Iran Seizes Oil Tanker With 16 Crew in Persian Gulf

iran seizes oil tanker in persian gulf

Iran seized an oil tanker in the Persian Gulf carrying about 4 million litres of “smuggled fuel” and detained 16 foreign crew members, days after authorities reported another tanker seizure in the Gulf of Oman with 18 crew and an alleged 6 million litres of illicit diesel.​

What happened in the Persian Gulf

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said its naval forces intercepted an oil tanker as it was attempting to leave Iran’s territorial waters in the Persian Gulf.​
Iranian state media quoted IRGC Navy commander Brig. Gen. Abbas Gholamshahi as saying the vessel carried about 4 million litres of smuggled fuel and had 16 non-Iranian crew members on board.​
Iran said the crew was detained and the case was referred to judicial authorities for investigation, while officials did not disclose the ship’s flag, ownership, or destination.​

Iran’s stated allegation: fuel gathered at sea

Iranian media reports said intelligence findings indicated the tanker had allegedly received fuel from smaller vessels and was preparing to transfer it onward outside the Gulf, a pattern Iran describes as part of organized fuel-smuggling networks.​
Iran has repeatedly linked such operations to the profitability created by domestic fuel subsidies and large price gaps with neighboring markets.​

The earlier tanker seizure in the Gulf of Oman

On Dec. 13, Iranian authorities reported a separate seizure of a foreign tanker in the Gulf of Oman and said they detained 18 crew members, including the captain.​
Iranian media, citing the judiciary in Hormozgan province, said that vessel was allegedly carrying about 6 million litres of illicit fuel.​
The same reports said the detained crew included nationals of India, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh, and alleged the tanker committed multiple violations such as ignoring stop orders, attempting to flee, and lacking required navigation and cargo documentation.​

Why these seizures matter for shipping and energy markets

The Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman sit next to the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important energy chokepoints connecting the Persian Gulf with the Arabian Sea.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz averaged about 20 million barrels per day in 2024—around 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption—and remained relatively flat in the first quarter of 2025.
EIA also notes that flows through Hormuz account for more than one-quarter of global seaborne oil trade and that around one-fifth of global LNG trade transited the strait in 2024, mainly from Qatar.

Key Strait of Hormuz facts

Metric Latest figure (from EIA)
Average oil flow (2024) ~20 million b/d
Share of global petroleum liquids consumption (2024) ~20%
Share of global seaborne oil trade (2024 & Q1 2025) >25%
LNG share transiting Hormuz (2024) ~20% of global LNG trade
Crude/LNG destination focus ~84% crude/condensate and ~83% LNG to Asia (2024)

EIA warns that “very few alternative options exist” to move comparable volumes out of the Gulf if Hormuz were closed, even though some pipelines can bypass the strait.
EIA estimates about 2.6 million b/d of Saudi and UAE pipeline capacity could be available to bypass Hormuz during a disruption, a fraction of the 2024 seaborne flow it reports through the strait.

Partial bypass options (not a full substitute)

Route What EIA says it can do
Saudi East-West pipeline Operated at 5 million b/d, temporarily expanded to 7 million b/d in 2019; used in 2024 to shift flows overland to Red Sea ports amid other regional shipping disruptions.
UAE pipeline to Fujairah 1.8 million b/d pipeline to the Gulf of Oman; increased day-to-day use can limit excess capacity for rerouting.
Iran Goreh–Jask pipeline Effective capacity around 300,000 b/d; EIA reports Iran exported less than 70,000 b/d in summer 2024 from related ports and stopped loading after September 2024.

A broader crackdown on fuel smuggling

Iran has periodically announced vessel seizures tied to fuel smuggling, describing them as enforcement against illicit trade driven by subsidized domestic prices and sanctions-related economic pressures.​
In late November, Iranian reports said the IRGC seized an Eswatini-flagged vessel with about 350,000 litres of smuggled fuel and a 13-person crew that included Indian nationals.​
Iranian accounts of that case also referenced a separate Marshall Islands-flagged tanker incident in mid-November, after which the ship manager later confirmed the vessel was released and its 21 crew were safe.​

Timeline of reported seizures (late 2025)

Date (2025) Reported location Alleged cargo Crew reported What Iran disclosed
Nov. 29–30 Persian Gulf (reported) ~350,000 litres of smuggled fuel 13 Vessel reported as Eswatini-flagged; taken to Bushehr under judicial order. ​
Dec. 13 Gulf of Oman ~6 million litres of illicit fuel 18 Detentions reported; alleged violations included ignoring stop orders and lacking documentation. ​
Dec. 23–24 Persian Gulf ~4 million litres of smuggled fuel 16 Crew detained; vessel flag/owner/destination not disclosed. ​

Final Thoughts

  • Two tanker seizures within roughly two weeks signal intensified maritime enforcement focused on fuel-smuggling allegations along Iran’s southern coast.​
  • Even when incidents are framed as law enforcement—rather than state-to-state confrontation—repeated interdictions around the Strait of Hormuz can heighten perceived risk in a corridor EIA estimates carries about 20 million b/d of oil.
  • The next concrete developments to watch are judicial outcomes for detained crews, any disclosure of vessel ownership/flags, and whether regional shipping advisories or insurance costs adjust in response to the latest incidents.​

