The South China Sea is entering a new phase of strategic competition. British naval patrols have intensified in the region, a direct response to what the Royal Navy describes as a ‘grab what you can’ dynamic among claimant states. This is not rhetoric. Data from the Automatic Identification System shows a 40% increase in military vessel traffic in the Spratly Islands since January 2023, with China, Vietnam, the Philippines, and Malaysia all accelerating construction on artificial features.
The physics of this competition are straightforward. The South China Sea holds an estimated 11 billion barrels of oil and 190 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in proven reserves. More critically, 40% of global liquefied natural gas trade transits its waters. The energy transition has not diminished the value of these resources; it has sharpened the focus on securing them during the decades-long pivot away from fossil fuels.
British involvement is part of a broader NATO-aligned posture. HMS Queen Elizabeth’s carrier strike group conducted exercises with the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force in October. The HMS Spey and HMS Tamar are now on rotational deployment, tracking Chinese naval movements. The legal framework remains the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which grants coastal states exclusive rights within their exclusive economic zones but requires freedom of navigation for all vessels. In practice, China’s nine-dash line claim encompasses over 80% of the sea, creating zones where Chinese coast guard vessels intercept Filipino fishing boats and survey ships.
The biosphere impact of this activity is measurable. Coral reefs in the Spratlys have suffered a 25% decline in live coral cover since 2015, directly correlated to dredging for airstrip construction. The carbon footprint of military patrols is non-trivial: a Type 052D destroyer burns roughly 1.5 tonnes of fuel per hour at cruising speed. But the larger climate consequence is the obstruction of renewable energy infrastructure. Offshore wind potential in the South China Sea exceeds 1,000 gigawatts, yet no utility-scale farms exist due to territorial disputes. Every year of delay locks in an equivalent of 200 million tonnes of CO2 from fossil fuel alternatives.
Technological solutions exist but require political will. Blockchain-based vessel tracking could provide transparent logging of fishing and military movements. Unmanned surface vessels could patrol at lower emissions. Yet these are stopgaps. The fundamental reality is that 11 billion barrels of oil are a carbon bomb that cannot be burned if we are to meet the Paris Agreement targets. The ‘grab what you can’ mentality is a tragedy of the commons playing out in real time.
The Royal Navy’s message is clear: freedom of navigation is non-negotiable. But freedom of navigation for whom? For energy markets that still depend on tanker routes? For marine scientists trying to study acidification? Or for the next generation who will inherit a sea emptied of fish and burdened by rising temperatures? The patrols are a symptom, not a solution. Until the underlying resource competition is addressed through multilateral agreement, the region will remain a pressure cooker with no release valve.
Data from the International Energy Agency shows that Southeast Asia’s energy demand is growing at 3% per year. Without a managed transition, the ‘grab’ will intensify. The temperature of the sea surface in the South China Sea has risen 0.8 degrees Celsius since 1900. That is not a statistic. That is the physical law that governs everything else.










