A classified intelligence assessment circulating within Whitehall has described the South China Sea as entering a ‘grab what you can’ phase of resource extraction, prompting the Royal Navy to reconsider its posture in the region. The report, seen by this correspondent, warns that overlapping territorial claims and the accelerating depletion of fish stocks are creating a volatile environment where diplomatic norms are being abandoned in favour of unilateral action. For a climate scientist accustomed to graphing exponential curves, this is a familiar pattern: the biosphere’s limits are being breached, and nations are reacting not with co-operation but with competitive escalation.
The South China Sea holds an estimated 11 billion barrels of oil and 190 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, alongside one of the world’s most productive fisheries, which supplies 40% of global catch. But overfishing has reduced stocks by 70% since the 1970s, and rising sea temperatures are shifting species distributions. The assessment notes that Chinese fishing vessels, often accompanied by coast guard cutters, have intensified harvests in waters claimed by Vietnam, the Philippines, and Malaysia, while Beijing’s artificial island construction continues to militarise the area. The British government’s concern is not abstract. The UK maintains a permanent naval presence in the Indo-Pacific through the Carrier Strike Group and the Littoral Response Group, and the recent deployment of HMS Tamar and HMS Spey to the region reflects a commitment to freedom of navigation. But the intelligence report argues that the current trajectory makes armed confrontation a question of when, not if.
The physics of the situation is straightforward. Energy transitions take decades, but the appetite for hydrocarbons remains insatiable. The South China Sea is a case study in what happens when natural capital is treated as a zero-sum game. The region’s coral reefs, which sustain fish populations, are bleaching at a rate of 80% per decade. As the resource base contracts, the incentive to grab before others increases. This is not geopolitics; it is thermodynamics. A system under stress seeks equilibrium through whatever channel offers least resistance, and in the South China Sea, that channel is often military.
The Royal Navy’s concern is partly about protecting British shipping, which transits the sea in vast numbers, and partly about the precedent set by resource wars. But there is a deeper anxiety: the UK’s own waters are not immune. The North Sea fisheries have collapsed, and the government’s net-zero targets require an energy transition that has barely begun. If the South China Sea descends into open conflict, it will mark a turning point in how nations respond to environmental scarcity. The intelligence report recommends enhanced surveillance and diplomatic pressure, but it also acknowledges that the ‘grab what you can’ mentality is a rational response to an irrational system. The biosphere does not negotiate. It simply presents the bill, and the South China Sea is where the interest is due.
For a brief moment, the notion of a global commons seemed possible. The Paris Agreement, the Law of the Sea, and the Convention on Biological Diversity were attempts to regulate shared resources. But as the physical reality of a warming planet sets in, those agreements are looking like parchment barriers against a flood. The South China Sea is not a problem to be solved; it is a symptom of a civilisation that has exceeded its ecological carrying capacity. The Royal Navy’s concern is legitimate, but it is a concern about the consequences, not the cause. Until we address the underlying physics of growth on a finite planet, the ‘grab what you can’ strategy will remain the dominant logic. And the fish, the coral, and the climate will continue to send their stark signals. The only question is whether we listen before the next grab turns the signal into a silence.








