Dubai: Amid the kickoff of high-wire US-Iran talks in Islamabad, fresh signs of oil supertanker activity are surfacing in the Strait of Hormuz — a global energy lifeline — offering glimmers of normalized shipping after weeks of severe disruptions from escalating bilateral tensions that rattled markets worldwide.
Bloomberg tracking reveals three oil supertankers — two Chinese crude carriers and a Greek one — now traversing or queuing for the strait. A clean run-through would make this the peak oil shipment day since early March disruptions all but froze the chokepoint, as reported by The Economic Times.
Commanding a fifth of world oil flows, Hormuz’s impasse had wiped out millions of barrels, hammering global prices and chains. Iranian authorities are now approving transits, provided ships secure advance nods.
Truce Encourages Shipping Operators
The Bloomberg report said this uptick in vessels tracks a nascent ceasefire between the US and Iran, spurring cautious restarts. The Greek tanker is headed for Malaysia as its destination, with the Chinese pair freighted in
crude — early markers of trade routes rebounding.
US-Iran Envoys Convene In Islamabad
According to Al Jazeera, diplomacy ramps up as teams from both nations meet in Pakistan’s capital. The US lineup includes Vice President JD Vance, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner, facing Iran’s group under Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf and key deputies.
Duelling Plans Dominate Agenda
Central disputes involve offset strategies. Tehran tables a 10-point outline for sanctions rollback, area peace, and Hormuz stewardship. Washington insists on uranium enrichment ceilings, amplified IAEA scrutiny, and missile restraints.
The White House on April 8 posted on X that US President Donald Trump said discussions would take place privately with clearly defined objectives, quelling early ambiguities.
Regional Strains Challenge Ceasefire
Fragility reigns amid progress: Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledges sustained action against Hezbollah in Lebanon, while endorsing the truce’s skeleton. Ongoing airstrikes in south Lebanon is pointer to the armistice’s vulnerability.
Energy Markets Hang In Balance
World markets scrutinize the tanker resurgence and Islamabad parleys closely, betting that secure Hormuz runs and solid negotiation strides could tame volatile oil prices, safeguard supplies, and blunt wider geopolitical frictions.
The coming days ahead will prove make-or-break for both diplomatic momentum and the energy sector’s steadiness.
