Get EnterpriseAM daily

Who gets through Hormuz is down to cargo — and the flag

1

WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

TODAY: Hormuz access is now determined by ownership and cargo

Good morning, nice people. We’re starting the week with a brisk read, though it’s certainly not void of important updates. Yes, regional disruptions are still impacting shipping flows in Hormuz, but some vessels have been spotted strutting the strait. Does this mean Hormuz is open? Well, not quite.

Plus: Israeli flows to Egypt from the Leviathan and Tamar gas fields have returned to pre-war levels — potentially giving the Egyptian government a bit of breathing room, given the LNG’s relatively lower price.

Watch this space

ENERGY — Flows from Israel’s Leviathan and Tamar gas fields to Egypt have returned to pre-war levels, with around 1.1 bcf/d passing through the East Mediterranean Gas pipeline, a government official tells EnterpriseAM. The restart of sizable exports to Egypt and Jordan comes just two days after Israel resumed production in the Leviathan gas field.

Why this matters: With global energy prices rising and LNG shipments in short supply — as Qatari flows remain blocked by the Strait of Hormuz closure — imports from Israel at comparatively lower prices give the government a little bit of breathing room, we’re told.

However, the additional pipeline supplies aren’t enough to eliminate the need for additional LNG. The Madbouly government is on track to order 20 LNG cargoes for April to bridge the gap between supply and demand and front-run expected higher prices ahead of summer, when seasonal demand is expected to come in about 7% higher than last year. Supply from Qatar, meanwhile, remains offline.

Despite the squeeze, industrial users and power plants have still been getting their full quotas, the official tells us. Coordination between the oil and electricity ministries, the presence of sufficient floating regasification units, and a strong existing relationship with foreign suppliers have helped the country support spot cargoes quickly, they added.


TRADE — Exim has made it easier for Egypt to import US LNG: The Export-Import Bank of the US (Exim) approved over USD 2 bn in export credit ins. to support US LNG shipments to Egypt through 2027, according to a statement out last week. The agreement backs contracts between the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation and Hartree Partners.

The government has been angling to secure USD 11 bn in LNG across 130 shipments starting this June, two government sources told EnterpriseAM earlier this year. A government source in the oil sector had previously confirmed that Hartree Partners is among the players with whom the state plans to renew supply agreements.


SHIPPING — The US underwrites the route: The US has doubled its reins. for ships transiting Hormuz to USD 40 bn to lower “war risk” barriers for shippers. The US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) expanded the program with insurers including AIG, Berkshire Hathaway, Travelers, Liberty Mutual Ins., Starr, CNA, and Chubb.

Upping the ante: The move builds on a USD 20 bn DFC program launched last month to revive shipping through the strait, but operators remain deterred by drone, missile, and naval mine risks — while the lack of naval escort protection continues to weigh on confidence.

Why it matters: The US has had to sweeten the pot because the strait’s disruption has driven up global energy prices, pushing US gasoline prices above USD 4 per gallon. Analysts say ins. costs and shipping activity are unlikely to normalize unless Iran’s military threat is reduced.

But there are other routes, courtesy of Saudi: The Kingdom’s East-West pipeline officially hit 100% capacity late last month at 7 mn bbl / d. This bypass is credited with preventing oil prices from hitting catastrophic highs. Meanwhile on land, Saudi Arabian Railways launched a new 1.7k km rail freight route last month, connecting the Eastern Province to the Jordanian border and the Red Sea to bypass the strait entirely for non-oil goods.

Market watch

Oil prices climbed this morning amid fears that regional disruptions could hit supply, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures gained USD 1.71 to trade at USD 110.74 / bbl by 00.57 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) increased USD 0.71 to USD 112.25 / bbl.

Meanwhile, Opec+ decided to boost oil output by 206k bbl / d for May, with Saudi Arabia alone contributing 62k bbl / d, according to a statement. The hike may only take effect on paper as key nations remain unable to raise production amid the US-Iran conflict, Reuters reports.

The move indicates a willingness to raise output once the Strait of Hormuz reopens, sources in the eight-member bloc told the newswire. The hike — which only amounts to 2% of the supply disrupted by Iran’s closure of the waterway — is expected to add “very few barrels to the market,” former Opec official Jorge Leon said.

The organization “expressed concern regarding attacks on energy infrastructure, noting that restoring damaged energy assets to full capacity is both costly and takes a long time, thereby affecting overall supply availability.”


The Baltic Index keeps the rally going: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segments — rose 1.8% to 2,066 points on Thursday. The capesize climbed 2.1% to 3,086 points, the panamax index rose 1.5% to 1,784, and the smaller supramax advanced 1.2% to 1,224 points.


The Drewry World Container Index was unchanged at USD 2,287 per 40-ft container last week, according to the latest index readings. The rise is driven by an increase across transpacific and Asia-Europe rates, especially Shanghai-Genoa (2%) and Shanghai-New York (1%), with spot rates expected to face fresh upward pressure in the coming weeks as rising bunker costs prompt carriers to roll out fuel surcharges.

