ON
← Back to feed
QatarEconomy2 days ago

Oil prices rise as Lebanon fighting erupts and Hormuz traffic still slow

Oil prices have risen as tensions escalate in Lebanon following Israeli attacks, while the situation in the Strait of Hormuz remains uncertain. The article notes that Brent crude increased slightly after initially declining, influenced by factors including the U.S.-Iran agreement and movements of oil and LNG tankers through the strategic waterway.

Brent crude reverses slide after oil, LNG tankers cross critical waterway.

Oil prices have begun rising again as an agreement between the United States and Iran hangs in the balance.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose 0.65 percent on Friday, after falling as much as 0.9 percent earlier in the day, as traders continued to weigh the practical effect of the US-Iran memorandum of understanding on ending their war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 items list 1 of 4 Paint peeling after $14 million memorial pool renovation

list 2 of 4 Obama opens presidential centre with call for unity

list 3 of 4 6-0, Kone injury, 2 red cards: All to know about Canada vs Qatar match

list 4 of 4 Andy Burnham wins key UK by-election, paving way to challenge Keir Starmer

end of list Brent futures for August delivery stood at $80.37 as of 06:30 GMT, taking the benchmark above the $80 threshold for the first time since Wednesday, after an earlier slide spurred by an uptick in commercial vessels transporting energy supplies through the strait.

It comes after Israel launched a series of attacks on Lebanon, killing 16 people and threatening the ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran.

Clashes between Israel and Hezbollah forces in southern Israel on Friday killed four Israeli soldiers, according to Israeli media.

A planned meeting between US and Iranian officials in Switzerland has been cancelled, reportedly due to the attacks, although the Strait of Hormuz still appeared to be open to shipping.

Japan and South Korea’s stock markets also had a volatile trading session.

Seoul’s Kospi surged more than 2.5 percent to reach an all-time high shortly after market opening, then fell 1.8 percent before rebounding to a 0.8 percent gain.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225, which rose about 0.6 percent shortly after market opening, was 0.08 percent in the red.

Stock markets in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Taipei were closed for the day.

Three Saudi Arabia-flagged oil supertankers carrying about 6 million barrels of crude exited the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, broadcasting their locations after spending weeks in the Gulf with their transponders turned off, according to maritime analysis firm Kpler.

The Hong Kong-flagged oil tanker Tong Lin Wan and the France-flagged LNG tanker Mraikh also passed through the waterway on Thursday, according to shiptracking data.

Despite the transits, traffic in the waterway remains a fraction of what it was before the war, when the channel saw 120-130 transits a day.

More than 500 vessels are estimated to be waiting to exit the Gulf through the strait, which in peacetime carries about one-fifth of the global oil supply.

While Iran and the US have committed to reopening the waterway, ship operators have expressed doubt about the safety of their vessels and crew after nearly four months of threats and attacks.

At least 46 attacks have been carried out against ships in the vicinity of the channel since the start of the conflict in late February, killing 14 seafarers, according to the International Maritime Organization.

The strait is also believed to contain an unknown number of Iranian naval mines, necessitating mine-sweeping operations that could take weeks.

On Thursday, the International Association of Independent Tanker Owners (INTERTANKO), one of the world’s largest organisations representing tanker owners and operators, called for greater clarity on the practical steps needed to facilitate safe passage through the waterway.

“Without clarity on these issues, ships will be unsure whether to transit the Strait of Hormuz,” INTERTANKO Managing Director Tim Wilkins said in a statement.

“Some ships will, of course, start to move. That will be natural. But ship owners have adopted a very cautious approach,” Wilkins said.

“The safety and security of seafarers have been uppermost in their minds, and no one wishes to jeopardise that safety-first approach when things appear to be moving in the right direction.”

Read the full article at Al Jazeera English
Source document: Israeli media reports

1 reports

Al Jazeera EnglishState / PublicCenter2 days ago
Oil prices rise as Lebanon fighting erupts and Hormuz traffic still slow

Oil prices have risen as tensions escalate in Lebanon following Israeli attacks, while the situation in the Strait of Hormuz remains uncertain. The article notes that Brent crude increased slightly after initially declining, influenced by factors including the U.S.-Iran agreement and movements of oil and LNG tankers through the strategic waterway.

Bias read (Center): The article provides a factual account of oil price fluctuations linked to geopolitical events without overtly favoring any side. It mentions both the U.S.-Iran agreement and the conflict in Lebanon but does not use loaded language or emphasize one perspective over another.

Official sources cited

  • press release Israeli media reports

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • press_releaseIsraeli media reports