Crude Oil May 13, 2026 12:20:27 AM

Vietnam state oil company urges US Navy to allow tanker through blockade, document shows

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The vessel had sailed through the Strait of Hormuz on ‌Sunday using ⁠Iran's designated route for tankers, according to Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency.

SEATTLE (Oil Monster): The trading arm of Vietnam's state oil company has urged the U.S. Navy ​to allow a crude oil tanker laden with Iraqi oil to sail through ‌its blockade in the Middle East Gulf to provide a Vietnamese refinery with critical supplies, PVOIL said in a letter on Tuesday.

The U.S. military has expanded its shipping blockade on Iran to include cargoes deemed contraband, ​although it has said other oil exports from the Gulf are free to sail ​through.

The Maltese-flagged Agio Fanourios I supertanker, carrying 2 million barrels of crude ⁠oil, sailed out of the Strait of Hormuz on May 10 and was sailing in ​the Gulf of Oman before making a U-turn on May 11, ship tracking data on ​the MarineTraffic platform showed on Tuesday.

"U.S. forces redirected the vessel as part of ongoing enforcement of the blockade against Iran," the U.S. military’s Central Command said in a statement in response to a Reuters query about ​the tanker.

It was not clear from the statement if the U.S. Navy would eventually allow ​the vessel to proceed to Vietnam as requested.

The vessel had sailed through the Strait of Hormuz on ‌Sunday using ⁠Iran's designated route for tankers, according to Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency.

The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has prompted the closure of the Strait of Hormuz with hundreds of ships stranded and global energy supplies disrupted from the critical waterway through which 20% of the world's energy supplies ​pass.

"This cargo is of ​extreme importance to ⁠Nghi Son Refinery (NSRP), to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and to the Vietnamese people," Petrovietnam Oil Corporation (PVOIL) Vice President Hoang Dinh Tung said ​in a May 12 letter seen by Reuters and sent to U.S. ​military and ⁠diplomatic missions.

"NSRP's feedstock inventories are critically low; any further delay risks halting refinery throughput, with cascading consequences for millions of Vietnamese consumers, businesses, public services and industries."

PVOIL said it "unequivocally" confirmed that the ⁠vessel loaded ​Iraqi Basra crude sold by Iraq's state oil company ​SOMO after the tanker was loaded between April 10 and 14.

Courtesy: www.reuters.com