China and Maritime Chokepoints: Hormuz, Malacca, and Indo-Pacific Vulnerability

Disruptions in Hormuz immediately generate concern regarding Malacca, another vital maritime chokepoint.

The Diplomat
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China and Maritime Chokepoints: Hormuz, Malacca, and Indo-Pacific Vulnerability

The Strait of Hormuz became a focal point of recurring regional tensions and broader power struggles following United States and Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28 and beyond. Heightened Iranian restrictions on shipping and Tehran’s blockade of the waterway have renewed global concern over strategic maritime chokepoints, shifting analytical and policy attention toward other critical corridors, including the Strait of Malacca. 

While the Strait of Hormuz is indispensable to global energy trade as a conduit for key commodities – most notably oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) – the Strait of Malacca links the Indian and Pacific Oceans and functions as the principal maritime corridor connecting the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia.

The two straits function as critical arteries of the global maritime economy, but they are not structurally identical chokepoints. Hormuz functions mainly as a supply-concentrated energy chokepoint, through which a large proportion of global oil and LNG exports are physically concentrated. By contrast, Malacca functions as a network-dependent systemic trade chokepoint, embedded within dense manufacturing, logistics, and supply-chain interdependencies across East Asia and beyond. Disruptions in Hormuz therefore tend to produce immediate energy-price effects, whereas disruptions in Malacca are more likely to generate cascading systemic effects across both energy and industrial supply chains.

Disruptions in Hormuz immediately generate concern regarding Malacca, given that energy flows originating in the Persian Gulf continue through Southeast Asia toward major markets such as China, Japan, and South Korea, as well as other emerging and industrializing economies in Asia. Approximately 23 million barrels of oil transit the Strait of Malacca each day, with roughly four-fifths of China’s imported oil moving along this route. This interdependence calls attention to globalization’s reliance on secure maritime shipping lanes, a structural condition that is unlikely to materially change in the foreseeable future.

Following Iran’s blockade of Hormuz and the subsequent so-called “double blockade” by both Iran and the U.S., daily shipping traffic through the strait reportedly fell from approximately 130-140 vessels to 5-10. Overall traffic declined to around 5 percent of pre-conflict levels by the end of April and is estimated to have fallen below 4 percent in subsequent assessments.

Despite overwhelming U.S. military superiority, normal shipping conditions were not restored owing to broader regional constraints and operational limitations. As vessels accumulated on both sides of the strait awaiting safe passage, the crisis increasingly exposed the fragility of the wider maritime trading system.

The Strait of Malacca, situated between Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore, functions as one of the world’s busiest shipping corridors and a critical conduit for energy exports from the Persian Gulf to East Asia. Its strategic significance, however, extends well beyond hydrocarbons. Manufactured goods, electronics, food supplies, and raw materials flow through the strait in vast quantities, embedding it deeply within global production and consumption networks. Consequently, a disruption in Malacca could generate economic consequences broader in scope than those associated with Hormuz, reflecting its dual role in linking both energy flows and global manufacturing supply chains.

Alternative Routes and Southeast Asian Vulnerabilities

Narrowing to about 2.7-3 km at its tightest point near the Phillips Channel between Singapore and Indonesia, the Strait of Malacca foregrounds the fragility of global maritime trade. Any disruption or closure of the waterway would carry significant consequences. Unlike overland transportation networks, maritime shipping depends on a limited number of narrow chokepoints that are difficult to substitute. If the Strait of Malacca becomes impassable, the 200 to 300 vessels that transit it daily, amounting to more than 90,000 annually, will have to reroute through alternative passages, notably the Lombok, Sunda, and Makassar Straits in the Indonesian archipelago.

These routes are strategically significant in their own right. The Lombok Strait, located between Bali and Lombok, is sufficiently deep to accommodate large supertankers and naval vessels that may struggle to transit Malacca. The Sunda Strait, positioned between Java and Sumatra, offers an alternative corridor, although its shallow sections and complex geography reduce navigational efficiency. The Makassar Strait, running between Borneo and Sulawesi, connects to the Lombok route and functions as a key secondary maritime corridor.

