Energy shipments in the Gulf have once again resumed sailing, after the US and Iran signed an interim agreement. After months of disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz, activity appears to have finally resumed, with a liquefied natural gas (LNG) loaded tanker now moving towards the strategic waterway.

LNG tanker nears Hormuz as US-Iran deal raises hopes for reopening the crucial waterway, impacting global gas prices.

An LNG tanker has begun heading toward the Strait of Hormuz following a preliminary U.S.-Iran agreement that could reopen the vital energy shipping route and ease pressure on…

India’s Petronet sent a liquefied natural gas tanker through the Strait of Hormuz, the only shipment on Monday since the United States and Iran reached a peace deal to reopen the…

Shipping groups warned Monday it was too soon to safely resume sailing through the Strait of Hormuz following US and Iranian promises that the trade route would reopen under their…

Shipping groups warned Monday that it was too soon to start sailing through the Strait of Hormuz following US and Iranian promises that the trade route would reopen under their…

The first LNG tanker carrying energy cargo passed through the Strait of Hormuz after the U.S. and Iran agreed to reopen the waterway, although shipping companies remain cautious…

"The flow of traffic will take some time to improve due to mines in the strait."

Five laden carriers remain in the Gulf while 15 have left since conflict began in February, Kpler data finds

Source says QatarEnergy is ready to resume LNG production very quickly after US-Iran deal reopens Strait of Hormuz

"And it never will be ...not for years. Iranian attacks on Ras Laffan damaged 2 full liquefaction trains..."

Traders remain uncertain over how fast Qatari LNG exports can ramp up and whether the Strait of Hormuz is safe enough to transit.

The recent Iran-US deal is yet to determine how fast Qatari LNG production will resume and whether Hormuz transit will be considered safe for shippers.

Qatar is repositioning LNG tankers and preparing to restore gas production as expectations grow that the Strait of Hormuz will soon reopen following the U.S.-Iran agreement.

Reopening the waterway will only be a first step; crews must be changed, disrupted supply chains restarted and strategic energy reserves replenished.

An LNG tanker approaches the Strait of Hormuz as the US-Iran peace deal takes effect, signaling potential normalization of energy trade with ripple effects

Energy shipments in the Gulf have once again resumed sailing, after the US and Iran signed an interim agreement. After months of disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz, activity…

The Strait of Hormuz is back in business after more than 100 days of disruption, with over 60 million barrels of crude set to leave the pipeline. Following a US-Iran peace deal,…

Three big Saudi oil tankers left the Gulf through the Hormuz Strait on Thursday, maritime trackers said, after leaders vowed to reopen the route under an agreement to end the…

Goldman: "We now assume that Persian Gulf exports normalize to pre- war levels by the end of July."

Three ships laden with crude pass through key waterway as it opens for traffic