Connect with Zorays

Hi, what are you looking for?

Energy & Environment

The Strait of Hormuz Is Not Closed. It Is Becoming Uninsurable.

If the Strait of Hormuz becomes uninsurable, Pakistan’s oil bill, inflation and remittances face pressure. Here’s the real risk and rational response.

Oil tankers navigating the Strait of Hormuz amid rising geopolitical tensions and insurance risk.

Roughly 20 million barrels of oil pass daily through a 33-kilometer chokepoint between Iran and Oman. For Pakistan, 70%–80% of crude imports and a significant portion of LNG transit this corridor. That is not opinion. That is energy arithmetic.

But the real risk is not naval mines or missile strikes. It is insurance.

War-risk premiums spike before missiles land. Baseline war-risk insurance sits around 0.25% of hull value. A $100 million tanker equals $250,000 per voyage. In escalation phases, that number can approach $1 million per transit. When underwriters hesitate, shipping halts without a single shot fired.

Aircraft carriers cannot compel an insurer to rewrite a policy.

This is the transmission channel global investors misunderstand.


What Happens If Oil Spikes to $100–$120?

Pakistan’s 2024–25 energy import bill is approximately $12.7 billion. If Brent sustains $100–$120:

Scenario Additional Annual Cost Monthly Impact
+10% Oil <$2 billion ~$150 million
$100–120 Range Trade deficit widens materially FX pressure

This is uncomfortable. It is not existential.

Pakistan today enters this episode with:

• Positive real interest rates (~4%)
• IMF program discipline
• Lower import compression compared to past crises
• Remittance inflows near $2–3 billion monthly

The narrative that “Pakistan collapses immediately” is emotional, not analytical.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The Remittance Question

Millions of Pakistanis work in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. If Gulf economies slow due to aviation disruption, construction slowdown, or capital outflows, remittances could soften.

However, in the short term, high oil prices actually strengthen Gulf fiscal balances. That stabilizes host economies. Immediate remittance collapse is improbable unless conflict becomes prolonged and regionally destabilizing.

Markets price fear quickly. They do not always price duration accurately.

Pages: 1 2

Pages ( 1 of 2 ): 1 2Continue Analysis »
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement

Top
Index
Exit mobile version