The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway through which a fifth of the world’s oil passes, remains effectively blocked by Iranian forces. British tankers, long accustomed to navigating these waters, now steer clear. Here are three reasons why.
First, the overt threat of seizure. Iran has demonstrated its willingness to detain vessels, citing maritime law violations that are often thinly veiled. The tanker Stena Impero was seized in 2019 and held for two months, a stark reminder of the risks. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has deployed fast attack craft and naval mines, creating a volatile environment where a routine transit could escalate into a diplomatic crisis. For British operators, the calculus is simple: the insurance premiums alone make the route commercially unviable.
Second, the erosion of naval deterrence. The UK’s Royal Navy presence in the Gulf has shrunk relative to the threat. A single frigate or destroyer cannot guarantee safe passage for every vessel, especially when Iran’s asymmetric tactics involve swarms of small boats and shore-based anti-ship missiles. The US-led coalition, while capable, has not restored the aura of invincibility that once allowed tankers to pass with impunity. Without a credible show of force, British tankers rely on diplomatic assurances, which in Tehran’s view are worth little more than the paper they are written on.
Third, the economic and reputational cost. A ship carrying crude oil is not just a commodity; it is a floating National Insurance policy. Any incident in the Strait would trigger massive legal liabilities, cleanup costs, and a PR disaster for the shipping company. The UK’s post-Brexit trade ambitions rely on predictable supply chains, and the Strait’s unpredictability makes it a liability. Investors now ask whether the risk-adjusted return of transiting Hormuz justifies the premium. For most, the answer is no.
Meanwhile, ships fly flags of convenience, register in Panama or Liberia, and hedge their bets with Iranian petrodollars. But for British tankers, the Strait remains a digital cordon sanitaire, drawn not by algorithm but by the old-fashioned calculus of guns and dollars. Until the IRGC changes its playbook or a new coalition emerges, the waterway will stay hostile. The user experience of the global oil trade, once seamless, is now fractured by the reality of asymmetric power.
A technology optimist might hope for satellite tracking and blockchain insurance to solve this. But no quantum algorithm can negotiate with a speedboat full of armed men. The Strait of Hormuz is a reminder that digital sovereignty begins with physical security. Until that shifts, British tankers will remain in safer waters.








