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European Energy Markets
26JUN

Hormuz stand-down has not reopened the strait

2 min read
13:51UTC

Four days on from the 29 June verbal stand-down, IMF PortWatch counts 27 to 43 Hormuz transits a day against a baseline near 84, and QatarEnergy runs at 35% of nameplate.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

QatarEnergy is running at 35% of nameplate, below its own guidance, with Hormuz transits still a fraction of normal.

Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is still running at a fraction of normal, four days after the 29 June verbal stand-down between the warring parties. IMF PortWatch, the Fund's vessel-tracking service, counted between 27 and 43 transits a day at the start of July against a pre-crisis baseline near 84. QatarEnergy, Qatar's state energy company, is running at roughly 35% of its 77 MTPA (million tonnes a year) nameplate.

That trails the 50%-within-a-month restart pace QatarEnergy guided when the strait first reopened . The stand-down unlocked a slow, escorted trickle rather than open lanes, which invalidated the OIES clean-reopening base case built on a smooth late-June restart . This is a follow-up on that thread, not a fresh break: the numbers confirm what the round-trip already signalled.

LNG feels the drag directly. The JKM-TTF arbitrage held near parity while two Qatari trains stayed dark , so Europe is not being outbid for the cargoes that do move; there are simply too few of them clearing the corridor. For a spreads desk that reads as a supply constraint sitting upstream of price, which no de-escalation headline resolves on its own.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran said it would stop threatening ships in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow sea route Qatar's gas tankers must pass through, four days before this report. But shipping through the strait is still far below normal, and Qatar's gas export company is running well below the recovery pace it promised. Firms that insure ships against war risk want several weeks of calm before cutting their rates, which is why shipowners are holding tankers back from Hormuz until that window passes, not because of any fresh threat.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Protection and indemnity clubs and hull war-risk underwriters do not lift elevated premiums on a verbal military stand-down alone; industry practice requires a sustained claims-free window, typically four to eight weeks, before rates come back down. Shipowners holding tankers back from Hormuz are pricing that lag, not a fresh threat.

QatarEnergy's own restart guidance assumed insurers would move faster than they have, which is why the current reading sits below the pace it announced at reopening rather than reflecting a change in the security picture itself.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    QatarEnergy's restart lagging its own guidance keeps global LNG scarcer for longer, supporting the near-parity JKM-TTF read rather than a return to the pre-crisis arbitrage.

First Reported In

Update #23 · The EU's own regulator says the ban isn't biting

straits.live· 3 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
EU carbon and storage regulators
EU carbon and storage regulators
EUA carbon broke EUR 81/tonne on 13 July as the ETS Market Stability Reserve's scheduled withdrawals met fresh fuel-switching demand from France's nuclear curtailment. Brussels' mandatory storage-fill rule kept German and French injection running regardless of the TTF swings, the mechanism working as designed four years after the 2022 shock.
Equinor
Equinor
Equinor returned its Asgard field from maintenance on 11 July, lifting Gassco's exit nominations to 319.8 mcm/day just as TTF round-tripped on Hormuz risk. The restart gave Norway spare pipeline capacity to help Europe absorb the gas rally without drawing down storage, reinforcing its role as the post-2022 swing supplier.
Germany
Germany
Germany briefly became the cheaper leg of the FR-DE spread on 12 July as French reactors went offline, while its own storage injection tripled to 723 GWh on 11 July under the EU's mandatory fill rule. Berlin's CCGT fleet absorbed the extra load at a time when EUA's climb past EUR 81 is raising its own marginal cost too.
EDF
EDF
EDF took Chooz, Golfech and Bugey fully offline on 12 July under river-cooling discharge limits, then secured a temperature exemption for Bugey to 20 July rather than wait for the rivers to cool. The government's willingness to relax the environmental ceiling shows French grid security now outweighs the permit breach when reactor hardware itself is undamaged.
Storage and injection-pace desk
Storage and injection-pace desk
EU storage sat at 51.1% on 8 July, still running below the pace needed for an 80% November target, and the JKM-TTF Asia premium of roughly USD 1.4-2.4/MMBtu was already pulling marginal cargoes east before Qatar's withdrawal compounded the gap. October's top-up remains the binding constraint, not this week's price level.
EDF / France
EDF / France
EDF added Chooz to its heat-curtailment watch list as a precaution against the second heat dome peaking 9-14 July, alongside standing warnings at Blayais, Bugey, Golfech and Saint-Alban. No output cut has been confirmed at any site as of 10 July.