Ceasefire Illusion Shattered? Iran Seals Strait Of Hormuz As Ships Turn Back And Crisis Deepens

Despite US-Iran ceasefire, Iran halts tanker movement through Strait of Hormuz after Lebanon strikes, leaving over 1000 ships stranded

According to Iranian state media, conditions worsened rapidly despite ceasefire between United States and Iran, moreover initially some vessels attempted crossing through the route, however Israeli attacks on Lebanon changed the situation abruptly, consequently on Wednesday April 8 2026 Greek-owned bulk carrier NJ Earth and Liberia’s Daytona Beach became first ships to cross after ceasefire, meanwhile this created hope for normalcy but relief did not last long

Iran Blocks Oil Tankers After Rising Casualties

After Israeli strikes killed 254 people in Lebanon, Iran took strict action immediately, moreover Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency reported that Tehran stopped all oil tanker movement through Strait of Hormuz, additionally state broadcaster confirmed complete closure of the route, meanwhile tankers attempting exit turned back towards Persian Gulf, consequently impact appeared instantly across the region

Over 1000 Ships Stuck As Situation Escalates Further

According to shipping analytics firm Kpler, more than 1000 vessels already remained stuck in the area, moreover this number included 187 oil-loaded tankers, additionally even under normal conditions ships take over two weeks to exit this region, therefore disruption created serious operational delays

Iran Issues New Navigation Orders For Safety Concerns

Furthermore Iran released a new navigation chart citing security reasons for ships, moreover authorities instructed vessels to follow designated routes strictly, additionally this aimed to avoid possible sea mines placed in waters, meanwhile this step highlighted rising maritime risk levels

Global Energy Supply Faces Major Threat From Closure

Since nearly one-third of global seaborne oil trade passes through Strait of Hormuz, closure raises major concerns, moreover this disruption threatens both energy supply chains and oil prices globally, therefore the crisis now extends beyond regional tensions into global economic risk