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Ports and Maritime Organisation
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Ports and Maritime Organisation

Iran's civil maritime authority managing ports and vessel transit; operationally sidelined by the IRGC Navy since 2026.

Last refreshed: 17 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Will Iran's civil port authority regain transit control over Hormuz after a ceasefire?

Timeline for Ports and Maritime Organisation

#79 25 Apr

Received operational control of Chabahar as IPGL transferred its stake

Iran Conflict 2026: India hands Chabahar to Iran at Sunday midnight
#72 17 Apr

Designated coordinated transit routes for the opening window

Iran Conflict 2026: Hormuz opens then closes in 24 hours
View full timeline →

Background

Iran's Ports and Maritime Organisation (PMO) is the civil state body responsible for managing the country's ports, coastguard functions, and vessel transit administration. Founded in 1964 and subordinate to the Ministry of Roads and Urban Development, the PMO oversees nine major ports including Bandar Abbas, Shahid Rajaee, and Imam Khomeini, which together handle the bulk of Iran's non-oil and transit trade. In peacetime the PMO issues vessel transit permissions, coordinates with the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, and interfaces with international bodies including the IMO. It is Iran's principal interlocutor for port-state control matters and the signatory to international maritime conventions on Iran's behalf.

The PMO's civil authority operates through the Ministry hierarchy and is structurally distinct from the IRGC Navy, which is a military command reporting to the Supreme Leader. This institutional separation matters: the PMO can agree to international conventions, publish port-state procedures, and negotiate with shipping organisations in ways that military bodies cannot without framing them as security agreements. However, when the IRGC asserts control over a waterway, the PMO's nominal authority over vessel movements becomes non-operational. The PMO retains administrative functions inside port perimeters, but transit authority over contested straits shifts to the military chain.

Since the onset of the 2026 Hormuz conflict, the PMO's role over strait transits has been effectively superseded by the IRGC Navy and, from May 2026, by the newly created Persian Gulf Strait Authority. The PGSA, which sits under military command rather than the Ministry of Roads, assumed the transit registration function that would ordinarily fall to the PMO. The PMO continues to administer Iran's commercial ports and to receive port-state calls, but the strait transit regime is no longer within its operational perimeter.

Common Questions
Who controls the Strait of Hormuz - Iran's military or its port authority?
The IRGC Navy has held operational control of Hormuz since February 2026, effectively overriding the civilian Ports and Maritime Organisation.Source: Iran joint military command statements
What does Iran's Ports and Maritime Organisation do?
The PMO administers commercial ports, issues vessel transit permissions, and coordinates shipping for Iran's nine major ports including Bandar Abbas.
Which ships were allowed through Hormuz when it briefly opened?
Only one vessel, the Celestyal Discovery cruise ship, completed a transit during the 24-hour window on 17 April 2026.Source: Kpler/Windward
What is Iran's Ports and Maritime Organisation?
The PMO is Iran's civil state body for port management and maritime administration, founded in 1964 under the Ministry of Roads and Urban Development. It oversees nine major ports and manages vessel transit permissions in peacetime.Source: PMO
Who controls shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, Iran's ports authority or the IRGC?
In practice, the IRGC Navy holds operational control of the strait since the outbreak of hostilities in 2026. The civil Ports and Maritime Organisation retains administrative authority inside port perimeters but has no operational role in Hormuz transit decisions.Source: Iran Conflict 2026 coverage
What is the difference between Iran's PMO and the Persian Gulf Strait Authority?
The PMO is a civilian body under the Ministry of Roads; it manages commercial ports and represents Iran at the IMO. The Persian Gulf Strait Authority, created in May 2026, is a transit-fee body under military command that has assumed the strait transit registration function the PMO would normally hold.Source: Iran Conflict 2026 coverage
Does Iran's civil port authority have any say in Hormuz transit rules during the conflict?
No. The IRGC Navy and the PGSA make transit decisions. The PMO continues to administer commercial ports inside Iran, but the strait transit regime is outside its operational perimeter for the duration of the conflict.Source: Iran Conflict 2026 coverage