Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
13APR

PGSA goes live on Hormuz transit

3 min read
17:09UTC

Iran's Persian Gulf Strait Authority launched an official X account and a vessel-submission portal on 18 May, converting the Majlis-backed Hormuz toll from political signalling into an administrative interface ships must engage with.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's Hormuz toll moved from a slogan to a working permit office on 18 May.

Iran's Persian Gulf Strait Authority launched an official X account and a live vessel-submission portal on 18 May 2026, demanding ownership details, insurance, crew manifests, cargo declarations and routing for a transit permit through the Strait of Hormuz. Euronews reported the launch the same day 1. The body is IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps)-backed and answers to the Majlis, Iran's parliament. PGSA replaces a parliamentary mechanism Azizi posted as legislative intent two days earlier with a working administrative interface that ships now have to engage with one way or another.

the strait of Hormuz is the 33-km chokepoint through which roughly a fifth of seaborne oil moves each day. Permit systems there are not a matter of fee schedules alone; they reset who counts as the gatekeeper. Euronews relayed a market-reported figure of up to $2 million per transit in yuan-denominated fees 2, though PGSA has not published an official tariff. The absence of a public price list means insurance underwriters and tanker owners are bidding into a system whose terms are still being written by the office collecting them.

For the 26-nation coalition that signed the Hormuz joint statement on 12 May , the PGSA portal is the first hard test of UNCLOS Article 38 transit-passage rights against a sovereign administrative system. UNCLOS (UN Convention on the Law of the Sea) Article 38 protects freedom of transit through international straits, but it presumes the strait state is not running a permit office. Once a vessel registers with PGSA, even under protest, the coalition's legal frame stops being an open-seas argument and becomes a treaty dispute over a working bureaucracy.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran set up a new government body called the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) to control who passes through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which about 20% of the world's oil moves. For weeks the PGSA existed on paper only. On 18 May, it went live online: shipping companies can now submit their vessel's details and pay a fee of up to $2 million per trip, in Chinese yuan, to get a transit permit. Ships that file the paperwork are implicitly accepting Iran's right to charge. Ships that refuse must decide whether to risk the consequences. Neither option removes the legal dilemma the PGSA has created.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The PGSA's X-account launch rests on three structural conditions that no ceasefire automatically removes.

First, Iran never ratified the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). The transit-passage right that coalition planners invoke under UNCLOS Article 38 simply has no standing in Iranian domestic law, which Tehran updated in 2024 to assert jurisdiction over 'hostile-linked vessels' in what it terms Persian Gulf rather than international waters.

Second, the yuan-denominated payment rail routes outside the US dollar correspondent-banking system, creating a financial infrastructure whose utility to China, Russia, and sanctioned states predates and survives any Iran-specific political settlement.

Third, the PGSA emerged from a Majlis legislative mandate rather than an executive decree, giving it institutional depth that a presidential ceasefire commitment cannot unilaterally revoke without a parliamentary counter-vote.

Escalation

The PGSA going operational marks a qualitative step beyond political posturing: Iran now has an administrative interface that generates compliance dilemmas for every vessel, rather than a legislative threat that ships could ignore. Escalation risk comes not from the fee itself but from the first enforcement action against a vessel that refuses to file.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Shipping companies face an immediate compliance fork: file with PGSA and implicitly accept Iranian jurisdiction, or refuse and absorb unquantified transit risk.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Risk

    If even a handful of carriers pay the yuan toll, the payment rail becomes self-reinforcing and difficult to wind back in a ceasefire negotiation.

    Short term · 0.72
  • Precedent

    A functioning yuan-denominated strait-toll mechanism would represent the first major energy-chokepoint fee collected outside the US dollar system, with implications for renminbi internationalisation well beyond the Iran conflict.

    Long term · 0.65
First Reported In

Update #102 · Iran signs Hormuz toll; Trump posts a cancelled strike

Euronews· 19 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
ASML / European tech industry
ASML / European tech industry
ASML's Q2 2026 guidance came in €300m below consensus as China DUV revenue collapsed 17 percentage points; the company's CEO wrote US export-control outcomes directly into 2026 guidance. European tech firms named on the USTR retaliation list alongside SAP, Siemens and Spotify face the same calculus: US trade exposure constrains what Brussels can legislate on their behalf.
France / Anne Le Henanff
France / Anne Le Henanff
Le Henanff chaired the G7 Digital Ministerial at Bercy on 29 May with CAIDA off the agenda, pivoting France's presidency to AI safety principles it had not designed the week around. France backs CAIDA but cannot override Berlin's tariff calculus, so the ministerial produced no new French-led commitment.
Germany / Federal government
Germany / Federal government
Berlin's automotive sector faces up to $200bn in threatened US tariffs, a commercial exposure that dwarfs any benefit CAIDA's public-sector cloud rules would deliver to German digital firms. Federal silence inside the College of Commissioners functions as a block under consensus adoption rules without requiring a formal veto.
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
Puzder's public warning on 25 May that CAIDA is inconsistent with the EU-US trade framework was the first time Washington made its bilateral pressure visible before a Commission adoption vote rather than after. The USTR Section 301 determination on 24 July provides the enforcement backstop.
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
Virkkunen framed the third slip as a procedural delay in finalising a 400-page text without addressing Puzder's trade-framework red line publicly. The Commission enforces existing law against Google while losing the legislative timeline on CAIDA, exposing an asymmetric position: enforcement holds; new sovereignty legislation does not.
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
The EUR 350m Sovereign Tech Fund has no Commission host, no budget line, and no commissioner's name attached six weeks after the April conference, while Germany is already paying maintainers to staff international standards bodies. The CRA open-source guidance resolves contributor liability but leaves the financial-donations grey area open with the 11 September reporting clock running.