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Shadow of Hormuz: Why the crisis in the Gulf is turning all eyes to the Malacca Strait
Reuters | April 23, 2026 6:57 PM CST

Synopsis

The Strait of Malacca, a vital global trade artery, faces increased scrutiny following disruptions elsewhere. This busy waterway connects East Asia to the Middle East and Europe, carrying significant oil shipments. Concerns include its narrowness, potential for accidents, and past piracy. Regional nations are committed to keeping it open through joint patrols, ensuring unimpeded passage for international trade.

Picture of Strait of Hormuz
BANGKOK: The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has forced policymakers in Asia to face questions over the security of other maritime chokepoints, including the ​Strait of Malacca, which is the world's busiest waterway for international ​trade.

WHAT IS THE MALACCA STRAIT?

The 900-km (550-mile) long Malacca Strait, bounded by Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore, provides the shortest ​sea route from East Asia to the Middle East and Europe.

It carries nearly 22% of the world's maritime trade, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. This includes oil and gas shipments from the Middle East to the energy-hungry economies of China, Japan and South Korea.


Also Read: Hormuz crisis deepens: Mine clearance may take six months

Malacca is the largest "oil transit chokepoint" in the world and the only one that ‌outpaces Hormuz, according to ⁠the U.S. Energy ⁠Information Administration.

In the first half of 2025, some 23.2 million barrels of oil per day were transported through the Malacca Strait, accounting for 29% of total maritime oil flows. The next largest chokepoint, ​Hormuz, saw about 20.9 million bpd pass through.

More than 102,500 ships, mostly commercial vessels, transited through the Malacca Strait in 2025, up from around 94,300 in 2024, data ​from Malaysia's Marine Department showed. These include most tankers, but some very large vessels avoid the strait because of draught restrictions and go south around Indonesia instead.

This route allows the Strait of Malacca to be bypassed if it were closed, but it adds to journey time that would delay shipments and drive up prices.

WHAT ARE THE CONCERNS ABOUT THE STRAIT OF MALACCA?

At its narrowest point in the Phillips ⁠Channel of the Singapore ‌Strait, the Malacca Strait is only 1.7 miles (2.7 km) wide, creating a natural bottleneck, as well as potential for collisions, grounding, or oil spills.

Also Read:Welcome to the age of energy shocks: The unsettling future view that Iran's Hormuz playbook shows

Some ​parts of the strait are relatively shallow, with a depth of 25-27 metres (82-90 ft), restricting the largest vessels, but even very ⁠large crude carriers (VLCCs) measuring more than 350 metres long, 60 metres wide, and with a ​draft of more than 20 metres, make the transit.

For years, the strait has been a hotbed of ​piracy and attacks on merchant vessels. Last year saw criminal attacks spike to at least 104, but these have fallen off in the first quarter of this year, according to the ReCAAP Information Sharing Centre, an organisation established by regional governments to combat piracy.

The narrow and congested waterway has been strategically important to Beijing, with around 75% of China's seaborne crude oil imports passing through it from the Middle East and Africa, data from tanker tracker Vortexa shows.

The Iran crisis has crystallised long-standing worries about how chokepoints such as Malacca could be affected if a conflict breaks out in the South China Sea or the Taiwan Strait, ‌where another 21% of global maritime trade transits, according to CSIS.

Malaysian authorities say the Malacca Strait is also a growing spot for illegal ship-to-ship transfers, where oil is shifted between tankers at sea to obscure its origin.

WHAT ARE OFFICIALS SAYING?

Indonesian Finance Minister ​Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa made ​waves on Wednesday by openly musing about ways ⁠countries could impose tolls on ships as a way to monetize the strait, before noting that such an arrangement is not possible.

When asked about the risks of tolls or other restrictions on movement in the strait, Singapore Foreign Affairs Minister Vivian Balakrishnan told CNBC that the nations along the strait share a ​strategic interest to keep it open, and have agreed not to collect tolls.

He also said Singapore had assured the United States and China that the right of passage was guaranteed for all and it would not participate in any efforts to block the strait or impose tolls.

Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan told a forum on Wednesday that no unilateral decisions can be made about the strait and that Malaysia is on the same page with Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand, and they conduct joint patrols to ensure the waterway remains open.


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