Indian LNG Tanker Disha Crosses Strait of Hormuz After Two Months, First Since Peace Deal Announced

The LNG tanker Disha has become the first Indian merchant vessel in nearly two months to successfully cross the Strait of Hormuz following the US-Iran peace deal, signaling a cautious return to maritime transit.

Last Updated : Monday, 15 June 2026
Follow us :

New Delhi: An Indian vessel has finally crossed the Strait of Hormuz. LNG tanker Disha, operated by the state-owned Shipping Corporation of India, made it through the strait on Monday. It is the first Indian merchant vessel to cross these waters in nearly two months. It is also the first vessel of any kind to cross since the US and Iran announced a peace deal. Disha was stuck in the Persian Gulf for over three months because of the West Asia war. It is carrying Qatari LNG for Petronet LNG, India's largest LNG importer. The ship is expected to reach the Dahej terminal in Gujarat on June 18.

What makes this crossing different?

Most ships that have crossed the strait in recent weeks did so quietly. They switched off their Automatic Identification System transponders to avoid detection. Disha did not do that. It crossed with the AIS transponder on, broadcasting its location the entire time. That is a sign that the situation on the water may be shifting, even if cautiously.
Shipping Ministry Director Opesh Kumar Sharma confirmed the transit. He said Disha is carrying 62,370 metric tonnes of LNG cargo and the government is ready to bring back other stranded Indian ships once it is deemed safe to do so.

Traffic has not picked up yet?

Despite the peace deal announcement, ships are not rushing through the strait. Industry insiders say shippers are watching carefully before making a move. Experts say it could take weeks before traffic meaningfully recovers. The past three months have left everyone wary. Iran closed the strait abruptly on April 18 just a day after announcing vessels could move freely. That kind of unpredictability has made shipping companies extremely cautious.

How bad it got?

The Strait of Hormuz crisis hit India hard. Around 40 percent of India's crude oil imports pass through the strait. So does 60 percent of its LNG imports. The number that really stings is LPG - 90 percent of India's LPG imports come through this chokepoint. That is why India prioritized getting LPG tankers out first. Since early March, ten Indian vessels have crossed the strait in total. Nine of those were India-flagged. Eight were LPG tankers, one was a crude oil tanker and the tenth is Disha herself.

What was the turning point?

Indian vessel crossings effectively stopped after April 18. On that day Iranian forces fired on Indian ships trying to cross the strait. One vessel, Desh Garima, managed to get through on that same day before things shut down completely. The US had also started its own blockade of Iranian ports from mid-March. Both Iran and the US were running separate blockades at the same time. The result was a complete halt in Indian vessel movements.

How many Indian ships still stuck?

Even with Disha out, 13 Indian vessels remain in the Persian Gulf. Dozens of foreign-flagged ships carrying cargo for India are also stranded in the region. Thousands of seafarers from various countries have been stuck since the war began on February 28. For Iran, shutting the strait was its most powerful weapon in this conflict. It sent energy prices soaring globally, caused fuel shortages in several countries and forced some nations to start rationing supplies. The peace deal, if it holds, could finally begin to undo that damage.