Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
22MAY

COSCO ships pay IRGC toll at Hormuz

3 min read
11:08UTC

Two COSCO container vessels completed the Strait transit on their second attempt, normalising Iran's toll corridor at the container shipping level.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

China is helping normalise Iran's Hormuz toll by paying it with state-backed ships.

Two COSCO container ships, the CSCL Indian Ocean and CSCL Arctic Ocean, transited the Strait of Hormuz on 30 March. 1 They are the first container vessels operated by a major state-backed Chinese company to cross since the war began. An earlier attempt on 27 March was aborted with a U-turn near Iranian waters; the successful crossing took roughly 12 hours via Larak and Qeshm islands.

Container traffic matters differently from tanker traffic. Tankers moved through Hormuz under shadow-fleet arrangements and favoured-nation exemptions. Container ships carry manufactured goods, consumer products, and supply chain inputs. Their passage signals the IRGC's toll corridor is expanding beyond crude oil into general commerce. NBC News and Lloyd's List confirmed at least two vessels paid the IRGC approximately $2 million each to transit. 2 More than 20 vessels have used the tolled corridor since it opened.

The aborted 27 March attempt followed by success three days later suggests terms were negotiated in the interval, likely between Beijing and the IRGC directly. China is operationalising the toll at the container level, a step beyond tanker exemptions. For consumers beyond The Gulf, the toll will eventually surface not just in petrol prices but in the cost of electronics, clothing, and anything else that crosses the Indian Ocean.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Strait of Hormuz is the world's most important oil passage. Since the war began, Iran has been charging ships a toll to cross it, roughly $2 million per vessel. Two large Chinese state-owned ships crossed on 30 March after paying the toll. This matters because China is the world's largest trading nation. When Chinese state companies pay the toll, they signal to every other country that the toll is legitimate and here to stay. Iran's parliament is now drafting a law to make the toll permanent. The Strait went from a free international waterway to a paid checkpoint in 32 days. That cost eventually reaches consumers as higher prices on petrol, electronics, and imported goods.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

China's supply chains depend on cross-Hormuz shipping for oil imports and Indian Ocean container transit. The two COSCO ships represent a pragmatic decision that the cost of continued blockage exceeds the political cost of paying the toll.

Beijing has leveraged its position as Iran's largest trading partner and diplomatic backer to secure transit. The aborted 27 March attempt followed by success three days later suggests direct negotiation between Chinese officials and the IRGC in the intervening period. China is operationalising its neutrality as commercial access, not political endorsement.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    China's state-backed commercial participation legitimises the toll system, making it far harder for any future administration to demand its removal as a non-negotiable condition.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Consequence

    The toll corridor expanding from tankers to container shipping embeds the cost into consumer goods prices globally within weeks.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Precedent

    First instance of a major state-backed shipping operator paying an IRGC-operated toll, establishing the system as commercially viable and diplomatically tolerated.

    Medium term · 0.9
  • Risk

    Once codified in Iranian domestic law, reversing the toll requires a sovereignty concession no Iranian government can make without domestic political destruction.

    Long term · 0.8
First Reported In

Update #53 · Trump drops Hormuz goal; toll becomes law

gCaptain / Bloomberg· 31 Mar 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Islamabad (Pakistan Armed Forces and Foreign Ministry)
Islamabad (Pakistan Armed Forces and Foreign Ministry)
Munir's cancellation reflects Islamabad's assessment that no bridging formula survives the collision of Khamenei's uranium directive, Rubio's Hormuz red line, and the sequencing gap simultaneously; Naqvi's relay role signals continued Pakistani engagement without a mandate to close any of the three gaps.
Lloyd's of London war-risk market
Lloyd's of London war-risk market
Published PGSA coordinates give underwriters the cartographic input to model tanker route exposure inside the claimed zone; OFAC's Sunday GL V ruling determines whether Hengli-Singapore dollar-clearing routes carry secondary-sanctions risk from Monday, adding a compliance layer to the existing kinetic war-risk premium.
Hengaw Human Rights Organisation
Hengaw Human Rights Organisation
Zaleh's trial lasted 'only a few minutes' before a conviction on PDKI membership charges at Naqadeh; the pattern of solitary detention, coerced confession, and minutes-long hearing is consistent with wartime political-charge architecture the organisation has documented across the Kurdish northwest.
Gulf Arab states (UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait)
Gulf Arab states (UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait)
The UAE has not published counter-coordinates to the PGSA's Hormuz zone map, leaving Emirati silence as the maritime-law response to Iran's charted boundary claim. Abu Dhabi's published position now defaults by omission toward implied acceptance of the zone's cartographic fact.
Beijing's Ministry of Commerce
Beijing's Ministry of Commerce
MOFCOM's blocking order covers Hengli and four other designated refineries on the mainland but does not extend to the dollar-clearing layer in Singapore, making Sunday's GL V expiry the first live test of whether Beijing's sanctions-defiance architecture reaches the place where dollars settle.
The White House
The White House
Trump's verbal track on Iran has produced no signed Iran-specific presidential instrument across 84 days; both financial-sector EOs signed on 19 May are unrelated to Hormuz or the IRGC. Rubio's public naming of the Hormuz toll architecture as a deal-killer is the administration's most concrete new position this week.