Three reasons ships are not going through the Strait of Hormuz yet
Experts say that there are significant obstacles preventing traffic from returning to the levels seen before the conflict began – security, mines and tolls.
Experts say that there are significant obstacles preventing traffic from returning to the levels seen before the conflict began – security, mines and tolls.
Ranked reports inside the event cluster. Open any publisher link to read the original coverage.
Experts say that there are significant obstacles preventing traffic from returning to the levels seen before the conflict began – security, mines and tolls.
Nearby clusters pulled from title, summary, and keyword similarity in PostgreSQL.
The months-long shutdown of the the crucial shipping route has rocked global oil markets and flowed through to all sorts of prices. How will the reopening change things, and how fast? Grouped from 5 articles across 5 sources.
A potential US-Iran agreement could lower energy-, fertilizer- and food prices in Africa if the Strait of Hormuz fully reopens. Oil exporters such as Nigeria and Angola might have to cope with less revenue, experts say. Grouped from 17 articles across 11 sources.
US President Donald Trump claimed that crossings were resuming under his deal to end the war with Iran.
Odds that the Strait of Hormuz traffic will return to normal before August surpassed 50%, following U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement.
Operation could take 40 to 50 days before insurance, shipping or oil companies are confident enough to sail through Grouped from 2 articles across 2 sources.
Military spouses turn to entrepreneurship amid high rates of unemployment. They face high barriers to success, but a growing coalition is pushing for more help.