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Strait of Hormuz – Situation update 17 March

myKN
2026-03-20

Latest developments across the region


The closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to reshape vessel deployment and cargo flows across the wider Middle East and South Asia.


Carriers have diverted Gulf‑bound ships to alternative hubs, including Khor Fakkan, Fujairah, Sohar, Salalah, and ports in India and Southeast Asia, resulting in temporary congestion and increased reliance on feeder networks and long‑haul trucking.


Industry intelligence suggests that while congestion remains manageable, pressure on bunker supply is growing across Asia, with China currently the least affected. Network adjustments, combined with elevated security risks, continue to place strain on port operations, inland transport capacity and overall schedule reliability.


This update consolidates the latest carrier advisories, port conditions, and vessel intelligence as of 17 March 2026.



Carrier updated response


Most major carriers continue to limit bookings to and from ports impacted by the Gulf closure.


While some carriers resumed accepting reefer and dry cargo bookings into some ports in the region, such as Jeddah, King Abdullah, Sohar and Khor Fakkan, they also placed restrictions on the return of empty containers.


In addition, some liners announced deploying multimodal corridors via Jeddah, Sohar, Aqaba and Mersin to maintain cargo connectivity.


Situation at impacted ports


Operations across most regional ports remain stable, although selected locations continue to experience targeted disruptions.


A recent fire near the crude export terminal in Al-Fujairah, following the interception of a drone, briefly interrupted some loading activities. These operations have since resumed, though authorities have issued a navigational warning regarding intermittent GPS signal interference offshore.


In Bahrain, vessel movements have restarted but are constrained due to limited pilot availability. APM Terminals has resumed operations, and all other major ports in the region report normal performance.


Vessel situation and risks


Security incidents remain a significant operational concern.


On 11 March, the container vessel ONE Majesty (6,724 TEU) reported impact damage approximately 25 nautical miles northwest of Ras Al Khaimah, resulting in a small hull breach but no injuries.


On 12 March, the Source Blessing, operating on an intra‑Middle East service, was struck by falling missile debris near Jebel Ali, causing a fire onboard. The crew remained unharmed, and the situation was contained.


The latest situation concerning impacted vessels remains
relatively unchanged. The latest number of vessels stuck in the Persian Gulf is calculated at 124 vessels with 168,000 TEUs.


Source: seaexplorer, Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, MSC, CMA CGM, ONE, Linerlytica, Lloyd's List, APM Terminals

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