Red Sea Risk Brief — Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Strait of Hormuz effectively closed as US pauses "Project Freedom" escorts; Houthi lull ending with Red Sea skiff incident and tanker hijacking; OFAC designates Hormuz toll payments as sanctions violations — 5 decision flags for logistics and procurement teams.

Edition 001 · Morning Intelligence Briefing for Supply Chain & Logistics

Section 1 · Active conflict & ceasefire status

Strait of Hormuz: Project Freedom suspended — zero trackable transits
  • Trump announced a pause to "Project Freedom" on May 5 — one day after launch — citing "great progress" in US-Iran talks.1 The US naval blockade of Iranian ports remains in force. BIMCO Chief Security Officer Jakob Larsen's May 4 assessment has not moved: "Without consent from Iran to let commercial ships transit safely, the overall security situation for the shipping industry is currently unchanged."2
  • Trackable transits collapsed from 21 vessels on May 1 to 9 on May 3, to effectively zero by Tuesday May 6.3 Iran-linked vessels represent 46% of remaining strait traffic.
  • Iran's IRGC unveiled an expanded maritime control map on May 4 bounded by Mubarak Mountain (Iran) to Fujairah south (UAE) and Gheshm Island to Umm Al Quwain, with demands that vessels obtain transit permits and follow IRGC Navy corridor routes — non-compliant vessels face "forceful stoppage."4 OFAC has separately confirmed that paying IRGC-mandated tolls (reportedly up to $2M per vessel) constitutes a sanctions violation under US Iran sanctions law.5
  • Fresh attacks (May 5): A cargo vessel was struck by an unknown projectile inside the Strait per UKMTO, and a tanker was hit 78 nautical miles north of Fujairah on May 3.6 Iran conducted a coordinated strike on UAE on May 4: 12 ballistic missiles, 3 cruise missiles, and 4 drones; multiple intercepted, Fujairah port and oil industrial zone struck; 3 light injuries reported.7 UAE intercepted Iranian ballistic missiles and drones for a second consecutive day on May 5.
  • Internal Iranian split: Iranian President Pezeshkian reportedly called the May 4 IRGC attacks on UAE "completely irresponsible" and "madness," conducted without government knowledge, and is pushing for emergency diplomacy to halt escalation.8 This civil-military fracture is the single highest-stakes uncertainty for the 48–96 hour outlook.
  • Ten civilian sailors have been confirmed dead in Hormuz incidents, per US Secretary of State Rubio.9 US nuclear intelligence assessments indicate Iran's nuclear weapon production timeline is effectively unchanged from last summer — strikes have not materially set back the program.10
Red Sea / Bab-el-Mandeb: Houthi operational pause fraying
  • UKMTO JMIC Advisory Update 041 (as of May 5) classifies Southern Red Sea / Bab-el-Mandeb as "no change" in the current advisory cycle, indicating maintained vigilance but no new escalation as of report publication.11
  • An armed skiff with 7 personnel approached a bulk carrier 92 nautical miles southwest of Al Mukalla, Yemen on May 1 (UKMTO Warning 049-2026), turning away only after the vessel displayed armed sentries.12 Analysts characterize this as a tactical probing action consistent with pre-attack reconnaissance patterns.
  • Oil tanker M/T Eureka (18,000-barrel capacity) was hijacked off Yemen's Shabwa coast on May 2 — the 4th vessel seizure near Somalia in recent weeks — attributed to Somali pirate resurgence enabled by anti-piracy naval reallocation to the Hormuz theatre.13 Crew safety status remains unconfirmed.
Gaza: Ceasefire under severe strain
  • At least 830 Palestinians have been killed since the October 2025 ceasefire inception.14 Israel has unilaterally expanded its "yellow line" control to 59% of the Gaza Strip and is threatening ceasefire rescission unless Hamas complies with a 5-stage, 281-day disarmament framework. All Palestinian factions have unanimously rejected the terms.15
  • Israel intercepted 22 vessels of the Global Sumud Flotilla in international waters on April 30, detaining 168 crew members; 47 additional vessels continue toward Gaza.16
Lebanon: Strikes continue despite nominal ceasefire
  • 110 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon since April 30 — the bulk outside the designated "yellow line."17 The April 26 ceasefire extension expires May 17; a US diplomatic push for a direct Aoun-Netanyahu summit faces cross-sectarian rejection and Saudi opposition.18

