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LSEG data shows that a second crude oil tanker linked to Japan has passed through the Strait of Hormuz.

Ship-tracking data provided by LSEG on Thursday showed that a crude 'oil tanker under the flag of Panama, managed by the Japanese refinery?group Eneos, had passed through the Strait of Hormuz. This is the second time a ship with Japan-related links has made it through.

Japan used to rely on the Gulf for 95% of its imports of oil before the U.S. and Israeli war on Iran largely interrupted oil supplies via Strait of Hormuz.

Kpler data shows that the Eneos managed tanker was loaded with 700,000 barrels Emirati Das Blend oil and 1.2 million barrels Kuwait crude in late February. Kpler data shows that the vessel is expected to reach Japan on June 3.

The tanker's passage through the Strait was not immediately known. Eneos Japan, the largest refining company in Japan, declined to comment.

Tokyo has intensified its diplomatic efforts and has switched to alternative fuels to replace some of the barrels lost, while lowering domestic fuel prices through massive government subsidies.

The Idemitsu Maru made a similar passage in late April, carrying Saudi crude oil and managed by an Idemitsu?Kosan unit.

Idemitsu, Japan’s second largest oil refining company, announced this week that it expects Hormuz will reopen between July and Septembre, with Dubai benchmark?oil prices falling to pre-war levels before the end of March 2027.

Refinery runs have begun to normalize this month as Japanese refineries replenish strategic stocks and increase alternative supplies, such as from the United States or the Caspian region. They are now above 70% for the first time since March.

On Wednesday, a Chinese supertanker containing Iraqi crude left the Gulf before the two-day summit in Beijing of U.S. leaders and Chinese.

Abbas Araqchi, the Iranian foreign minister, visited Beijing in the last week.

(source: Reuters)