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Oil keeps flowing through Hormuz despite Iran saying it’s shut
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Oil keeps flowing through Hormuz despite Iran saying it’s shut

Fortune · Jun 21, 2026, 3:24 PM · Also reported by 3 other sources

Millions of barrels of oil continued to flow through the Strait of Hormuz this weekend, even after Iran claimed to have closed the waterway again, as Washington and Tehran offer contrasting narratives over the status of the world’s most important shipping chokepoint. Three laden oil supertankers, with a combined transport capacity of 6 million barrels, emitted signals as they were sailing through the channel on Saturday via a route that hugs Oman’s coast, ship-tracking shows. One of them subsequently resumed sending automated signals early on Sunday after it had reached the Gulf of Oman. The Gulf Sunrise, hauling about 2 million barrels of Saudi crude to Japan is now crossing the Gulf of Oman, its automated tracking signals show, after vanishing from screens near the apex of the strait on Saturday. The Angola B, loaded with Emirati crude, was last seen rounding the tip of the Musandam peninsula, an Omani exclave that justs into Hormuz, on Saturday. The Monaco Loyalty was yet to reach the apex of the strait when it disappeared, also on Satuday. An email to the ships’ manager wasn’t immediately returned. If all three clear the waterway, their movements would support the US military’s assertion that it can successfully defend the southern route near Oman’s coast, despite Iran claiming it can control the waterway. A handful of vessels were also seen entering the Persian Gulf using the same route. US Central Command said on Saturday that 17 million barrels had passed through Hormuz, despite the reports in Iran’s media that the strait was closed. A liaison between navies and shipping said early Saturday, before Iran said Hormuz was shut, that vessels could transit on the Omani side at any time of day while making their locations visible. Iran and the US are jostling to control the narrative around Hormuz, with peace talks set to take place on Sunday as top officials including US Vice President JD Vance converge in Switzerland. Ensuring freedom of navigation in the strait

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