***YOU’RE READING EnterpriseAM Logistics, the essential MENA publication for senior execs who care about the industry that connects producers and retailers to global markets. We’re out Monday through Thursday by 9:15am in Cairo, 10:15am in Riyadh, and 11:15am in the UAE.

EnterpriseAM Logistics is available without charge thanks to the generous support of our friends at Hassan Allam Utilities and Transmar.

Were you forwarded this email? Tap or click here to get your own copy of EnterpriseAM Logistics.

Want to send us a story idea, request coverage, ask for a correction, or otherwise get in touch? Reach out to us on logistics@enterprisemea.com.

DID YOU KNOW that we also cover Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE ? ***

This publication is proudly sponsored by

2

The Big Story Today

Who gets through Hormuz now?

Flows are moving in Hormuz, but only along a controlled current. Traffic through the strait has picked up over the past week, with a handful of select vessels making successful crossings after nearly a month of disruption.

Data caveat: Vessel tracking is being hampered by electronic interference, while some tankers are switching off AIS transponders in high-risk waters — reducing the reliability and timeliness of observed movements reported in the media. “AIS tracking shows ships in locations where they are not and can disrupt compliance checks with false sanctioned flagging,” Sean Burgin, senior purchaser at Unicore Sean, previously told EnterpriseAM.

Who passed?

Western shipping has made it through: The Malta-flagged CMA CGM “Kribi” exited the Gulf after reactivating its transponder near Dubai on 28 March — transiting the strait laden with cargo and marking the first known safe passage by a Western vessel since the outbreak.

The route: The vessel passed close to Iran’s Larak Island, following a corridor that has become standard in recent weeks — part of a system allowing Iranian authorities to verify and monitor crossings. Most recorded transits have been directed through the narrow northern passage between Larak and Qeshm islands, concentrating traffic into a monitored corridor.

Indian-flagged vessels are also moving: LPG tanker Green Sanvi crossed the strait carrying 46.7k metric tons of LPG, with Indian authorities indicating that several of their vessels have also transited safely in the past three weeks, although 17 ships remain idle in the Arabian Gulf.

Oman: A one-off exception, or the start of a new trend?

Gas flows are testing the limits: Omani-linked LNG tanker Sohar, partly owned by Japan’s Mitsui OSK Lines, is now near Muscat after exiting Hormuz via the southern route near Oman — an unusual deviation from the northern corridor most ships have followed, suggesting some flexibility depending on vessel ownership and alignment.

Oman is going even further: Two VLCCs, Habrut and Dhalkut, each carrying up to 2 mn barrels, crossed the strait on 2 April en route to feed the Duqm refinery, which has been starved of crude since the conflict began.

Cargoes are telling: Habrut is carrying UAE Murban crude loaded at Jebel Dhanna, while Dhalkut co-loaded Saudi Arab Heavy and Arab Medium at Juaymah. Both vessels are owned by Oman’s state shipping firm Asyad and were redirected after being stuck in the Gulf for weeks.

The policy layer is catching up to reality on the water: Iranian officials say they are working with Oman on a framework requiring vessels to coordinate transit in advance and obtain permits from both sides.

Our take: The ships are Omani-owned and sailing along Omani waters — suggesting Muscat has received assurances from Tehran that it can move cargoes through the strait without risk.

Who’s exempted?

The “non-hostile” club: Countries like China, Russia, India, and Pakistan have been allowed transit under the “aligned with Iran” logic, with negotiated passages for countries like Malaysia and Thailand — alongside ships carrying “ essential goods.”

Iraq joined the inner circle: Iran has said Iraqi oil shipments are exempt from restrictions, potentially unlocking up to 3 mn bbl / d of exports — though it remains unclear whether this applies to all cargoes or only Iraqi tankers, and whether shipowners will take the risk to lift them. Within a day of the exemption, an oil tanker loaded with 1 mn barrels of Basrah Heavy crude was seen passing the strait.

Access is also becoming priced: Some tankers have reportedly paid around USD 1 / bbl through Iran’s toll booth play.

Controlled access, limited flow

Capacity remains the constraint: After a month of disruption, tanker availability is tight, and it’s unclear how much shipping capacity can immediately return to load and transport crude from Gulf ports, even where exemptions exist.

Why this matters: The strait is no longer closed — but it is no longer open either, with transit determined by routing, ownership, coordination, and risk tolerance.

What’s next: The key question is whether these controlled transits scale into sustained flows — or remain isolated exceptions that signal access without restoring real supply.

3

Projects

Morocco wants a bigger piece in the AI infrastructure race

Morocco goes big on AI: The UK’s Nexus Core Systems and its partners are building a USD 1.2 bn AI data center project in Morocco’s Nouaceur — designed to scale to 500 MW. The facility will run on renewable power from Taqa Morocco and deploy Nvidia’s Blackwell GB200 chips, with Naver Cloud set to operate the platform.

Location, location, and location: Morocco has already allocated 666 hectares in Nouaceur for major industrial projects, including data centers. Orange Maroc previously launched a 1.5 MW Orange Tech data center in the Casablanca area to support its B2B and cloud services offering.

