Hormuz Strait AIS data display
Hormuz Strait AIS data displaySpire Maritime

Ships warned to keep clear of Iranian waters near Hormuz Strait

Electronic interference and elevated maritime threat level reported
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Commercial ships are sailing close to Oman and are being advised by maritime agencies to avoid Iran's waters around the Strait of Hormuz, with the risk of the conflict between Israel and Iran escalating, shipping sources said on Wednesday.

In the latest measure, ships sailing towards Hormuz are looking to minimise risks and are sailing close to Oman's coast for much of the journey.

The Gulf of Oman is 200 miles (320 kilometres) wide, much of it international waters, and is bordered by Oman and Iran, as well as the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan, which have territorial waters of 12 miles.

Journeys will still need to be made through Hormuz itself, which is 21 miles (33 kilometres) wide at its narrowest point. The two shipping lanes are just two miles (three kilometres) wide in either direction.

A larger cluster of ships was sailing closer to the Omani coast on Wednesday, while mainly Iranian-flagged vessels were sailing within Iranian waters, according to ship-tracking data on the MarineTraffic platform.

"Taking into account that during the past, there have been incidents of violations of freedom of navigation and maritime safety for merchant vessels near the shores of Iran, we strongly suggest that Greek-flagged vessels sail, if possible, away from waters of Iranian jurisdiction when in the Persian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Oman," the Greek Shipping Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

Electronic interference with commercial ship navigation systems has surged in recent days around the Strait of Hormuz and the wider Gulf, adding to risks for sailors hauling oil cargoes.

Average earnings for the supertankers have surged in recent days to over $50,000 a day from over $20,000 a week ago, according to analysts. "The regional threat level remains significant as strikes continue from both Iran and Israel," the multinational, US-led Combined Maritime Forces JMIC Information Center said in an advisory, adding that the maritime threat level is elevated.

QatarEnergy has instructed tankers to remain outside the Strait of Hormuz and to enter the Gulf only the day before loading, amid military strikes between nearby Iran and Israel, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul, Renee Maltezou and Marwa Rashad; Editing by Rod Nickel)

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