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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Qatar Asks Vessels At Key LNG Port To Go Dark for Safety

 by Charles Kennedy of OilPrice.com

Qatar has requested LNG vessels near its Ras Laffan LNG port to switch off their transponders as part of safety measures at the key export port of the world’s second-largest LNG exporter before the war, anonymous sources with knowledge of the plan told Bloomberg on Tuesday.  

The de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz has trapped about 20% of daily global LNG flows, mostly those previously shipping out of Qatar and part of the UAE’s LNG flows. 

In addition, Iranian drone and missile strikes on energy infrastructure in the region has damaged Qatar’s key LNG liquefaction complex Ras Laffan, the world’s single largest such facility. Due to the attacks, QatarEnergy has been forced to declare force majeure for up to five years on some long-term LNG contracts and has advised that full capacity could take up to five years to restore following extensive damage from the strikes. 

The waters around Qatar have seen increased security threats since the war began on February 28. After more than two months of total blockage of Qatari shipments out of the Strait of Hormuz, the major Gulf LNG exporter is now apparently seeking to avoid being targeted. 

At least nine LNG tankers that were anchored near Qatar stopped sending signals via their Automatic Identification System from May 11, vessel-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg showed, in a sign that Qatar may have indeed asked ships to go dark to avoid being targeted. 

A tanker laden with LNG from Qatar successfully passed the Strait of Hormuz this weekend, the first such transit since February 28.

Crude tankers have also successfully exited the Strait in recent days, after going dark, according to shipping data cited by Reuters. 

“Commercial shipping and maritime security activity around the Strait of Hormuz are increasingly shifting into dark or emissions-controlled conditions,” maritime intelligence firm Windward said on Monday.  

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/qatar-asks-vessels-key-lng-port-go-dark-safety

Virus in the Dust: Exposing the Fabricated Contagion of Andes Hantavirus

 By Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH

As an epidemiologist, I know contact tracing studies are inherently flawed. So I was immediately suspicious of the claim that Hantavirus Andes strain had jumped from zoonotic to human-to-human spread. This claim is very likely to be false and should not be the basis for the global public health response to the Hantavirus outbreak from rodents on board the MV Hondius.

🔬 Scientific Evaluation: Reassessing Transmission Pathways of the Andes Orthohantavirus


1. Introduction

The Andes orthohantavirus (ANDV) is uniquely recognized within the Hantaviridae family for its putative human-to-human transmission. While this claim has become a foundational pillar in epidemiological modeling and public health policy, the scientific evidence base remains largely speculative. This report critically examines the methodological limitations inherent in existing contact tracing studies and argues that the assertion of direct human-to-human transmission lacks the rigorous validation required by controlled, empirical investigation.


2. The Confounding Variable: Environmental Exposure

The primary challenge in attributing ANDV infection to human-to-human contact lies in the ubiquity of the virus’s primary reservoir, the long-tailed pygmy rice rat (Oligoryzomys longicaudatus).

🏚️ The “Common Environment” Hypothesis

Existing epidemiological studies frequently rely on retrospective contact tracing to establish transmission chains. However, these investigations often fail to adequately isolate participants from shared environmental risks.

  • Aerosolized Particulates: ANDV, like other hantaviruses, is primarily shed in the urine, feces, and saliva of infected rodents. These excretions dry into dust, which can remain infectious for extended periods in enclosed spaces.

  • Inadequate Site Assessment: In many documented “human-to-human” cases, the transmission occurred within households or rural dwellings. These environments are frequently contaminated with rodent excreta. Current contact tracing methodologies often assume that if no rodent was seen, no rodent exposure occurred. This assumption ignores the reality that microscopic viral particles in house dust are sufficient for inhalation or mucosal contact.

A rigorous scientific framework must rule out the possibility that both the “index” case and the “secondary” case were independent victims of the same contaminated environmental reservoir before concluding that direct transmission took place. In the absence of comprehensive environmental sampling—specifically, testing dust and surfaces for viral RNA at the time of exposure—the environmental transmission hypothesis cannot be dismissed.

4/1/26 Ship departs likely with infected rodents on board

4/11/26 Dutch man dies on ship

4/24/26 Spouse of Dutch man disembarks in St Helena with his body and dies shortly afterwards

4/24/26 Ill British man disembarks and airlifted to Johannesburg improved now out of ICU

4/24/26 n=28 passengers get off and remain well except Swiss man

4/24/26 Swiss man with mild symptoms has Hantavirus found and genotyped (below)

5/2/26 German dies on ship in harbor at Cape Verde (authorities refused to let the ship dock at the port because of the suspected hantavirus outbreak)

5/2/26 WHO locks passengers in cabins with infected rodents/ventilation system, fresh air on deck not permitted

5/10/26 Remaining passengers disembark in Canary Islands

5/10/26 Ill French woman flown from Tenerife to a France ICU (first victim from WHO lockdown)

5/11/26 MV Hondius, still virus-contaminated, likely with rodent reservoir sets sail with 30 crew and medical personnel to Rotterdam, Netherlands


3. The Absence of Empirical Validation

The standard for establishing a novel transmission pathway is high. To definitively conclude that a virus has transitioned from zoonotic to human-to-human spread, one must move beyond correlational field data. Toledo et al evaluated the published studies and concluded that person-to-person spread had not been demonstrated.

🚫 Lack of Challenge Studies

Currently, there exists a complete absence of isolated human challenge studies. While ethical constraints are understood, the lack of clinical validation leaves a significant interpretive gap.

  • Biologic Plausibility vs. Proof: While viral shedding in human bodily fluids has been documented, the viability and infectiousness of the virus via human-to-human routes remain unproven.

  • The Zoonotic Baseline: The Hantavirus genus is characterized by its strict association with rodent hosts. For a virus to jump from a zoonotic cycle to sustained or even sporadic human-to-human transmission, distinct evolutionary adaptations are typically required—none have been found in the current strain. The current literature has yet to provide a robust, mechanistic explanation of how ANDV bypasses the natural species barrier so effectively in human populations without intermediate animal hosts.


4. Methodological Critiques of Current Surveillance

The widespread acceptance of human-to-human ANDV transmission relies heavily on the strength of contact tracing data. Yet, these studies suffer from significant selection bias:

  1. Recall Bias: Participants in high-stress, post-outbreak scenarios are naturally prone to recall interactions with other people, while often overlooking mundane environmental exposures like sweeping a floor or entering an unventilated storage room.

  2. Lack of Genomic Precision: While viral sequencing has shown links between cases, it does not distinguish between a direct human-to-human transmission chain and a shared, localized environmental source that mutated or persisted in a specific rodent population.


5. Conclusion

The assertion that Andes orthohantavirus has definitively transitioned to human-to-human transmission is premature and conceptually fragile. When environmental contamination—a well-established risk factor for all hantaviruses—is not meticulously excluded, the “transmission” observed in clusters may simply be a reflection of communal exposure to a shared, contaminated micro-environment. Until controlled studies are performed and environmental variables are rigorously accounted for, the scientific community should maintain a skeptical perspective on the viability of human-to-human spread and should not participate in global fear-mongering over a hantavirus contagion.

https://www.thefocalpoints.com/p/virus-in-the-dust-exposing-the-fabricated