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Iran-linked ammonia vessel transits strait of Hormuz

  • Spanish Market: Fertilizers
  • 08/04/26

An Iran-linked ammonia vessel successfully transited the strait of Hormuz over the weekend and is expected to deliver a shipment to India under a spot deal that has yet to be finalised, according to market participants and Kpler ship-tracking data.

The Handysize vessel loaded from producer inventories in Iran. It is still understood that all ammonia production is off line in the country. The shipment is under discussion with buyers in India, where Argus last assessed prices at $750/t cfr on a midpoint basis on 2 April. Prices in India were $255/t lower before the start of the US-Israel war with Iran at around $495/t cfr on 26 February.

It is the first ammonia shipment to be exported through the strait since the outbreak of war in the region on 28 February. A limited number of vessels have made safe passage through the waterway — Iran has signed agreements with "friendly" countries for the safe passage of vessels, including Malaysia, Pakistan, China, Russia, Iraq and Bangladesh.

"These restrictions apply only to enemy countries," a spokesman for Iran's military previously said via the WANA News Agency in Tehran.

The US and Iran then said on 7 April that they would halt hostilities for a two-week period to finalise a peace deal, with US president Donald Trump saying the deal was "subject to the Islamic Republic of Iran agreeing to the complete, immediate, and safe opening of the strait of Hormuz".

Iran's supreme national security council confirmed the ceasefire agreement but described the peace proposal under discussion as enshrining "continued Iranian control over the strait of Hormuz", according to Iran's Tasnim news agency.

Vessel movements in the waterway are little changed so far following the US and Iran's conflicting statements, as shipowners and operators await further clarity on security arrangements and insurance cover. Two medium-sized gas carriers (MGCs) laden with ammonia have been stuck in the Mideast Gulf for more than five weeks and have shown no signs of movement since the ceasefire announcement. The Eco Oracle (26,870t) and Green One (25,835t) are expected to be the first non-Iranian ammonia vessels to exit the region when exports do resume.

But a meaningful resumption of ammonia exports will not be immediate. The status of Saudi Arabian producer Sabic's 330,000 t/yr export capacity is unclear following strikes at Jubail on 7 April. Fellow Saudi producer Maaden has taken two of its three 1.1mn t/yr ammonia units off line and state-owned QatarEnergy's ammonia production was taken off line on 3 March following drone strikes. Stock levels in tanks across the region available for immediate export once the strait reopens are not known. Maaden has two MGCs located within a few days' travel of the region, which could load a total of over 50,000t if stocks are available.

Just 30,000t shipped from the Middle East in March, all of which loaded from Oman. The region typically exports 350,000 t/month.


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