Section 2 · Sanctions tracker

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  • OFAC "Economic Fury" (May 5): 6 individuals, 21 entities, and 1 vessel designated under Iran sanctions targeting illicit oil trade and shadow banking networks.19 The designations run alongside, not instead of, diplomatic negotiations — Washington's dual-track in practice.
  • OFAC Hormuz Toll Alert & FAQ 1249 (May 1–5): OFAC has issued explicit guidance that paying Iran's demanded Strait transit fees — reportedly up to $2M per vessel — violates US Iran sanctions and exposes the paying entity to SDN designation risk.5 Compliance teams must decline any such payments without a specific license. For trade-finance and compliance teams, this is the week's sharpest live tripwire.
  • China MOFCOM Blocking Order (effective May 2): China's Ministry of Commerce issued a blocking order prohibiting recognition of or compliance with US sanctions on five Chinese "teapot" refineries designated for Iran oil imports.20 Any firm with US-jurisdictional and China-jurisdictional operations transacting with those five refineries now faces directly contradictory legal obligations. Legal counsel cannot wait on this one.
  • US blockade interdictions (as of May 5): US forces had interdicted 41 oil tankers (representing approximately 6.9 billion barrels of Iranian crude) and ordered 51 vessels to divert since the naval blockade began on April 13.21
  • UN Security Council resolution (in progress): The US is circulating a draft Chapter VII resolution demanding Iran cease Hormuz attacks, disclose mine locations, and cooperate on a humanitarian corridor, with a vote targeted for the week of May 11. China states it is "evaluating"; Russia has not responded.22 Russia and China previously vetoed a similar Hormuz freedom-of-passage measure on April 7.
  • UK & EU (May 4–6): No new Iran or Yemen designations recorded in this window. Existing UK Iran human rights, WMD, and Ukraine-support designations, and EU multi-layered Iran regime, remain in force.23

Section 3 · Corridor & chokepoint conditions

Strait of Hormuz — functionally closed
  • As of Tuesday May 6, zero trackable commercial transits recorded.3 Weekly transit volumes dropped 11%, from 44 passages to 39 during the May 5 security deterioration; weekend conditions reduced transits to 4 vessels per day.
  • Approximately 163 million barrels of crude oil remain stranded on tankers west of the Strait — 43 million barrels Iranian crude, 42 million barrels Saudi crude. Only 3 tankers carrying Iraqi crude have exited since the conflict began on February 28.2
  • The first fully laden LNG tanker since February 28 — the Mubaraz, ADNOC-chartered — crossed the Strait, completing its loading at the ADNOC Dashanah facility (6M tonnes/year capacity) and was near Malaysia by May 6.24 This isolated transit should not be read as a systemic reopening signal.
  • LNG supply damage (structural): ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods confirmed Qatar LNG facilities sustained damage — two liquefaction trains offline, representing an estimated 3% of global LNG production, with a repair timeline of 3–5 years.25 Golden Pass LNG (Texas) shipped its first cargo on April 22 as part of the US/IEA emergency response to Hormuz disruption.26
  • Brent crude is holding above $110/barrel despite corridor-opening signals.27
  • Trump-Xi summit (May 14–15) is being watched by shipping stakeholders as a potential inflection point for US-China-Iran consensus building.28
Suez Canal — operational, no new disruptions
  • The canal itself is open and processing traffic. The SCA issued no new navigation circulars during May 4–6; the most recent was Periodical 3/2026 dated April 2, which suspended a 15% rebate on containership transits (effective April 7, 2026).29
  • CMA CGM GRAND PALAIS — described as the world's largest and newest environment-friendly container vessel — completed its first Suez Canal transit on May 3.30
  • Canal traffic is structurally below pre-crisis norms. Bab-el-Mandeb traffic remains 45% below 2023 pre-Houthi-crisis volumes despite a surge in Red Sea crude tanker transits (up 66% month-on-month in March 2026, partly driven by Hormuz-displaced Saudi crude flows). Industry consensus: Cape of Good Hope routing remains preferred over the Red Sea corridor for general cargo.31
Bab-el-Mandeb — maintained alert; no new vessel attacks
  • UKMTO confirms 0 incidents in the Voluntary Report Area as of May 6, 04:24 UTC.6 The armed-skiff approach on May 1 (see Section 1) has not escalated to a vessel attack as of this edition's cut-off.
  • Salalah (Oman) — operations are fully resumed following the March 28 drone attack that caused crane damage and suspended operations until March 31.32 Current status: operational with elevated security.

