2 min readfrom Marine Insight

Iranian Oil Tankers Go Dark To Evade U.S Naval Blockade In Hormuz Strait

Our take

Two Iranian very large crude carriers (VLCCs) successfully navigated the U.S. naval blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, departing from the Persian Gulf with a combined cargo of 4 million barrels of oil. This maneuver highlights the ongoing tension between Iran and the United States regarding maritime routes and oil transportation. The vessels' ability to evade detection underscores the complexities of enforcing maritime security in a region critical to global oil supply, raising questions about the effectiveness of current naval strategies in the area.
Iranian Oil Tankers Go Dark To Evade U.S Naval Blockade In Hormuz Strait
Oil Tanker ship
Oil Tanker ship
Image for representation purpose only

Two Iranian VLCCs, the Hero II and Hedy, evaded the U.S naval blockade of Iranian ports and trade routes, sailing out of the Persian Gulf, carrying a combined 4 million barrels of oil.

Satellite images showed the Iranian-flagged tankers moving into the Arabian Sea on April 20, 2026.

This demonstrated the limited capacity of the U.S. Navy to block Iran’s oil exports, though Trump described the efforts as a “tremendous success”.

Data from Vortexa show that Iran’s exports have continued despite U.S threats, with 34 Iran-linked tankers and gas carriers exiting the strait and the US blockade line, stretching from the Omani shores near Ras al Hadd, northeast to the Iran-Pakistani border.

These ships are turning off their transponders to evade the U.S forces.

The VLCC Hero II was last seen more than a month ago, sailing northward in the Strait of Malacca, while Hedy last broadcast its location off Khor Fakkan in February.

The final destination of those two ships remains unclear, though a majority of Iran’s oil ends up in China. India, too, received 2 shipments of Iranian crude in the past weeks.

Other vessels have also evaded the U.S Navy in the region. One such is a small LPG Tanker called G Summer, which is on the U.S Sanctions List.

A Gambia-flagged cargo ship, the Lian Star, also crossed the Hormuz on Tuesday.

The Atlantis II, a US-sanctioned long-range fuel tanker, also dodged the U.S Navy and is now near Larak Island, which sits in Hormuz.

LPG Sevan is also nearing Hormuz, despite indicating Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates within the Persian Gulf as its destination.

Read on the original site

Open the publisher's page for the full experience

View original article

Tagged with

#ocean data#satellite remote sensing#data visualization#Iranian Oil Tankers#Hormuz Strait#oil exports#U.S Naval Blockade#VLCCs#Persian Gulf#Iran-linked tankers#trade routes#U.S threats#Arabian Sea#China#Indian crude#gas carriers#Sanctions List#transponders#LPG Tanker#Khor Fakkan