Iraq’s 14 million barrels of trapped oil travels through Strait of Hormuz
Approximately 14 million barrels of Iraqi oil, previously stranded in the Persian Gulf, have successfully transited through the Strait of Hormuz in the latter part of June. This significant outflow, averaging about 1.4 million barrels daily over a ten-day period, occurred as transit eased due to an uneasy US-Iran ceasefire.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedApproximately 14 million barrels of Iraqi oil, previously stranded in the Persian Gulf, have successfully transited through the Strait of Hormuz in the latter part of June. This significant outflow, averaging about 1.4 million barrels daily over a ten-day period, occurred as transit eased due to an uneasy US-Iran ceasefire. Tanker tracking data indicates these cargoes are now en route to buyers in Asia, Europe, and the US. All oil loaded since late February that was held up inside the Gulf has now departed. The blockage of hundreds of ships had followed US and Israeli attacks on Iran starting February 28, leading to Iran's near closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Shipping activity resumed after the US and Iran agreed to pause hostilities.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe Strait of Hormuz is a vital choke point for about a fifth of the world's oil and gas supplies.
All oil cargoes loaded since late February, which were previously stuck inside the Gulf, have now sailed to their destinations.
Approximately 14 million barrels of Iraqi oil have exited the Persian Gulf in the past ten days.
Shipping has resumed following a US-Iran agreement to pause hostilities.
Hundreds of ships were blocked inside the Gulf after US and Israel attacks on Iran starting February 28.