200 ships present mysteriously? War-time signal jamming near Hormuz creates confusion
Dozens of ship clusters near the Strait of Hormuz indicate significant electronic interference, making navigation tracking nearly impossible. This disruption, linked to the US and Israeli conflict with Iran, has severely impacted global energy mar...
The groups, which can number more than 200 vessels for some clusters, contain ships of all types, with some that appear to be traveling at more than 100 knots an hour, according to tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.

The maritime artery is a key focus for investors at present because its effective closure during the conflict has thrown the global energy market into disarray, forcing Persian Gulf producers to lock-in oil output as storage capacity runs out. The halt to normal flows initially lifted Brent futures toward $120 a barrel, although contracts fell sharply Tuesday after US President Donald Trump signaled that the war may soon end.
“Over the past 48 hours, the situation has become ‘impenetrable’, said Mark Douglas, a maritime-domain analyst at Starboard Maritime Intelligence. Trying to tell where any vessel is around the strait with tracking data is all but impossible, he added.
Some of the clusters appear to form distinctive shapes, including an apparent circle of vessels inland near Abu Dhabi, and one in the form of an inverted “Z” off Ruwais in the United Arab Emirates, the data showed on Monday. Other groups are in the Gulf of Oman, possibly indicating vessels waiting in groups for tensions to ease, or secure clear loading dates, before entering Hormuz.
The jamming can distort vessels’ reported speeds. The Asprouda, a 2013-built products tanker, signaled on Monday that it was traveling at an improbable 102.2 knots off Jebel Ali, equivalent to almost 190 kilometers an hour. Such tankers typically have a maximum speed of about 16 knots.
The appearance of the huge groups of vessels stands to compound nervousness for shipowners and charterers of operating in the region. As the conflict has dragged on, the industry has already faced escalating war-risk insurance premiums, with several vessels targeted by missiles and projectiles.
Jamming began immediately at the outset of the conflict and impacted more than 1,100 ships in the Persian Gulf, according to the maritime-intelligence firm Windward. Traffic through Hormuz totaled just five vessels on March 4, compared with 120 crossings on Feb. 26, according to Windward.
“Any vessel navigating the area clearly can’t rely on GPS,” said Douglas at Starboard Maritime, referring to the global positioning system. That “compounds the security situation in which vessels have been struck,” he said.
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