Strain grows on shipping industry with vessels stuck inside Hormuz - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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Strain grows on shipping industry with vessels stuck inside Hormuz

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on June 3, 2026

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· Last updated: June 3, 2026

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Shipping Industry Faces Mounting Strain With Vessels Trapped in the Strait of Hormuz

Impact of Strait of Hormuz Closure on Global Shipping

By Jonathan Saul

Ships and Seafarers Stranded Amid Conflict

ATHENS, June 3 (Reuters) - Even if the U.S. and Iran agreed to halt the war and open the Strait of Hormuz, ships trapped in the Gulf will be unable to leave without safety assurances, the CEO of V.Group, a leading global ship manager, told Reuters.

Renewed hostilities in the three-month-old conflict are testing a shaky ceasefire while hundreds of ships and about 20,000 seafarers remain stuck in the region with Hormuz largely closed.

V.Group's Vessels and the Need for Safety Guarantees

V.Group, which manages around 800 vessels, has 13 ships stuck in the Gulf, half of them tankers, said Rene Kofod-Olsen, group CEO with one of the world's top technical ship and crew management specialists.

"You are in a situation where you supposedly have a ceasefire," he said during the Posidonia shipping week in Athens. 

"But you still have kinetic activity." Kofold-Olsen said, referring to drone or missile strikes.

Requirements for Resuming Normal Traffic

For traffic to return to pre-war levels, when on average 125 vessels passed via Hormuz daily, ship operators will need solid assurances of safe passage, in which the international community would need to be involved, he said.

"I don't believe that global shipping by definition will go through in a material way the Strait of Hormuz before those things are actually guaranteed," Kofod-Olsen said.     

Industry Reactions and Operational Challenges

Shipping executives who gathered in Athens said that while crews in the Gulf were receiving supplies and it was possible to rotate teams inside the region, the strain from the conflict was deepening.

Operational and Insurance Pressures

"Ship owners are having to operate in irregular frameworks, which can be difficult or challenging for the industry, difficult and challenging for insurers as well," Alex Gregg-Smith, president for marine and offshore with top ship safety certifier Bureau Veritas, told Reuters.   

"It's putting pressure on the owners' operations." 

Flag Registries and Owner Decisions

Dwain Hutchinson, managing director of the Bahamas maritime registry, told Reuters there were 14 Bahamas-flagged ships, with over 900 seafarers on board, inside the Gulf, which included smaller offshore vessels that normally operated in the area.

While their safety and wellbeing were the top priority, the flag registry did not restrict ships from sailing into the region.

"We think that's an owner's decision and we hope that they will review the risk and take a balanced decision for operation in the region," he said.    

Major Operators' Perspectives

Evangelos Marinakis, founder and chairman of Capital Maritime & Trading Corp, one of the world’s major tanker operators, said his group "were lucky enough" not to have had any vessels inside the Gulf when the conflict started on February 28.

"In case something happens, a casualty, we wouldn't be able to take such a risk," he told the TradeWinds ship owners' forum in Athens.

(Reporting by Jonathan SaulEditing by Tomasz Janowski)

Key Takeaways

  • Commercial vessels transits plunged to roughly 10 per day—just about 11% of pre‑war levels of ~95–130 daily crossings—effectively paralyzing the vital shipping corridor. (straits.live)
  • An estimated 20,000 seafarers remain trapped aboard ships in the Gulf; logistical and human pressures mount as crew changes, supplies, and normal operations remain severely disrupted. (shipuniverse.com)
  • War‑risk insurance premiums have exploded—rising from ~0.125% to between 0.5–8% of vessel value—and many P&I clubs have withdrawn coverage, discouraging operators from risk‑taking. (hormuzmonitor.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are ships stuck inside the Strait of Hormuz?
Ships remain stuck due to ongoing conflict in the region, which has led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, restricting safe passage.
How many vessels and seafarers are affected by the situation in Hormuz?
Hundreds of ships and about 20,000 seafarers are currently trapped in the Gulf region, awaiting safety assurances for departure.
What conditions are needed for shipping to resume in the Strait of Hormuz?
Shipping executives say that solid guarantees for safe passage, potentially involving the international community, are required before traffic can return to normal.
How are crew members being supported while stuck in the Gulf?
Crews are receiving supplies and can rotate teams within the region, but the continued conflict is increasing strain and operational difficulties.
What challenges do ship owners and insurers face due to the Hormuz crisis?
Ship owners must operate in irregular frameworks, increasing challenges for their operations and for insurers amid rising security risks.

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