What Happened
- Joint US-Israel military strikes on Iran triggered Iranian retaliatory attacks across the Middle East, with Iran announcing restrictions on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
- Indian exporters of rice, tea, and fruits face significant disruption as key maritime routes through the Red Sea and Persian Gulf face heightened risk.
- Over 100 container ships, 450 oil and gas tankers, and 200 bulk carriers were reported inside or near the Strait of Hormuz as the crisis unfolded.
- Several Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) diverted away from the Strait of Hormuz region following the strikes on February 28, 2026.
- Shipping rerouted via the Cape of Good Hope adds an estimated 15-20 days to transit time for Europe and the US, substantially raising freight and insurance costs for Indian exporters.
Static Topic Bridges
The Strait of Hormuz — World's Most Critical Maritime Chokepoint
The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, connecting Middle Eastern oil producers to global markets. It is approximately 33 km wide at its narrowest navigable point and sits between Iran (to the north) and Oman and the UAE (to the south). About one-third of globally traded seaborne oil and approximately 20% of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports pass through this strait annually, making it the most strategically significant maritime chokepoint in the world.
- More than 14 million barrels per day flowed through the Strait in 2025 — roughly one-third of total global seaborne crude exports
- Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN) has the constitutional authority to enforce Iran's territorial waters under the Iranian military command structure
- Alternative routes if closed: supertankers would need to use the Strait of Malacca or route around the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks of transit
- India's oil import dependence exceeds 85% of total crude requirements; in FY24, crude oil imports were valued at approximately $180 billion
Connection to this news: Iran's reported closure of the Strait of Hormuz to shipping directly threatens the primary route for India's energy imports and disrupts export shipments from India to West Asia and Africa.
Red Sea Crisis and India's Export Trade
The Red Sea, connected to the Strait of Bab el-Mandeb at its southern end, is a critical artery for India's trade with Europe, West Asia, and East Africa. The Bab el-Mandeb strait (Arabic for "Gate of Tears") is approximately 30 km wide and connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and onward to the Arabian Sea. In the recent Houthi-driven Red Sea crisis of 2023-24, shipping diversions via the Cape of Good Hope had already raised freight rates by 200-400% on some routes.
- India's top agricultural exports that transit this route include non-basmati rice, basmati rice, tea, spices, and fruits destined for the Middle East and Africa
- India is the world's largest exporter of rice; West Asia and Africa are major buyer markets
- Marine insurance war risk premiums spike significantly during conflict periods in the region, directly raising per-shipment costs
- Cape of Good Hope diversion: adds approximately 15-20 extra sailing days, raising costs by an estimated 30-40% per consignment
Connection to this news: The combination of the Strait of Hormuz closure and Red Sea instability threatens to simultaneously cut India's exports to West Asia while raising energy import costs, creating a double pressure on the current account deficit.
India's Oil Import Dependence and Macroeconomic Vulnerability
India is the world's third-largest oil importer and consumer. The country's heavy dependence on imported crude (over 85% of requirements) makes it acutely vulnerable to any price shock in the Middle East. A $10 per barrel increase in crude oil prices raises India's inflation by approximately 49 basis points and can reduce GDP growth by 0.25-0.27 percentage points, according to RBI research. The current account deficit (CAD) widens with every oil price surge, exerting downward pressure on the rupee and raising import costs further.
- India's oil import bill: approximately $180 billion in FY24 (nearly one-fourth of total imports)
- A 10% rise in crude prices increases India's import bill by roughly $18 billion annually
- RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) — 6 members, chaired by the RBI Governor — monitors imported inflation through oil prices as a key input in rate decisions
- The rupee-dollar exchange rate is particularly sensitive to oil price shocks, as dollar demand rises with higher oil import payments
- India had suspended Iranian oil imports in 2019 following US sanctions; prior to that, Iran supplied nearly 11% of India's oil needs
Connection to this news: If oil prices surge toward $100-130 per barrel as some analysts project for a prolonged Strait of Hormuz blockade, India faces a significant macroeconomic challenge: widening CAD, rupee depreciation, and inflationary pressure — all simultaneously.
India-Iran Bilateral Relations and Chabahar Port
India has maintained historically cordial relations with Iran based on civilizational ties, trade, and strategic interests. The centerpiece of India's Iran strategy is the Chabahar Port on Iran's southeastern Makran coast. India signed a 10-year contract in May 2024 to develop Chabahar Port, which provides India with a transit route to Afghanistan and Central Asia bypassing Pakistan. Chabahar is also India's gateway to the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), which connects India to Russia via Iran.
- Chabahar Port: located in Sistan-Baluchestan province, southeastern Iran; operational under India Ports Global Limited (IPGL)
- INSTC: 7,200-km multimodal route linking India (Mumbai) → Iran (Bandar Abbas/Chabahar) → Azerbaijan/Russia; cuts transit time to Russia by half vs Suez route
- US sanctions: A Conditional Sanctions Waiver for Chabahar was valid until April 26, 2026 — now uncertain given the conflict
- India-Iran bilateral trade: approximately $1.68 billion in FY 2024-25
- India's Iranian Embassy statement asking India to "not remain silent" places India in a diplomatically delicate position vis-a-vis the US
Connection to this news: The US-Iran war jeopardizes India's Chabahar investment and INSTC connectivity ambitions, while India must balance its strategic partnership with the US against its own economic interests in Iran.
Key Facts & Data
- Strait of Hormuz: approximately 33 km wide at the narrowest navigable channel; over 14 million barrels/day transit (2025)
- India's crude oil import dependence: over 85% of requirements met through imports
- India's oil import bill FY24: approximately $180 billion (~25% of total imports)
- A $10/barrel crude price rise: raises Indian inflation by ~49 basis points, reduces GDP growth by ~0.25-0.27 percentage points
- Rerouting via Cape of Good Hope: adds 15-20 extra sailing days vs Suez/Red Sea route
- India-Iran bilateral trade FY 2024-25: approximately $1.68 billion
- Chabahar Port: 10-year India-Iran operational contract signed May 2024
- INSTC length: approximately 7,200 km (Mumbai to Moscow via Iran)
- India is the world's largest rice exporter; West Asia and Africa are major destination markets