Although these alternatives could partially absorb redirected traffic, they are substantially longer. Rerouting through these waterways raises concerns about congestion and potential logistical bottlenecks. Such diversions increase fuel consumption, insurance premiums, transit times, and overall operational costs, as demonstrated during the Bab el-Mandeb disruptions in late 2023, while placing additional strain on regional maritime infrastructure and naval security systems.

For Southeast Asian states, the risks are particularly acute. Indonesia occupies a uniquely strategic position, as many alternative maritime corridors pass through waters under its jurisdiction. A disruption in Malacca would redirect traffic through the Lombok and Sunda Straits, potentially enhancing Indonesia’s geopolitical leverage and increasing maritime revenues, while also intensifying political and economic pressures associated with its role as more than a littoral state hosting key waterways. Indonesia’s manufacturing sector is likewise dependent on the uninterrupted flow of strategic components for export-orientated industries. Rerouted shipments increase port congestion, raise freight rates, extend production delays, and exacerbate customs processing backlogs.

Mounting security pressures would likely follow as well. Increased traffic volumes elevate risks of piracy, human trafficking, smuggling, illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing, and maritime accidents, while placing additional strain on Indonesia’s navy and coast guard. Against this backdrop of heightened operational and security pressures, debates over the governance of maritime traffic have also become more politically sensitive. 

The Indonesian government recently attracted attention and criticism following remarks suggesting a potential toll or tax on shipping passing through the Strait of Malacca, although the Finance and Foreign Ministries later clarified that Jakarta has no plans to impose such a levy. Singapore’s Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan rejected the proposal, stressing that passage through the straits must remain open and free for all users.

Malaysia would also experience significant economic and strategic repercussions from a Malacca closure. Azmi Hassan of Malaysia’s Akademi Nusantara has argued that the “Straits of Malacca and the South China Sea are much more important and critical compared to the Strait of Hormuz.” 

Malaysia’s ports and export-orientated industries are deeply integrated into regional maritime trade networks. Any disruption to shipping through Malacca would reduce commercial activity, strain logistics sectors, and increase import costs. A Malacca chokepoint crisis is likely to generate higher domestic electricity bills, rising transportation costs, and surging prices for fertilizers and food for the country. 

More broadly, tensions surrounding the strait have the potential to intensify competition among regional and extra-regional powers, forcing Southeast Asian governments to balance economic imperatives against mounting geopolitical pressures. Southeast Asia is important not just because of its location, but also because it is becoming a key area in the larger struggle for control over sea routes, economic safety, and the changing balance of power in the Indo-Pacific region.

China’s “Malacca Dilemma”

China is among the most exposed to the strategic vulnerability of the Strait of Malacca. As the world’s second-largest oil consumer and a country surrounded by maritime chokepoints, China imports well over 11 million barrels of oil per day and consumes around 16 million barrels daily – more than three times India’s consumption and over 50 percent more than that of the European Union (EU). As a result, China is heavily dependent on energy shipments from the Middle East and Africa, much of which must transit the Strait of Malacca.

Chinese leaders have long viewed this dependence as a major strategic liability, leading Chinese President Hu Jintao to coin the term “Malacca Dilemma” in 2003. Beijing fears that hostile powers could exploit its reliance on maritime trade routes during a crisis, thereby threatening both economic stability and national security. 

A closure of the Strait of Malacca would have severe consequences for the Chinese economy. Energy shortages would emerge rapidly, given the dependence of Chinese industry, transport systems, and urban centers on imported oil and natural gas. Manufacturing exports, central to China’s economic model, would also suffer from shipping delays and disruptions in raw material supplies. These effects would extend beyond China due to its central role in global supply chains, as economies dependent on Chinese manufacturing and trade would also face shortages, inflationary pressures, and broader economic disruption. Rerouting vessels through the Lombok or Makassar Straits would further burden Chinese trade flows due to increased distance and higher operational costs.

