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Hormuz Crisis Deepens as Trump Extends Blockade; IMO Mobilizes Evacuation Plan for Stranded Fleet
By MGN Editorial•April 22, 2026 at 12:00 PM
With the U.S. maritime blockade of Iran set to continue indefinitely, the International Maritime Organization is preparing emergency evacuation procedures for hundreds of vessels trapped in the Persian Gulf after seven weeks of disrupted shipping traffic.
## Geopolitical Stalemate Extends Shipping Crisis
President Donald Trump announced the extension of the current ceasefire with Iran while maintaining the U.S. maritime blockade, citing a request from Pakistani leadership to allow time for a unified negotiating proposal. The decision extends one of the most significant disruptions to global shipping chokepoints in recent years, with no clear end date in sight.
The impact on maritime commerce is severe and measurable. Shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world's most critical petroleum transit routes—remained broadly halted, with only three vessels passing through in the 24-hour period reported on Tuesday. This near-total cessation of traffic represents an unprecedented challenge to energy markets and international trade.
## IMO Launches Emergency Response
Recognizing the humanitarian and operational urgency, the International Maritime Organization has begun developing an evacuation plan for the estimated hundreds of ships trapped in the Persian Gulf since U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets commenced more than seven weeks ago. IMO Secretary General Arsenio Dominguez confirmed the emergency planning efforts, which would represent one of the largest coordinated maritime evacuation operations in recent history.
The stranded vessels represent crews awaiting transit, cargo with time-sensitive delivery requirements, and ship operators facing mounting operational costs. The evacuation plan signals international recognition that the current situation is unsustainable and requires coordinated multilateral response.
## Market Implications
The extended blockade maintains upward pressure on energy prices and creates significant uncertainty for shipping operators and exporters dependent on Hormuz transit. The diplomatic stalemate, coupled with concrete steps toward emergency evacuation protocols, suggests maritime stakeholders should prepare for extended disruption rather than near-term resolution.
#Strait of Hormuz#shipping disruptions#IMO#Persian Gulf#maritime blockade#geopolitics
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