China-linked Hormuz transits become opaque

 China-linked traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has slowed sharply after recent attacks, with transits largely confined to bulkers and one sanctioned VLCC, reports London's Lloyd's List.

Lloyd's List Intelligence data shows only 11 China-linked vessels passed through Hormuz between March 1 and 15, with four transits on March 10-11 and just one in the following four days. Mainstream state-owned tanker fleets have avoided the strait, citing safety, insurance and political risks.

The few vessels that did transit highlighted opaque ownership structures. Bailian Star, a bulker, broadcast "Chinese crew n owner" via AIS despite unclear registry records. The sole tanker, Skywave, a US-sanctioned VLCC, also claimed Chinese ownership but lacked verifiable details.

An incident involving Source Blessing, a Chinese-owned vessel operated under Hapag-Lloyd and Maersk's Gemini Alliance, added to concerns after it was struck by debris en route to Jebel Ali. Though not transiting Hormuz and not directly attacked, the episode underscored risks of collateral damage.

Insurance executives said coverage remains fluid, with brokers giving informal quotes that change daily. Political sensitivities during China's Two Sessions meetings also discouraged state-owned fleets from risking headline incidents.

Reports suggest Iran may allow certain tankers through if oil trades are settled in yuan, though analysts doubt feasibility. With Washington assembling a convoy coalition, Chinese shipowners are pivoting to the Red Sea. Seventeen Cosco and China Merchants VLCCs are now gathered there, helping sustain earnings.