Although the United States does not physically control the Strait of Malacca, its naval capabilities and extensive alliance network across the Indo-Pacific provide considerable influence over surrounding maritime routes. In a scenario involving Taiwan, the South China Sea, or broader China-U.S. rivalry, Washington and its allies could theoretically seek to restrict Chinese shipping through key chokepoints. The strategic logic underpinning such a scenario is straightforward: China’s economy remains heavily dependent on maritime imports and exports for its continued functioning. Any interruption to these flows would result in significant energy and trade shocks. Maritime vulnerability therefore represents not merely a logistical challenge but a core national security concern.

Historically, naval powers have relied on blockades and maritime dominance to weaken adversaries. Many analysts argue that the Strait of Malacca would become a key theater in a China-U.S. confrontation, as control over sea lanes translates directly into economic leverage and coercive capacity. However, attempts to restrict China’s access to Malacca would carry substantial risks. Given China’s central role in global trade and manufacturing, major disruptions would reverberate across the international economy. Regional states such as Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore would face intense pressure, as they depend heavily on open maritime commerce while seeking to avoid becoming entangled in great-power rivalry.

China’s awareness of these vulnerabilities has informed a range of strategic initiatives. Beijing has invested heavily in naval modernization, overseas port infrastructure, and overland connectivity projects linked to the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). It has also developed alternative transport corridors through Pakistan, notably via the deep-sea port at Gwadar, and through Myanmar, including the Kyaukphyu deep-sea port and the Muse-Mandalay railway. 

In parallel, China continues to expand rail connectivity across Eurasia. Following disruptions in Hormuz, it increasingly relied on rail links connecting it to Iran via Kazakhstan, established in 2025. However, overland transport cannot fully substitute for maritime trade, as rail networks lack the capacity to absorb large-scale commercial shipping volumes. These initiatives therefore mitigate, but do not eliminate, China’s structural dependence on vulnerable maritime chokepoints.

At its core, the “Malacca Dilemma” is emblematic of broader strategic competition in the Indo-Pacific in the 21st century. It reflects the evolving relationship between maritime access, geopolitical influence, and the balance of power in the international system. In an increasingly interconnected global economy, however, the Malacca Dilemma is no longer solely China’s strategic predicament but one that implicates multiple actors and stakeholders dependent on the security of the Strait of Malacca and broader Indo-Pacific sea lanes.

Maritime Security and the Future of Indo-Pacific Competition

Hormuz and Malacca underscore that maritime chokepoints lie at the center of contemporary global geopolitics. Disruptions in one amplify perceptions of vulnerability in others, a pattern increasingly evident in the shifting strategic focus from the Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb Strait to Hormuz and the Strait of Malacca. The global economy remains dependent on stable sea lanes; yet chokepoints such as Hormuz and Malacca illustrate how localized instability can generate systemic consequences, ranging from energy shocks and inflationary pressures to military escalation and supply-chain disruption.

For Southeast Asian states, this condition produces a persistent tension between economic opportunity and strategic vulnerability. Their geography confers systemic importance within global trade networks while simultaneously exposing them to the pressures of intensifying great-power rivalry. Small powers such as Singapore, alongside middle powers including Indonesia and Malaysia, are therefore likely to play an increasingly prominent role in the governance, security, and regulation of these maritime corridors, given their geographical position and strategic leverage over key passages.

For China, secure maritime access constitutes not only an economic imperative but also a foundation of political legitimacy and strategic influence, rendering uninterrupted sea-lane access central to its conception of national power. 

The growing significance of maritime chokepoints thus highlights that globalization remains fundamentally contingent on maritime security. As great power competition intensifies, contestation over vital waterways is likely to remain a defining strategic feature of the Indo-Pacific, extending from the Suez Canal and the Red Sea to the Strait of Malacca and beyond. Rather than functioning as neutral conduits of globalization, maritime chokepoints have become structural sites of geopolitical contestation that shape, rather than merely facilitate, the distribution of global power.

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