HomeAmericaShipping traffic remains at virtual standstill through Hormuz, data shows

Shipping traffic remains at virtual standstill through Hormuz, data shows

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LONDON, April 20 (Reuters) - ‌Shipping traffic through the Strait of ​Hormuz remained at a virtual standstill on Monday with just ⁠three crossings in the space of 12 hours, according to shipping data.

The oil products tanker Nero, ​which is under British sanctions for Russian oil activities, left ‌the Gulf and was sailing through the Strait, according to satellite analysis from data analytics specialists SynMax ⁠and tracking data from the Kpler platform.

Two ⁠other ships - a chemical tanker and a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) tanker - sailed into the Gulf through the critical waterway separately on Monday, the data ‌showed.

The LPG tanker, Axon I, was under separate U.S. ⁠sanctions for Iran trading activities.

A ‌ceasefire between the United States and ​Iran appeared in jeopardy on Monday after the U.S. said it had seized an Iranian cargo ‌ship that tried to run ​its blockade and Tehran ⁠vowed to retaliate, refusing for now to ‌join new peace talks.

"Recent ⁠weeks have brought several false starts, and although some form of resolution is likely at some point, ​the timing of any ‌durable breakthrough remains highly uncertain," ship broker Clarksons ⁠said in a note on ​Monday.

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul and Nerijus Adomaitis; ​Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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