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.
