UPDATE 1-Shipping traffic remains at virtual standstill through Hormuz, data shows

Shipping traffic ​through the Strait of Hormuz ‌remained at ​a virtual standstill on Monday with just three crossings in the space of ‌12 hours, according to shipping data. The oil products tanker Nero, which is under British sanctions for Russian oil activities, left the Gulf ‌and was sailing through the Strait, according to satellite analysis ‌from data analytics specialists SynMax and tracking data from the Kpler platform.

UPDATE 1-Shipping traffic remains at virtual standstill through Hormuz, data shows

Shipping traffic ​through the Strait of Hormuz ‌remained at ​a virtual standstill on Monday with just three crossings in the space of ‌12 hours, according to shipping data.

The oil products tanker Nero, which is under British sanctions for Russian oil activities, left the Gulf ‌and was sailing through the Strait, according to satellite analysis ‌from data analytics specialists SynMax and tracking data from the Kpler platform. Two other ships - a chemical tanker and a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) tanker - sailed into the ⁠Gulf ​through the critical waterway ⁠separately on Monday, the data showed.

The LPG tanker, Axon I, was ⁠under separate U.S. sanctions for Iran trading activities. A ceasefire between the United ​States and Iran appeared in jeopardy on Monday after the ⁠U.S. said it had seized an Iranian cargo ship that tried to run ⁠its ​blockade and Tehran vowed to retaliate, refusing for now to join new peace talks.

"Recent weeks have brought several ⁠false starts, and although some form of resolution is likely at some ⁠point, the timing ⁠of any durable breakthrough remains highly uncertain," ship broker Clarksons said in a note on Monday.

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