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Ships Vanish: Shadow Fleets Evade Tracking in Hormuz
17 Apr
Summary
- Ship transponders are being jammed, obscuring over half of vessels.
- New tracking methods combine satellite imagery and radio signals.
- Disruptions in Hormuz risk catastrophic oil spills and economic chaos.
In the Strait of Hormuz, a critical maritime route for global petroleum, a growing number of ships are intentionally disappearing from tracking systems. This tactic, often employed by 'shadow fleets' to bypass international sanctions, has escalated significantly amid recent conflict. At one point last month, over half the vessels in the strait had their transponders jammed, making identification difficult.
Analysts like Michelle Bockmann of Windward AI are now relying on a sophisticated blend of technologies to monitor these elusive vessels. These methods include electro-optical imagery, synthetic-aperture radar capable of seeing through adverse weather, and radio-frequency signal analysis. They are also integrating ship registry data and even 'human presence signals' from mobile devices.
These efforts are vital as the Strait of Hormuz handles approximately 20% of the world's oil consumption. Disruptions can lead to severe economic consequences and immediate dangers, such as collisions or groundings that risk catastrophic oil spills. The increased jamming and spoofing of ship transponders present a significant challenge, requiring constant adaptation of tracking techniques.