
After the preliminary agreement between the US and Iran to end the
hostilities that have had among the effects that of
interrupt ship traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, yesterday between
Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman 25 ships have passed through
the highest daily number since April 18,
when the beginning of the conflict had caused the blocking of traffic
maritime and more than five times the daily average recorded in the
first ten days of June. This was announced by the Singaporean
AXSMarine, which manages an IT platform for the
of shipping, recalling that before the conflict, traffic
trade through Hormuz was around 110
crossings per day.
AXSMarine specified that since the beginning of last March, the
data provided by the AIS ship tracking system recorded
846 crossings of Hormuz made by bulk carriers,
tankers, gas carriers and container ships, equal to an average of 7.6
crossings per day. AXSMarine pointed out that the peak
occurred during the largest
AIS signal jamming event detected in the Persian Gulf
since the beginning of the conflict, with over 200 commercial ships hit
simultaneously by spoofing or by AIS signal anomalies.