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DP World sees more traffic for Red Sea ports as Iran crisis chokes access to Gulf

DP World sees more traffic for Red Sea ports as Iran crisis chokes access to Gulf

DUBAI, March 12 (Reuters) – Global ports ​operator DP World expects rising volumes at its Red Sea terminals as the Iran conflict nears ‌the two-week mark, its CEO said on Thursday, with the Strait of Hormuz shut and spiralling tanker attacks cutting traffic towards Gulf ports.

The conflict, triggered by U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran, has disrupted energy and transport markets and effectively closed the ​world’s most important oil artery.

Most major Gulf ports are reachable only via the narrow Hormuz ​waterway. Jebel Ali in Dubai, DP World’s flagship hub, remains fully operational with no ⁠infrastructure damage but is seeing lower inbound vessel traffic, CEO Yuvraj Narayan said.

Volumes are “still moving through the ports ​on the eastern side of the Strait of Hormuz,” he added.

MORE TRAFFIC FOR RED SEA PORTS

UAE ports outside ​the strait have limited capacity. Khorfakkan can handle 5 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) and Fujairah less than 1 million, leaving them unable to compensate for lost throughput at Jebel Ali or Abu Dhabi’s Khalifa Port.

Jebel Ali handled 15.6 million TEUs last year ​out of the group’s 56.1 million consolidated TEUs.

Narayan said DP World was deploying regional rerouting and operational ​mitigation measures to maintain supply chain continuity.

Its Red Sea ports, including Jeddah in Saudi Arabia and Sokhna in Egypt, were ‌likely ⁠to see an increase in traffic as a result of the crisis, he added, without specifying what extra volumes or types of cargo they might handle.

But logistical and security risks remain high.

German shipping company Hapag-Lloyd (HLAG.DE), opens new tab said on Thursday that projectile fragments hit a container vessel chartered by Maersk near the Strait of Hormuz.

“I can see ​reopening (of the strait) happening ​maybe in phases, in ⁠terms of some breakthroughs happening, some naval escorts guiding vessels,” Narayan told analysts in a conference call. It would likely reopen first to ships from countries with “neutral or ​friendly relations with Iran,” he added.

DP World is one of the world’s largest ​port and ⁠logistics operators, with operations in countries including Canada, Peru, India and Angola.

The company also reported that profit attributable to shareholders rose almost 43% to $1.07 billion last year, boosted by strong performances in its ports, terminals and logistics division.

It ⁠has set ​capital expenditure of about $3 billion for 2026.

Narayan was appointed group CEO ​in February after long-serving former chief Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem resigned amid mounting pressure over his alleged ties with Jeffrey Epstein.

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