Strait of Hormuz: IRGC says 25 ships passed in 24 hours under escort
Iran's IRGC Navy said 25 oil tankers and commercial vessels transited the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours under its coordination, state media reported.

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy announced that 25 vessels, including oil tankers and commercial ships, transited the Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours after obtaining coordination and security assurances from IRGC naval units. The statement was carried by state media.
According to the IRGC release, the transiting vessels completed required permissions and were escorted or monitored by IRGC naval forces through designated corridors. Regional news agencies and state broadcasters relayed similar figures, although independent ship-tracking data and third-party counts have at times shown differing numbers on specific days.
The announcement has immediate relevance for global energy markets. The Strait of Hormuz is a strategic chokepoint for seaborne oil and LNG flows, and statements indicating resumed or managed transit tend to dampen short-term supply-risk premia. Major news agencies reported that recent developments out of the Gulf contributed to notable intraday moves in Brent and WTI benchmarks as traders re-priced risk.
In the broader geopolitical context, the Iran–U.S. tensions and intermittent maritime incidents have made the strait a bargaining chip in diplomatic talks; control over transit and the conditions applied to foreign-flagged vessels remain central negotiation points. The IRGC's emphasis on coordination and permissions underscores Tehran's intent to regulate shipping through its controlled corridors rather than allow unfettered passage.
Analysts say continued, verifiable increases in orderly transits would ease near-term supply concerns, but warn that a sustained normalization of flows depends on durable political agreements and reduced military escalation. Market watchers will follow daily vessel counts, ship-tracking services, and insurance premium trends as key indicators of whether the strait's reopening is temporary or structural.
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