving towards Pakistan, with the other detected close to southeast Asia, the report said.
One of the tankers was loaded on May 22, whereas the second one has had cargo since Feb. 27.
The third tanker, likely heading towards India, too resurfaced on Wednesday. It was tracked on May 1 ballast and east of Hormuz and then reappeared after loading a cargo in UAE on May 25, the report said.
So far 12 LNG cargoes, including these three tankers, have exited the Hormuz waterway since the beginning of the Iran war in late-Feb, the Reuters report said.
Meanwhile, Kuwait has exported a liquefied petroleum gas cargo via the Hormuz waterway using a tanker under its control, amid an increase in use of discreet ways by producers to move energy supplies via waterway, Bloomberg reported Thursday.
The tanker crossed the Hormuz Strait before shifting the cargo to another vessel, which in now moving towards Paradip port in India, the report said, citing traders, Kpler, and ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.
UAE is among the major producers, who are exporting crude and LNG through the Hormuz waterway by increasingly turning off tracking on tankers. About 2 million barrels per day of oil and related products are still being shipped through the Persian Gulf, as per Rapidan Energy Group, the report added.