What Happened
- Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi announced on April 17, 2026 that the Strait of Hormuz is "completely open" for all commercial vessels for the remainder of the ongoing U.S.-Iran ceasefire period.
- The announcement triggered a sharp fall in global crude oil prices — more than 10% in a single session — as markets had priced in a sustained supply disruption since the strait's effective closure in late February 2026.
- Stock markets surged globally in response, reflecting relief at the prospect of restored energy supply chains.
- U.S. President Trump welcomed Iran's decision but confirmed that the U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports would remain in place until a comprehensive deal is reached between Washington and Tehran.
- The reopening came one day after Trump announced a 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, signalling a broader regional de-escalation process.
Static Topic Bridges
The Strait of Hormuz: Strategic Geography and Oil Transit
The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow maritime chokepoint connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and onwards to the Arabian Sea. It is approximately 33 km (21 nautical miles) wide at its narrowest point, flanked by Iran to the north and the Omani Musandam Peninsula to the south. The strait functions as the world's single most important oil transit chokepoint.
- Approximately 20–21% of the world's seaborne oil trade (roughly 20–21 million barrels per day) passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
- About 20% of the world's liquefied natural gas (LNG) also transits through this route.
- Traffic exceeds 80–130 ships per day; more than 30,000 tankers annually.
- The strait connects the Persian Gulf oil exporters — Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Iran — to global markets.
- Iran's Kharg Island, located approximately 25 km off Iran's coast in the northern Persian Gulf, handles over 90% of Iran's crude oil exports.
Connection to this news: Iran's ability to "open" or "close" the strait reflects its geographic leverage; even a partial closure triggers global supply disruptions and oil price spikes, making the strait central to energy security discussions in UPSC.
UNCLOS and the Right of Transit Passage
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entered into force in 1994, is the foundational international legal framework governing maritime navigation. For international straits used for navigation between one part of the high seas and another (or an Exclusive Economic Zone), UNCLOS establishes the doctrine of transit passage (Part III, Articles 37–44).
- Transit passage grants all ships and aircraft the right of free, continuous, and unobstructed passage through international straits — it cannot be suspended by the coastal state.
- Innocent passage, by contrast, applies to territorial seas and can be temporarily suspended for security reasons.
- Iran has NOT ratified UNCLOS and disputes that transit passage applies to Hormuz, arguing instead that only innocent passage applies — giving it broader authority to regulate traffic.
- The U.S. and most maritime nations assert transit passage as customary international law, even for non-UNCLOS signatories.
- The distinction between transit passage and innocent passage is a live legal and geopolitical controversy with direct consequences for naval operations and tanker security.
Connection to this news: Iran's claim to control Hormuz rests on its rejection of transit passage rights. When Iran "closes" the strait, it is asserting the innocent passage regime; when it "opens" it, it is temporarily stepping back from that assertion under ceasefire conditions.
Oil Price Mechanism and Chokepoint Economics
Crude oil is a globally traded commodity priced predominantly in U.S. dollars on benchmark exchanges (Brent Crude for Europe/Asia, WTI for the U.S.). Supply shocks at any major chokepoint cause immediate price volatility because oil markets price in future supply expectations, not just current availability.
- A 10%+ single-session drop in oil prices is rare and reflects the outsized market anxiety around Hormuz disruptions.
- India is the world's third-largest oil importer; sustained high crude prices directly affect India's current account deficit, inflation, and fiscal position.
- India imports roughly 85% of its crude oil needs; a $10/barrel increase in crude prices widens India's import bill by approximately $15 billion annually.
- The inverse relationship between oil prices and stock markets (particularly in oil-importing countries) reflects how energy costs feed into corporate margins and consumer sentiment.
Connection to this news: The market reaction — oil down 10%, stocks up — directly illustrates the economic stakes of Hormuz and why the strait's status is a recurring theme in UPSC economics questions on energy security and external vulnerability.
Key Facts & Data
- Strait of Hormuz width at narrowest: approximately 21 nautical miles (33 km)
- Share of world's oil trade through Hormuz: ~20–21%
- Share of world's LNG through Hormuz: ~20%
- Kharg Island handles: over 90% of Iran's crude exports; capacity ~7 million barrels/day
- Oil price movement on reopening announcement: fell more than 10% in a single session
- UNCLOS adopted: 1982; entered into force: 1994
- Iran's status: not a signatory/ratifier of UNCLOS
- India's oil import dependence: ~85% of total consumption