M A Hossain,
For decades, the Strait of Hormuz has been treated as a narrow stretch of water with outsized geopolitical importance. Yet the latest regional security shocks have exposed a deeper reality. Hormuz is not simply an oil chokepoint; it is the foundation upon which the modern economies of the Gulf were built. Every major disruption—whether military confrontation, sanctions, or maritime tension—reminds Gulf leaders that their prosperity depends on a maritime passage they neither fully control nor can easily replace.
That realization has triggered one of the most ambitious infrastructure races in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia is expanding east-west pipelines and railway networks. The United Arab Emirates is strengthening ports outside the Strait and building new export pipelines. Oman seeks to transform itself into an alternative logistics gateway linking the Arabian Sea with global markets. On paper, these projects promise resilience. In reality, they reveal something more profound: geography cannot be defeated by engineering alone.
History offers a useful lesson. Great powers have always sought to reduce dependence on strategic chokepoints. Britain protected the Suez Canal because its empire depended on it. The United States invested heavily in the Panama Canal and later secured freedom of navigation across vital sea lanes. China now spends billions developing the Belt and Road Initiative partly to reduce vulnerability to the Malacca Strait. The Gulf monarchies are following the same historical pattern. They are attempting to diversify strategic risk rather than eliminate it.
The numbers explain why the urgency is real. Roughly one-fifth of globally traded crude oil and a significant share of liquefied natural gas exports traditionally move through the Strait of Hormuz. Qatar, one of the world's largest LNG exporters, relies almost entirely on this maritime corridor. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, Bahrain, and Iran all depend heavily on it. A prolonged disruption would affect not only energy markets but also food imports, industrial equipment, pharmaceuticals, and consumer goods throughout the Gulf.
Saudi Arabia possesses perhaps the strongest geographical advantage among Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) members. Its East-West Pipeline, stretching from oil fields in the Eastern Province to Yanbu on the Red Sea, provides an alternative export route that bypasses Hormuz altogether. Riyadh is now accelerating additional pipelines, rail projects, highways, and logistics hubs under its broader Vision 2030 agenda. These investments are not merely economic modernization; they represent an insurance policy against geopolitical uncertainty.
The UAE has adopted a different but equally pragmatic strategy. While Dubai's Jebel Ali and Abu Dhabi's Khalifa Port remain vulnerable to any disruption inside the Gulf, Fujairah and Khor Fakkan provide valuable access to the Gulf of Oman outside the Strait. Expanding pipeline capacity toward Fujairah could significantly increase the country's ability to export crude even during maritime crises. Nevertheless, geography imposes stubborn constraints. The Hajar Mountains separate the eastern coast from the country's principal commercial centers, making logistics slower and more expensive than traditional Gulf ports.
Oman occupies an even more intriguing position. Unlike most of its neighbors, Muscat enjoys direct access to the Arabian Sea without depending on Hormuz. Ports such as Duqm, Sohar, Salalah, and Muscat are increasingly viewed as strategic alternatives for regional shipping. Duqm, in particular, has attracted considerable international investment as both an industrial and logistics hub. Yet Oman faces a familiar challenge: strategic location alone cannot substitute for financial resources. Compared with Saudi Arabia or the UAE, Muscat's fiscal capacity remains limited.
The larger question, however, is whether these projects can truly replace Hormuz. The answer is almost certainly no.
Pipelines carry only specific commodities. Railways and highways cannot replicate the sheer volume and efficiency of maritime shipping. Even if every announced project were completed on schedule, their combined capacity would still fall well short of replacing the commercial traffic that normally transits the Strait. Geography continues to impose hard limits that even vast financial resources cannot erase.
There is another obstacle that receives less attention but may prove even more consequential: politics.
The Gulf states frequently speak about regional integration, yet their recent history tells a more complicated story. The GCC has existed for more than four decades, but genuine economic integration remains incomplete. Plans for a common currency never materialized. Customs arrangements continue to include exceptions. Security cooperation often gives way to national priorities.
The 2017-2021 blockade of Qatar illustrated how infrastructure itself can become a geopolitical weapon. Airspace, shipping routes, and land borders were abruptly closed among countries that supposedly belonged to the same regional bloc. For smaller states like Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain, this experience fundamentally changed strategic thinking. Alternative pipelines or railways crossing neighboring territory may reduce dependence on Hormuz, but they could simultaneously create new forms of political dependence on larger neighbors.
History again reinforces this caution. Europe's energy relationship with Russia appeared commercially rational for decades. Yet the Ukraine war demonstrated how economic interdependence can quickly become geopolitical leverage. Gulf policymakers have drawn similar conclusions. Diversification must reduce both geographical vulnerability and political vulnerability.
This explains why national projects are advancing faster than multinational corridors. Saudi Arabia prefers infrastructure under Saudi control. The UAE prioritizes Emirati facilities. Oman focuses on domestic port development. Cross-border megaprojects connecting Iraq, Turkey, Jordan, Syria, or India remain strategically attractive but politically fragile.
The proposed Iraq-Turkey logistics corridor illustrates both promise and peril. If completed, it could provide Gulf exporters with direct overland access to Europe. Yet Iraq continues to struggle with institutional weakness, competing militia influence, infrastructure deficiencies, and political instability. Infrastructure corridors require predictable governance as much as engineering expertise.
Similarly, proposals to revive the historic Hejaz Railway appeal to regional imagination. Once connecting Istanbul to the holy cities, it symbolizes an era of greater regional connectivity. But symbolism cannot overcome technical realities. Different rail gauges, outdated infrastructure, financing challenges, and uncertain commercial demand make revival extraordinarily difficult. Prestige alone rarely sustains billion-dollar infrastructure.
Nor can technology completely rewrite geography. Even ambitious proposals such as India-UAE undersea pipelines or Mediterranean export corridors remain constrained by political disputes, financial uncertainty, and shifting strategic calculations. Infrastructure may reduce exposure to Hormuz, but it cannot eliminate the Strait's enduring strategic significance.
The broader lesson extends well beyond the Gulf. Modern globalization rests upon a surprisingly small number of vulnerable chokepoints—Hormuz, Bab el-Mandeb, the Suez Canal, the Panama Canal, and the Strait of Malacca. As geopolitical rivalry intensifies, governments increasingly view supply-chain resilience as a matter of national security rather than simple commercial efficiency. Redundancy has become the new strategic doctrine.
For the Gulf states, therefore, the infrastructure boom should not be misunderstood as an attempt to replace the Strait of Hormuz. It is instead a recognition that resilience matters more than perfection. Pipelines, ports, railways, and logistics corridors will never entirely substitute for the world's most important energy gateway. What they can do is provide governments with precious strategic flexibility during moments of crisis.
Ultimately, geography still writes the first draft of geopolitics. Wealth can finance alternatives. Technology can improve efficiency. Diplomacy can reduce tensions. But none of them can repeal the realities imposed by maps. The Gulf's infrastructure revolution is not a checkmate against Iran or a permanent escape from Hormuz. It is a sophisticated effort to buy time, distribute risk, and ensure that when the next crisis arrives—as history suggests it inevitably will—the region is no longer dependent on a single narrow passage for its economic survival.
This article published at :
1. Business Today, Malaysia : 11 July, 26
2. Nepal Today, np: 11 July, 26
3. European Times, EU : 11 July, 26