The Mubaraz, an LNG carrier loaded at ADNOC's Das Island facility in early March, reappeared west of India on Monday 27 April after going dark around 31 March, completing the first confirmed loaded LNG transit through the Strait of Hormuz since the Iran conflict began 1. The cargo is destined for a terminal in China with estimated arrival 15 May. Before the conflict, roughly three loaded LNG carriers transited Hormuz daily; the Mubaraz crossing puts that count at one in roughly two months.
Das Island is the ADNOC-operated LNG facility off the UAE coast, the principal Gulf LNG export point routing through Hormuz. Hormuz had recorded 19 crossings on 25 April with no LNG transits ; the Mubaraz crossing is the first loaded LNG passage of the post-war window. The IEA's Q2 Gas Market Report had already shifted the analytical baseline from a mid-year Hormuz LNG resumption to a multi-year delay; the Mubaraz transit is a single data point against that revised baseline rather than a framework change.
JKM, the Asian LNG benchmark, traded at USD 16.55/MMBtu front-month on 28 April against TTF equivalent near USD 14.80, a USD 1.75 spread that European buyers feel directly. That gap is enough to pull flexible Atlantic LNG cargoes east, not west. For European buyers running storage injection under the Bruegel-flagged refill pace, the practical implication is that partial Hormuz reopening does not automatically deliver cargoes to European terminals. The arbitrage routes them to Chinese, Japanese and Korean buyers first.
Iran-conflict-2026 owns the military and political framing of the Hormuz reopening; this topic owns the supply-routing implication. Whether the next Hormuz transit is a single LNG carrier or a sustained pattern matters less for European buyers than whether the JKM-TTF spread compresses below the level that pulls cargoes east. Through 2025 the spread had narrowed to USD 0.50-1.00; the current USD 1.75 keeps the eastern pull intact. Storage injection planners running scenarios past July need to assume Atlantic cargoes route east while the spread holds, regardless of how often Hormuz cracks open in the months ahead.