Section 4 · Supply chain risk highlights

Carrier posture: Upper Gulf bookings suspended; surcharge stack entrenching
  • Maersk (Operational Update 29, May 4): Transit through Hormuz to be avoided despite ceasefire announcement. Booking suspensions in force for dry cargo, reefer, DG, and OOG shipments to/from Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia (Dammam/Jubail), and UAE (excluding Khor Fakkan imports). Emergency Freight Surcharge: $1,800 (20' dry), $3,000 (40' dry), $3,800 (reefer/special/DG) on Upper Gulf cargo. Landbridge solutions active via Jeddah, Aqaba, Salalah, and Sohar.33
  • Hapag-Lloyd (May 4–5): Cautious reopening of limited Upper Gulf bookings via third-party feeder services; Strait transits still avoided. Services JD2/JD3 temporarily suspended (April 21); AGX/IMX rerouted via Cape of Good Hope since March 1. War Risk Surcharge (WRS) and Contingency Surcharge (CSU) active across Red Sea-Europe, Red Sea-Asia, and Red Sea-Africa routes.32
Freight rates: Spot prices falling; surcharges eating the discount
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  • Asia-Europe spot rates have fallen for three consecutive weeks, down 1% WoW to $3,039/40ft (Shanghai-Genoa) and $2,127/40ft (Shanghai-Rotterdam). The slide reflects excess capacity, not risk improvement.3435
  • Spot rate softness is being partially absorbed by carrier surcharges. MSC is raising its Emergency Fuel Surcharge (EFS) on Asia-USEC from $430 to $644/40ft; CMA CGM is introducing a $2,000/40ft Peak Season Surcharge (PSS) from May 1.34 7 blank sailings announced for the coming week; Asia-Med capacity down 10% MoM in May.
  • Trucking costs across Middle East–adjacent markets have risen 30–70%+ from fuel volatility and surcharges.36 Upper Gulf road-freight reliability is further constrained by rolling port access restrictions.
  • Asia Cargo News notes that ocean rates "remain elevated on higher fuel costs linked to Strait of Hormuz closure, but are still far below peak Red Sea crisis levels."37 Global vessel delays now absorb 5.3% of container shipping capacity — a systemic schedule compression signal.
  • Flexport multimodal: Flexport has launched a Sea-Air Express solution (Asia to Europe ~27 days) at rates up to 41% below pure air freight, targeting shippers unable to absorb extended Cape of Good Hope transit times.38
Port access summary (as of May 4–6)
Port / RegionStatusNotes
Upper Gulf (Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Dammam/Jubail, UAE West Coast)⛔ Functionally inaccessibleNo direct liner service; major carriers using feeder-only models
Salalah, Oman⚠️ Operational with volatilityNot recommended for transshipment; drone-attack history
Saudi Arabia Red Sea ports (Jeddah, Yanbu, King Abdullah)✅ Operational & stablePrimary maritime gateways; designated Maersk alternative routing hubs
Aqaba, Jordan✅ OperationalActive Maersk/Hapag landbridge node
Sohar, Oman✅ OperationalActive landbridge routing hub
Khor Fakkan, UAE⚠️ Operating with constraintsHapag Emergency Operations Charge in effect; Maersk accepting imports only
Suez Canal✅ OpenTraffic 45% below 2023 pre-crisis baseline at Bab-el-Mandeb
Insurance: War-risk market pricing reactively
  • Marine war-risk insurers are pricing reactively rather than on modeled risk. Lloyd's List reports: "Nobody would put money on the duration of the Hormuz crisis. Marine insurers have no choice."28 Some insurers are withdrawing Red Sea / Gulf coverage entirely.33 Mission to Seafarers warns the Hormuz crisis is measurably damaging crew morale.28
  • A Qatar LNG supplier has extended force majeure through mid-June, citing Hormuz supply disruption risk. (Source: gCaptain industry reporting; no standalone article URL available for this item.)
  • CMA CGM signed a cooperation deal with AD Ports Group to expand inland logistics reach across the UAE and wider Gulf — carriers are building permanent landbridge infrastructure, not waiting for Hormuz to reopen.39

Decision flags

Action items for logistics, procurement, and trade-compliance teams — Wednesday 6 May
  • Do not authorize Hormuz transit without specific legal guidance. OFAC FAQ 1249 makes Iranian-demanded transit tolls a sanctions violation, and BIMCO's risk posture remains unchanged — zero trackable commercial transits as of May 6. Any transit attempt exposes crew, vessel, and cargo to Iranian interdiction and US sanctions simultaneously.
  • Review OFAC and China MOFCOM blocking order exposure now. The MOFCOM blocking order (effective May 2) creates directly contradictory obligations for any entity with both US-jurisdictional and China-jurisdictional operations transacting with the five designated Chinese teapot refineries. Legal counsel review cannot wait.
  • Treat Bab-el-Mandeb as an escalation-watch zone, not a cleared lane. The May 1 armed-skiff approach and M/T Eureka hijacking indicate that the seven-month Houthi pause may be ending. Red Sea routing should not be considered a stable fallback to Hormuz disruption without current carrier security advisory confirmation.
  • Lock in Upper Gulf multimodal or landbridge routing for May–June cargo. Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd, and APL Logistics all confirm Upper Gulf direct liner service is functionally unavailable. Landbridge via Jeddah/Aqaba/Salalah/Sohar is the operational standard; book early and build 2–3 day buffer into lead times. Consider Flexport's Sea-Air Express for time-critical Asia-Europe shipments.
  • Watch the Trump-Xi summit (May 14–15) and UN Security Council vote (week of May 11) as the two near-term potential inflection points for Hormuz status. Neither guarantees a reopening, but a China-Russia abstention on the UN resolution and a Xi-mediated Iran message could shift the calculus within 10 days.

Red Sea Risk Brief is published daily at 08:00 UTC. All intelligence is sourced from open-source commercial and government reporting within a 48-hour collection window ending at 06:00 UTC on the publication date.

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