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Hormuz Strait Traffic Collapses as Iran Issues Territorial Waters Warning
By MGN Editorial•April 10, 2026 at 12:44 AM
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has warned commercial shipping to navigate through its territorial waters in the Strait of Hormuz, as vessel traffic plummeted to below 10% of normal volumes on Thursday.
A sharp escalation in the Strait of Hormuz has sent shockwaves through global maritime commerce, with traffic volumes collapsing to near-record lows as Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued new routing directives for vessels transiting one of the world's most critical chokepoints.
According to gCaptain, Thursday saw traffic through the Hormuz Strait drop well below 10% of normal volumes—a dramatic reduction that underscores heightened tensions in the Persian Gulf. The IRGC's warning directed ships to confine their passage to a route running through Iranian territorial waters, effectively centralizing control over traffic flows through the 21-mile-wide strait that serves as the gateway for approximately 20% of global crude oil exports.
## Operational Impact
The near-standstill conditions represent a critical disruption to international maritime operations. Shipping lines, insurance providers, and energy markets are closely monitoring developments, as extended delays at Hormuz can ripple through global supply chains and increase transportation costs substantially. Owners and operators face immediate decisions regarding vessel routing, insurance coverage adjustments, and crew management for vessels unable to transit expeditiously.
## Strategic Significance
The Strait of Hormuz remains the world's most important oil chokepoint, with approximately 21 million barrels per day of crude oil and liquefied natural gas passing through under normal conditions. Any disruption—whether from geopolitical tension, incident, or deliberate restriction—has immediate consequences for global energy markets and shipping economics.
Iran's territorial waters claim and the associated IRGC directive represent an attempt to assert greater control over passage through the strait. The warning to shipping follows a pattern of heightened assertions of authority in the region, complicating an already-tense maritime security environment.
## Industry Response
Maritime operators are monitoring the situation closely, with many evaluating alternative routing options, though few viable alternatives exist for traffic requiring direct Middle Eastern to Indian Ocean passage. Insurers are reassessing war risk premiums and underwriting standards for vessels transiting the region.
The dramatic reduction in traffic suggests vessel operators are exercising caution—potentially diverting shipments, delaying departures, or routing around the strait entirely via longer, costlier alternatives. This behavior typically indicates serious concern about passage safety or regulatory compliance with Iranian demands.
Geopolitical analysts note that such restrictions could trigger broader international response, particularly from naval powers with strategic interests in maintaining freedom of navigation through international waters.
#Strait of Hormuz#Iran#shipping routes#maritime security#geopolitical risk#maritime law#international waters
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