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Middle East Crisis Cripples Global Shipping: Hormuz Transits Collapse 95% as Container Ports Choke and LNG Markets Strain

By MGN EditorialMarch 25, 2026 at 10:52 PM

A dramatic 95% collapse in Strait of Hormuz transits amid Middle East conflict is cascading across container shipping and energy markets, creating severe port congestion and supply chain disruptions worldwide.

The escalating Middle East conflict is strangling global maritime trade, with the Strait of Hormuz experiencing a near-total shutdown in commercial shipping activity. According to Clarksons Research, transits through the critical waterway have plummeted 95%, a dramatic decline that is reverberating through containerized cargo networks and energy markets worldwide. The collapse is creating a dual crisis: container ports globally face mounting congestion as vessels are rerouted away from the faster Persian Gulf passages, while simultaneously, the world's energy markets confront a severe supply shock. Qatari LNG infrastructure damage, combined with the transit paralysis in Hormuz, has removed approximately 17% of global LNG supply from the market, shifting the energy crisis from a supply problem to a flow-constrained catastrophe, according to industry analysis. 'Container contagion' is the apt description emerging from trade data—war-driven disruptions at a single chokepoint are spreading throughout the global container ecosystem. Vessels unable to transit Hormuz are forced into extended routing, creating cascading delays and pushing alternative ports into bottleneck conditions. The implications extend far beyond shipping schedules; global supply chains already stressed from previous disruptions now face extended lead times and compressed port windows. The secondary effects are reshaping maritime markets in real time. Ship owners are reassessing asset deployment, with recent market activity concentrated on bulk carriers and suezmaxes—vessels better suited to alternative trading patterns emerging from the crisis. These market moves reflect the industry's rapid adaptation to new geopolitical realities, even as the severity of Hormuz's closure makes clear that long-term rerouting strategies and alternative supply chains will be necessary. For energy markets, the crisis is particularly acute. The combination of damaged Qatari export infrastructure and the 95% collapse in Hormuz transits has created a bottleneck that no single supply source can relieve. LNG traders are facing constrained flow scenarios that extend beyond typical supply shock adjustments, threatening price stability and energy security across dependent markets. The scale of this disruption—affecting both containerized cargo and critical energy supplies through a single chokepoint—underscores the vulnerability of global trade routes to regional instability. Industry observers expect conditions to deteriorate further before improvements emerge, positioning this as a prolonged headwind for shipping economics and global commerce.
#Middle East conflict#Strait of Hormuz#container shipping#port congestion#LNG market#supply chain disruption#energy crisis

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