FACTBOX-Strait of Hormuz: economic effects of disruption
Source: Reuters
LONDON, Dec 19 (Reuters) - Any military action in the Strait of Hormuz in the Gulf would knock out oil exports from OPEC's biggest producers, cut off the oil supply to Japan and South Korea and knock the booming economies of Gulf states. Here are some key facts on what passes through the international waterway and some of the direct economic consequences of any attack on merchant shipping. -- 2.9 billion deadweight tonnes passes through the strait every year. -- Crude oil exported through the Strait rose to 750 million tonnes in 2006. -- 27 percent of transits carry crude on oil tankers, rising to 50 percent if petroleum products, natural gas and Liquefied Petroleum Gas transits are included. -- Transits for dry commodities like grains, iron ore and cement account for 22 percent of transits. -- Container trade accounts for 20 percent of transits, carrying finished goods to Gulf countries. Oil exports passing through Hormuz: (2006 figures) Saudi Arabia -- 88 percent Iran -- 90 percent Iraq -- 98 percent UAE -- 99 percent Kuwait -- 100 percent Qatar -- 100 percent Top 10 importers of crude oil through Hormuz (2006 figures) Japan -- Takes 26 percent of crude oil moving through the strait (shipments meet 85 percent of country's oil needs) Republic of Korea -- 14 percent (meets 72 percent of oil needs) United States -- 14 percent (meets 18 percent of oil needs) India -- 12 percent (meets 65 percent of oil needs) Egypt -- 8 percent (N.B. most transhipped to other countries) China -- 8 percent (meets 34 percent of oil needs) Singapore -- 7 percent Taiwan -- 5 percent Thailand -- 3 percent Netherlands -- 3 percent (Source: Lloyd's Marine Intelligence Unit) To see a related story, please click on [ID:nL19351019] (Reporting by Stefano Ambrogi, editing by Anthony Barker)
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