An India-bound tanker laden with liquefied natural gas from state-owned UAE energy giant Abu Dhabi National Oil Company has crossed the Strait of Hormuz, according to a Bloomberg analysis of ship-tracking data published Wednesday.
This is in addition to the recent transit of at least two non-Iranian oil supertankers through the crucial waterway, which is responsible for almost 20% of the global energy flows.
The Hormuz Strait has been effectively shut for LNG traffic since the start of the Iran war on Feb. 28, cutting off almost one-fifth of the global supply of the super-chilled gas, the report said.
Adnoc has also shipped three other cargoes from the Persian Gulf on tankers, with the last of these detected in western India, the report said.
The latest shipments are a fraction of pre-war volumes when about three LNG tankers, primarily carrying fuel from top producer Qatar, exited the Hormuz Strait every day, the report said.
In response to anquery, an Adnoc spokesperson said the company does not comment on the position, movements, or routing of its vessels as a matter of policy.