A ship was attacked 35 miles (56km) south of Mokha, Yemen on 18 February, forcing the crew to abandon the vessel, the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said.
The vessel was damaged by a nearby explosion at around 20:00 GMT, the vessel master reported. The crew have abandoned the ship and are safe, while military authorities remain on the scene to provide assistance, the UKMTO said. The UKMTO did not identify the vessel involved.
US Central Command said on 18 February that it had carried out five strikes on areas of Yemen controlled by the Houthi militant group, including on an unmanned underwater vessel. This was after US forces struck more targets in Yemen during strikes over 16-17 February, following an attack on the Pollux Long Range 2 tanker in the Red Sea on 16 February. The Pollux was carrying Russian crude to India, according to Vortexa data.
But US and UK strikes against Houthi militants will not remove the threat against maritime navigation through the Red Sea, said the head of Yemen's Saudi-backed presidential council Rashad al-Alimi at the Munich Security Conference on 17 February. Partnership with his government to restore the state and retake Houthi-controlled areas will ensure regional security, he said.
At 04:00 GMT the Ice front-month April Brent crude contract was at $82.88/bl, lower by 59¢/bl from its settlement on 16 February when the contract ended 61¢/bl higher.
The Nymex front-month March crude contract was at $78.78/bl, down by 41¢/bl from its settlement on 16 February when the contract ended $1.16/bl higher.