GLOBAL SHOCK: $200 Billion Canal Could End Iran’s Grip on World Oil — A Strategic Earthquake Unfolds
In a development that could permanently reshape global energy and geopolitical power, senior officials in the United Arab Emirates have confirmed that plans for a massive ship canal—capable of bypassing the Strait of Hormuz entirely—are now under serious consideration. Once dismissed as an unrealistic megaproject, the proposal has returned with urgency after recent events exposed just how fragile the world’s most critical oil chokepoint truly is.
For decades, the Strait of Hormuz—a narrow 21-nautical-mile corridor—has carried roughly 20% of the world’s oil supply, along with vast volumes of liquefied natural gas, diesel, and jet fuel. It has long been considered the single most important artery in the global energy system. But in the wake of escalating conflict and Iran’s ability to effectively shut down passage through the strait without deploying a conventional navy, that assumption has been shattered.
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A Crisis That Changed Everything
The turning point came on February 28, 2026, during what analysts are calling Operation Epic Fury—a massive military campaign that crippled Iran’s conventional naval capabilities. Despite the destruction of warships, missile systems, and radar networks, the Strait of Hormuz remains closed.
Why?
Because closing Hormuz does not require dominance—it requires uncertainty.
Naval mines, hidden missile launchers, fast attack boats concealed along rugged coastlines, and the ever-present threat of a single catastrophic strike have created a situation where no insurance company will cover vessels attempting transit. Without insurance, ships cannot sail. Without ships, oil does not move.
The result: over 150 tankers stranded, global oil prices surging past $100 per barrel, and an estimated $1.6 billion in daily economic losses worldwide.
Ironically, Iran—despite suffering heavy military losses—is reportedly generating $140 million per day, capitalizing on the very disruption it helped create.
The Harsh Reality: There Is No Backup Plan
Efforts to bypass Hormuz already exist—but they are nowhere near sufficient.
The UAE’s Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline (ADCOP), along with Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline, can collectively transport only about 5.5 million barrels per day—a fraction of the 20 million barrels that normally flow through Hormuz. That leaves a staggering gap of 14.5 million barrels per day with no viable route to market.
Worse still, early in the conflict, Iran targeted key alternative routes. Drone strikes hit critical infrastructure in Oman, major ports fell into high-risk insurance zones, and GPS jamming disrupted maritime navigation across the Gulf.
In effect, Iran didn’t just close the front door—it systematically destroyed every available exit.
The Canal That Could Change the Game
Now, Gulf leaders are revisiting a bold and controversial idea first proposed in 2008: a ship canal carved through the Musandam Peninsula, linking the Persian Gulf directly to the Gulf of Oman—entirely outside Iranian waters.
At its narrowest point, the land separating the two bodies of water is just 24 miles wide.
The proposed canal would be:
150 meters wide
25 meters deep
Capable of handling the world’s largest supertankers (VLCCs)
But the engineering challenge is immense. The terrain rises to 700 meters above sea level, requiring excavation on a scale that dwarfs even the Suez Canal.
Estimated cost: $200 billion.
Yet here’s the staggering calculation:
At current loss rates, the global economy is bleeding $1.6 billion per day. That means the canal could theoretically pay for itself in just 125 days.
Not years. Months.

More Than Infrastructure—A Strategic Revolution
This canal is not just about oil.
It is about power.
For over 40 years, Iran’s greatest strategic weapon has not been its military or nuclear ambitions—it has been geography. The ability to threaten a narrow waterway through which a fifth of the world’s energy supply flows has given Tehran disproportionate influence on the global stage.
A functioning canal would erase that leverage permanently.
No more threats to close Hormuz
No more oil shock blackmail
No more strategic chokehold over global energy markets
Future negotiations, sanctions, and conflicts would unfold without Iran holding its most powerful card.
But There Are Risks
The canal is not a short-term solution. Experts estimate 5 to 7 years for completion, assuming immediate approval and uninterrupted construction.
It also comes with vulnerabilities:
Construction sites could become military targets
Entry and exit points may still fall within missile range
LNG transport would require additional specialized infrastructure
Meanwhile, the current crisis continues. Tankers remain stranded. Energy markets remain volatile. And military efforts to reopen Hormuz are ongoing—but incomplete.
A Defining Moment in Global Strategy
The United States and its allies may solve the immediate problem through military force. But as recent events have proven, even overwhelming firepower cannot eliminate uncertainty entirely.
The canal represents something different.
Not a battle.
A bypass.
Not a temporary fix.
A permanent solution.
As one regional strategist put it:
“America is solving today. The UAE is solving forever.”
If built, this canal would transform one of the most strategically vital waterways in human history into something almost irrelevant—a relic of a past where geography dictated power.
Now, engineering may rewrite that equation for good.
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