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Hormuz Crisis Deepens: Middle East Loadings Continue as Pakistan Scrambles for LNG
By MGN Editorial•June 29, 2026 at 02:38 PM
Middle East oil and LNG producers are pressing ahead with exports despite escalating attacks in the Strait of Hormuz, while Pakistan has launched an urgent spot-market search for LNG as supply disruptions bite.
## Hormuz Crisis Deepens: Middle East Loadings Continue as Pakistan Scrambles for LNG
Middle East energy producers are maintaining oil and liquefied natural gas export schedules despite a fresh wave of ship attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and renewed military exchanges between the United States and Iran, according to shipping data cited by gCaptain. The resilience of loading operations offers some reassurance to global energy markets, but the downstream consequences of the security flare-up are already being felt by import-dependent nations.
### Producers Hold Course
Shipping data reviewed by gCaptain shows that tanker loadings at key Middle East terminals have continued largely uninterrupted despite the deteriorating security environment. Producers appear determined to honour supply commitments and avoid the reputational and contractual costs of force majeure declarations, even as vessel operators and insurers reassess risk exposure in the region.
The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world's most critical energy chokepoints, with an estimated 20% of global oil trade and a significant share of LNG exports transiting the waterway. Any sustained interruption to passage through the strait would have immediate and severe consequences for global energy prices and supply security.
### Pakistan Turns to Spot Market
The human cost of the disruption is already visible in South Asia. Pakistan has moved urgently into the spot LNG market, seeking cargoes for delivery within days as the Hormuz flare-up chokes inbound supply, gCaptain reports. The country, which relies heavily on imported LNG to meet domestic power generation and industrial demand, faces the prospect of acute energy shortfalls if alternative supply cannot be secured quickly.
Pakistan's scramble for spot cargoes is likely to add upward pressure to already elevated LNG spot prices, with other import-dependent nations in Asia and Europe watching developments closely. Buyers who lack long-term supply contracts or diversified import infrastructure are most exposed to the current volatility.
### Broader Market Implications
The situation underscores the persistent vulnerability of global energy supply chains to geopolitical disruption in the Gulf region. War-risk insurance premiums for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz have risen sharply in recent weeks, and some operators have begun evaluating alternative routing options, though no viable large-scale bypass exists for Hormuz traffic.
Market participants will be monitoring whether the current tempo of attacks escalates further or whether diplomatic channels can reduce tensions. For now, the combination of continued producer loadings and acute buyer-side stress illustrates the uneven and unpredictable way in which geopolitical risk propagates through global energy and shipping markets.
#Strait of Hormuz#LNG#tanker security#Middle East#Pakistan#spot market#energy security#war risk#crude oil#geopolitical risk
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