What Happened
- Following failed peace talks on April 12, 2026, the US declared a naval blockade of Iranian ports and coastal areas in the Strait of Hormuz, preventing Iranian oil exports
- China, which imports approximately 1.4 million barrels per day of Iranian crude (over 80% of Iran's shipped oil), faces the most direct economic impact as its primary cheap crude source is cut off
- China has formally called the blockade "dangerous and irresponsible" — reflecting Beijing's dependence on Iranian crude at discounted prices under sanction conditions
- India, while importing less Iranian crude directly (due to US secondary sanctions), faces significant pain through higher global oil prices, LPG shortages, and rupee depreciation
- The International Energy Agency (IEA) head described the disruption as potentially the worst energy shock the world has seen — more severe than the 1970s oil crises and the 2022 Ukraine war combined
- Analysts have warned that a full blockade could drive crude oil prices to ~$150 per barrel
Static Topic Bridges
Strait of Hormuz — Strategic Geography and Energy Significance
The Strait of Hormuz is the world's most critical maritime energy chokepoint. It is a narrow waterway (35–60 miles wide) connecting the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea, located between the Iranian and Omani coastlines.
- In 2025, approximately 15 million barrels per day (mb/d) of crude oil passed through the Strait — representing ~34% of global crude oil trade
- Approximately 20-21% of global petroleum liquids consumption transits the Strait
- About one-fifth of global LNG trade also passes through Hormuz annually
- Primary exporters through the Strait: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, Qatar, Bahrain, and Iran
- Unlike other chokepoints (Suez Canal, Strait of Malacca), Hormuz has no viable alternative bypass route for Persian Gulf oil — the only overland alternatives are Saudi Arabia's East-West Pipeline (capacity limited) and UAE's Habshan-Fujairah pipeline
- Shipping lanes through the Strait mostly traverse Omani territorial waters and are governed by international maritime law (UN Convention on the Law of the Sea — UNCLOS)
Connection to this news: The US blockade directly controls this critical bottleneck — disrupting Iranian oil exports impacts global crude supply and prices even if non-Iranian shipments continue, because of supply substitution effects and market panic.
India's Oil Import Dependence and Vulnerability
India meets over 87-90% of its crude oil requirements through imports, making it the world's third-largest crude oil importer and consumer. The Middle East (West Asia) accounts for over 40-45% of India's crude imports and over 90% of LPG imports.
- India's daily crude oil imports: approximately 4.5-5 million barrels/day [Unverified — FY25 estimate]
- Middle East crude share: ~40-45% of India's imports — includes Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Oman
- LPG imports from Middle East: ~90% of India's LPG import requirement
- West Asia supplies over 45% of India's fertiliser imports (urea, DAP, MOP)
- 85% of India's domestic urea production depends on imported regasified LNG (RLNG) as feedstock
- India's oil import bill: ~$130-140 billion annually — the single largest import category, creating pressure on current account deficit (CAD)
- India's Iran crude: Practically zero since 2019 due to US CAATSA secondary sanctions; however, India faced challenges when Iran imports were cut
Connection to this news: Even without direct Iranian crude imports, a supply shock that drives global oil prices to $150/barrel would increase India's import bill by tens of billions of dollars, weaken the rupee, and trigger inflation — particularly in food (fertiliser prices) and transport.
UNCLOS and Freedom of Navigation — Legal Framework for Straits
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS, 1982) establishes the legal regime for international straits. Under UNCLOS, all vessels — including warships and commercial tankers — have the right of "transit passage" through straits used for international navigation.
- UNCLOS was signed in 1982 and entered into force in 1994; 169 parties (India ratified in 1995)
- Transit Passage (Part III, UNCLOS): Applies to straits used for international navigation — ships and aircraft have the right of continuous and expeditious transit; coastal states cannot suspend transit passage
- The Strait of Hormuz qualifies as an international strait under UNCLOS Part III
- US legal justification for the blockade relies on laws of armed conflict and the right of belligerent states to blockade enemy ports — distinct from peacetime transit passage rights
- Iran is NOT a party to UNCLOS — it maintains a different legal position on the extent of coastal state rights in the strait
Connection to this news: The US blockade raises complex international legal questions — while the laws of armed conflict may permit blockading an enemy's ports, UNCLOS's transit passage provisions protect third-country vessels. China and other affected nations can challenge the blockade's legality before international tribunals.
India's Strategic Options — Energy Diplomacy and Diversification
India's energy security strategy has focused on diversifying crude sources, building strategic petroleum reserves, and investing in overseas energy assets. The current crisis tests these strategies.
- Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR): India has strategic crude oil reserves at three locations (Visakhapatnam, Mangalore, and Padur) with a combined capacity of ~5.33 million tonnes (~39 million barrels) — providing approximately 9-10 days of import cover
- India has accelerated purchases from Russia (post-2022 Ukraine war) — Russia became India's top crude supplier in FY24 (~35-40% of imports), providing discounted Urals crude
- ISPRL (Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited): Manages India's SPR under MoP&NG
- Overseas energy investments: ONGC Videsh Limited (OVL) holds stakes in oil/gas assets in 15+ countries; but overseas equity oil covers only ~8-10% of India's needs
- India participates in the IEA (International Energy Agency) as an Association country (not full member); the IEA has recommended India build reserves to 90 days of net imports
Connection to this news: The crisis highlights India's SPR inadequacy (9-10 days vs IEA's recommended 90 days) and the limits of supply diversification — even with Russia as a top source, a Hormuz disruption affects LPG, fertiliser imports, and global price benchmarks that Russia-sourced crude is also priced against.
Key Facts & Data
- Strait of Hormuz: 35–60 miles wide; between Iran and Oman; connects Persian Gulf to Gulf of Oman
- Oil transit through Hormuz (2025): ~15 mb/d crude, ~34% of global crude oil trade
- Global LNG transit through Hormuz: ~20% of global LNG trade
- China's Iranian crude imports: ~1.4 mb/d (>80% of Iran's shipped oil)
- India's crude import dependence: 87-90% of requirement
- India's Middle East crude share: ~40-45% of imports
- India's LPG imports from Middle East: ~90%
- India's urea production dependent on imported RLNG: ~85%
- India's SPR capacity: ~5.33 million tonnes (~39 million barrels, ~9-10 days import cover)
- Analyst forecast for oil prices under full blockade: ~$150/barrel
- IEA head statement: Potentially worst energy shock in history
- UNCLOS adopted: 1982; in force: 1994; India ratified: 1995