Dubai Is Already Planning for the Next Strait of Hormuz Crisis

The Strait of Hormuz reopened less than a month ago, but Dubai is already planning for the next closure.

DP World is reportedly in talks to build a new multipurpose port and container terminal in Fujairah on the UAE’s east coast, creating another shipping route that avoids Hormuz altogether. According to the Financial Times, construction could take as little as 18 months. The company has acknowledged it is pursuing diversification projects to get through future disruptions.

That timeline says plenty. Ports are built to solve problems measured in decades, not weeks.

Jebel Ali handled the bulk of Dubai’s trade for years. During the Iran war, activity at the flagship port reportedly collapsed by as much as 95% after Tehran shut the Strait of Hormuz. Cargo shifted east to Fujairah and Khor Fakkan, where congestion quickly followed. DP World’s answer is to add entirely new capacity outside one of the world’s biggest maritime chokepoints.

The UAE has been making the same calculation across its energy business.

The country pumped a record 4.1 million barrels per day in June after leaving OPEC, pushed more crude exports through Fujairah, and accelerated plans for a second pipeline that will double export capacity from the emirate beginning next year. Every dollar flowing into Fujairah buys a little less dependence on a waterway that spent months proving how vulnerable it had become.

The rest of the Gulf appears to be reading from the same playbook. Gulftainer recently announced a $2 billion expansion at nearby Khor Fakkan. Fujairah already serves as one of the region’s largest bunkering hubs and crude storage centers. Every new berth, storage tank, and pipeline shifts a little more trade east of Hormuz.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Oil Prices Surge 8% After Trump Reimposes Iran Blockade

    Oil prices jumped more than 8% on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump announced the United States would reinstate its blockade on Iran, forcing traders to once again price in…

    China Cuts Saudi Crude Orders as Hormuz Risks and Discounts Reshape Trade

    Some Chinese refiners have not nominated term crude cargoes from Saudi Arabia for August, while others have not been allocated any term supply for next month, as weak demand in…

    Have You Seen?

    Dubai Is Already Planning for the Next Strait of Hormuz Crisis

    • July 14, 2026
    Dubai Is Already Planning for the Next Strait of Hormuz Crisis

    Oil Prices Surge 8% After Trump Reimposes Iran Blockade

    • July 14, 2026
    Oil Prices Surge 8% After Trump Reimposes Iran Blockade

    OPEC Cuts Demand Forecast Again as the Oil Market Starts Looking Past Hormuz

    • July 14, 2026
    OPEC Cuts Demand Forecast Again as the Oil Market Starts Looking Past Hormuz

    Oil Prices Have Jumped 12% Since Friday as War Risks Return

    • July 14, 2026
    Oil Prices Have Jumped 12% Since Friday as War Risks Return

    China’s Crude Oil Imports Crash to Decade Low as Hormuz Crisis Bites

    • July 14, 2026
    China’s Crude Oil Imports Crash to Decade Low as Hormuz Crisis Bites

    Iran Sneaks 12 Million Barrels Past Renewed U.S. Oil Blockade

    • July 14, 2026
    Iran Sneaks 12 Million Barrels Past Renewed U.S. Oil Blockade

    China Cuts Saudi Crude Orders as Hormuz Risks and Discounts Reshape Trade

    • July 14, 2026
    China Cuts Saudi Crude Orders as Hormuz Risks and Discounts Reshape Trade

    Escalations Damage Hormuz Media Narrative

    • July 14, 2026
    Escalations Damage Hormuz Media Narrative

    AI boom strengthens case for CO2 removal as Microsoft emissions rise 25%

    • July 14, 2026
    AI boom strengthens case for CO2 removal as Microsoft emissions rise 25%

    Green Energy Sector Shows Pockets Of Strength In Weak Market Session (14 July 2026)

    • July 14, 2026
    Green Energy Sector Shows Pockets Of Strength In Weak Market Session (14 July 2026)