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Related Articles

Top Trending

The Shift from Co-Pilot to Autopilot The Rise of Agentic SaaS
The Shift from "Co-Pilot" to "Autopilot": The Rise of Agentic SaaS
Polylaminin Breakthrough
Polylaminin Breakthrough: Can This Brazilian Discovery Finally Reverse Spinal Cord Injury?
Windows on Arm- The 2026 Shift in Laptop Architecture
Windows on Arm: The 2026 Shift in Laptop Architecture
LG CLOiD Home Robot Price
CES 2026: LG’s “Zero-Labor” AI Agent Robot Finally Has a Price Tag
Nvidia Thor Chip vs Tesla FSD
Nvidia’s “Thor” Chip vs. Tesla FSD: Jensen Huang Calls Musk’s Tech “World-Class”

LIFESTYLE

Travel Sustainably Without Spending Extra featured image
How Can You Travel Sustainably Without Spending Extra? Save On Your Next Trip!
Benefits of Living in an Eco-Friendly Community featured image
Go Green Together: 12 Benefits of Living in an Eco-Friendly Community!
Happy new year 2026 global celebration
Happy New Year 2026: Celebrate Around the World With Global Traditions
dubai beach day itinerary
From Sunrise Yoga to Sunset Cocktails: The Perfect Beach Day Itinerary – Your Step-by-Step Guide to a Day by the Water
Ford F-150 Vs Ram 1500 Vs Chevy Silverado
The "Big 3" Battle: 10 Key Differences Between the Ford F-150, Ram 1500, and Chevy Silverado

Entertainment

Samsung’s 130-Inch Micro RGB TV The Wall Comes Home
Samsung’s 130-Inch Micro RGB TV: The "Wall" Comes Home
MrBeast Copyright Gambit
Beyond The Paywall: The MrBeast Copyright Gambit And The New Rules Of Co-Streaming Ownership
Stranger Things Finale Crashes Netflix
Stranger Things Finale Draws 137M Views, Crashes Netflix
Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Part 2 release date
Demon Slayer Infinity Castle Part 2 Release Date: Crunchyroll Denies Sequel Timing Rumors
BTS New Album 20 March 2026
BTS to Release New Album March 20, 2026

GAMING

Styx Blades of Greed
The Goblin Goes Open World: How Styx: Blades of Greed is Reinventing the AA Stealth Genre.
Resident Evil Requiem Switch 2
Resident Evil Requiem: First Look at "Open City" Gameplay on Switch 2
High-performance gaming setup with clear monitor display and low-latency peripherals. n Improve Your Gaming Performance Instantly
Improve Your Gaming Performance Instantly: 10 Fast Fixes That Actually Work
Learning Games for Toddlers
Learning Games For Toddlers: Top 10 Ad-Free Educational Games For 2026
Gamification In Education
Screen Time That Counts: Why Gamification Is the Future of Learning

BUSINESS

IMF 2026 Outlook Stable But Fragile
Global Economic Outlook: IMF Predicts 3.1% Growth but "Downside Risks" Remain
India Rice Exports
India’s Rice Dominance: How Strategic Export Shifts are Reshaping South Asian Trade in 2026
Mistakes to Avoid When Seeking Small Business Funding featured image
15 Mistakes to Avoid As New Entrepreneurs When Seeking Small Business Funding
Global stock markets break record highs featured image
Global Stock Markets Surge to Record Highs Across Continents: What’s Powering the Rally—and What Could Break It
Embodied Intelligence
Beyond Screen-Bound AI: How Embodied Intelligence is Reshaping Industrial Logistics in 2026

TECHNOLOGY

The Shift from Co-Pilot to Autopilot The Rise of Agentic SaaS
The Shift from "Co-Pilot" to "Autopilot": The Rise of Agentic SaaS
Windows on Arm- The 2026 Shift in Laptop Architecture
Windows on Arm: The 2026 Shift in Laptop Architecture
LG CLOiD Home Robot Price
CES 2026: LG’s “Zero-Labor” AI Agent Robot Finally Has a Price Tag
Nvidia Thor Chip vs Tesla FSD
Nvidia’s “Thor” Chip vs. Tesla FSD: Jensen Huang Calls Musk’s Tech “World-Class”
Meta vs. The World- The Smart Glasses War Heats Up at CES
Meta vs The World: The Smart Glasses War Heats Up at CES

HEALTH

Polylaminin Breakthrough
Polylaminin Breakthrough: Can This Brazilian Discovery Finally Reverse Spinal Cord Injury?
Bio Wearables For Stress
Post-Holiday Wellness: The Rise of "Bio-Wearables" for Stress
ChatGPT Health Medical Records
Beyond the Chatbot: Why OpenAI’s Entry into Medical Records is the Ultimate Test of Public Trust in the AI Era
A health worker registers an elderly patient using a laptop at a rural health clinic in Africa
Digital Health Sovereignty: The 2026 Push for National Digital Health Records in Rural Economies
Digital Detox for Kids
Digital Detox for Kids: Balancing Online Play With Outdoor Fun [2026 Guide]