Why this matters

It has a geographic edge: While Morocco would still trail the UAE and Saudi Arabia in scale, its advantage lies in geography and positioning — a Europe-facing site with renewable power and industrial land, rather than a direct bid to compete with the Gulf on size.

4

Also on Our Radar

DP World, AD Ports work on Nigerian shipping + Jeddah port gets two new shipping links

DP World + AD Ports to help boost Nigeria’s maritime capacity with new shipping line

Nigeria tapped port operators DP World and AD Ports Group for its new planned national shipping line. Nigeria has been looking to reduce reliance on foreign carriers, retain more maritime value for its domestic economy, and create local shipping jobs. The initiative is part of a wider push to boost maritime capacity, improve cargo handling, and reduce congestion at ports.

Mawani adds two new PIL services through Jeddah

Jeddah adds two more links: The Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani) has added two new Pacific International Lines (PIL) shipping services through Jeddah Islamic Port. The RGS service will connect Jeddah to Nhava Sheva and Mundra in India, Djibouti, and Berbera, with a capacity of 1.8k TEUs. The RS2 will link the port to nine international ports, including hubs in China and Singapore, as well as Ain Sokhna and Aqaba, with a capacity of roughly 12k TEUs.

More links, same playbook: Jeddah has become one of Saudi Arabia’s main tools for adding route density and widening liner access while Red Sea shipping patterns remain under pressure. The port has seen a steady run of new service additions over the past year, including routes tied to India, China, Egypt, Jordan, and Oman.

5

Logistics in the News

The disruptions are working in China’s favor

Regional disruptions are driving an uneven rise in energy costs, and that’s reshaping industrial competition. Chinese exporters are better positioned than peers in Europe and Southeast Asia to keep production steady — and pick up a global market share — as others slow down, the Financial Times reports.

The advantage is structural: China is a large oil importer from the Gulf, but its broader energysystem dilutes that exposure — domestic coal, a renewables surge, a diversified supplier list, pipelines with neighbors, the EV boom, and strategic reserves are all acting as buffers.

It’s already showing up in output: China’s manufacturing PMI rose to 50.4 in March, returning to expansion after two months of contraction, which indicates that factories are holding up one month into the crisis.

But the real shift is happening in orders: Exporters in eastern China report increasing inquiries from US and European clients who are concerned about supply chain reliability in Southeast Asia. Disruptions linked to the oil shock are hitting countries like Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, and Indonesia harder, pushing some buyers to reconsider their “China plus one” strategies.

Reversal matters more than any short-term output data: For years, manufacturers diversified away from China to reduce geopolitical and tariff risk. Now, energy security and delivery reliability are pulling some of that demand back.

Still, this isn’t a clean W: Higher energy costs are feeding into input prices, creating cost-driven inflation in an economy still dealing with weak demand. That means companies are paying more to produce, but can’t easily raise prices — so financial gains get squeezed, even if they can handle it for now.

That creates a split inside the economy: Upstream sectors like energy benefit from higher prices, while downstream manufacturers — especially in consumer-facing industries — see margins tighten.

It’s also a W for gas markets: Chinese firms are reselling record volumes of LNG into spot markets, taking advantage of high prices while domestic demand remains covered by pipeline gas and local supply.


APRIL

16-17 April (Thursday-Friday): Global Supply Chain and Logistics Summit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

23-24 April (Thursday-Friday): Sustainability World Summit, Frankfurt, Germany.

28-30 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Mediterranean Ports and Logistics, Porto, Portugal.

MAY

12-14 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Aviation Energy Forum (AEF), Paris, France.

19-21 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Ground Handling Conference (IGHC), Cairo, Egypt.

19-21 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Terminal Operations Conference & Exhibition, Hamburg, Germany.

JUNE

2-4 June (Tuesday-Thursday): ProPak Mena, Cairo, Egypt.

4-5 June (Thursday-Friday): Supply Chain and Logistics Summit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

6-8 June (Saturday-Monday): IATA World Air Transport Summit, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

10-11 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Black Sea Ports and Logistics, Istanbul, Turkey.

21-24 June (Sunday-Wednesday): Saudi Smart Logistics, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

22-23 June (Monday-Tuesday): Decarbonizing Shipping Forum, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

AUGUST

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Air Cargo Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Saudi Warehouse and Logistics Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

SEPTEMBER

16-17 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Maritime & Logistics Congress, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

22-24 September (Tuesday-Thursday): Seamless Middle East, Dubai, UAE.

28-30 September (Monday-Wednesday): Transport Logistics Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

OCTOBER

12-14 October (Monday-Wednesday): The Airport Show, Dubai, UAE.

21-22 October (Wednesday-Thursday): Global Ports Forum, Singapore.

26-29 (Monday-Thursday): Air Cargo Forum, Miami, US.

27-29 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Routes World, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

NOVEMBER

2-5 November (Monday-Thursday): ADIPEC Maritime and Logistics Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

Now Playing
Now Playing
00:00
00:00