• About Us
  • Our Editorial Policy
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise with Us
  • Our Advertisers
  • Contact Us
Australia India News
India News Australia
  • Home
  • Current Issue
    Past Issue
  • India News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • World
    World This Week
  • Community News
  • What's On
  • Others
    Yoga in Australia News COVID-19 Community News Naari IPL News Health Travel Entertainment
  • Migrants Expo
  • National Events
  • Please wait..
Business and Trade news

Chokepoints emerging as new hurdle for global trade flows: Report

  • BY India News Newsdesk
  • May 21, 2026
  • 0 COMMENTS

New Delhi, May 21 (IANS) After Iran demonstrated that it can exploit its geographical advantage to use the Strait of Hormuz as a chokepoint and monetise transit through the narrow waterway by charging a fee on ships, the trend appears to be spreading, with Indonesia sending a signal that it is contemplating similar steps to raise revenue from the Strait of Malacca.

Critical sea trade passages are no longer deemed safe and neutral. Instead, they are increasingly viewed as assets that can be regulated, priced, or leveraged, according to an article in India Narrative.

About 50 per cent of India’s crude and almost 90 per cent of its LPG and LNG imports pass through Hormuz, making it India’s single biggest energy vulnerability. Since the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, India has been routing 70 per cent of its crude imports via alternative, longer sea routes (the Arctic and the Baltic). This includes West African and Russian crude. But this will be economically unsustainable in the long run, the article points out.

India has a large exposure to Malacca-linked trade. While India’s crude imports are not heavily dependent on Malacca, more than a third of its global trade, especially with Southeast Asia, transits through this strait. Malacca is India’s trade artery, while Hormuz is its energy lifeline.

If transit through critical trade corridors such as Hormuz and Malacca is subject to taxes or regulatory control, the impact on a country’s economy is not marginal, but systemic. Not only will costs rise with such unpredictability, but exposure to political decisions beyond India’s control is bound to increase. Transit itself becomes subject to political and economic negotiation, the article observes.

India has begun making investments in port infrastructure, expansion of domestic refining capacity, and efforts to build strategic petroleum reserves, all of which contribute to resilience.

The development of island territories such as the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and proposals for a trans-shipment hub in Great Nicobar, offer additional strategic options. Their proximity to the western approaches of Malacca allows for better monitoring of maritime traffic and enhances India’s presence in a critical region.

The article points out that India could possibly reduce exposure to problematic choke-points by sourcing more oil from the West, Russia, and Africa. It can rely more on overland and multi-modal corridors and invest more in regional connectivity.

But the most sustainable response for India lies in reducing the share of energy that actually passes through long maritime routes. Development of domestic electrification of transport and expansion of renewable generation and non-fossil base-load capacity directly reduce exposure to choke-point risk and, crucially, convert external dependence into domestic capacity, the article explains.

Further, if India can bolster its buffer mechanisms and strategic reserves, it can at least provide better resilience against market volatility, even though powerless to handle transit constraints.

Indonesia’s position on the Strait of Malacca may or may not translate into near-term policy. Even so, it introduces a new layer of strategic risk. For India, responding to this requires more than incremental adjustments. It calls for a more integrated approach by linking energy planning with maritime strategy and economic policy with geopolitical assessment, the article added.

–IANS

sps/na

Post navigation

37 MP districts under severe heatwave alert; Khajuraho sizzles at 47.4 degrees
Ketan Kushwaha to lead Indian hockey men’s squad for U18 Asia Cup

Related Post

RBI likely to transfer Rs 3.5 lakh crore dividend to govt: Report
May 21, 2026
DRI busts vape smuggling racket, seizes Rs 120 crore worth e-cigarettes imported from China
May 21, 2026
India offers highest property yields in Asia Pacific region in Q1: Report
May 21, 2026
S. Korea to impose anti-dumping tariffs on PVC paste resin from 4 European countries
May 21, 2026

Our Current Issue

Australia IA – May 16-31, 2026

Alluring India 2026

Alluring India 2026

Our Advertisers

  • Battery Rebate australia
  • Bess Australia Solar Panels

Follow Us

  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
INDIA NEWS on YouTube in Australia, bring to our readers and subscribers national and international news, editorials, expert columns, community activities and interviews of political leaders, celebrities, business professionals, academics and sport personalities among others.
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook

Category

  • Accident
  • Adani Australia
  • Advertorial
  • Arts & Culture
  • Ashes 2022
  • Australia

Recent News

  • ‘Hallmark of a master’: Aakash Chopra lauds...
  • Falta repoll: 60.43 pc voting recorded in...

Subscribe Newsletter

Get the latest creative news from india news

  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer