On 17 April 2026, two signals arrived within hours of each other. President Trump said a deal with Tehran was close. A ten-day ceasefire took effect between Israel and Lebanon. Market commentary shifted overnight from “how high could Brent go?” to “how fast will it fall?” The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz in prospect is now a commercial premise rather than a distant hope.
This is genuinely good news. A reopened strait means LNG back into Asian gas markets, diesel back into European forecourts, fertilizer back into Northern Hemisphere soils before the planting season is lost, and hundreds of thousands of tonnes of stranded crude finally moving. Everybody wins when the world’s most important chokepoint works. Nobody reading this page, including the author, wanted the crisis to continue one day longer than necessary.
But reopening may not be a resolution. The thesis of this site since it was first published is that the Strait of Hormuz has never had a functioning chokepoint authority, and that the 2026 crisis is the most expensive proof of that absence in the seventy years since the Suez Canal Authority was founded. If the strait reopens via a bilateral US-Iran arrangement without a multilateral governance framework being institutionalized first, the underlying vulnerability returns unchanged. The next crisis will arrive on the same unpriced, ungoverned, unescorted waterway — and the only questions will be when, and how bad.
The historical record suggests there is a narrow window to prevent that outcome. It closes faster than most observers expect.
The 1957 precedent
The Suez Canal Authority that collects over nine billion dollars per year today did not exist in July 1956 when Gamal Abdel Nasser nationalized the canal. It did not exist during the Suez Crisis that followed. It did not exist in December 1956 when the fighting stopped. It did not exist in January 1957.
It came into being over the course of 1957 and 1958, during the reopening, as the canal was cleared of scuttled ships and returned to commercial service. The institutional design work — the rate-setting rules, the pilotage structure, the revenue allocation framework, the independence of the authority from Egyptian cabinet politics — was done in the narrow window between “the canal is physically passable again” and “everyone has returned to business as usual.” Once that window closed, the political momentum to build an authority would have dissipated. The world would have gone back to an ungoverned canal and waited for the next crisis.
The shipping industry understood this in 1957. Charterers, flag states, and P&I clubs had all spent the preceding year arranging Cape of Good Hope reroutes, paying war-risk premiums, and absorbing cargo-delay losses. They were not interested in doing it again. They pushed, collectively, for the institutional settlement that would make repetition less likely. That pressure is what produced the Suez Canal Authority in the form that has operated continuously for sixty-nine years.
The 2026 parallel is almost exact
Substitute the names and the dates and the pattern matches:
- A long-acknowledged chokepoint vulnerability ignored for decades.
- A geopolitical trigger that converts the vulnerability into a global economic crisis.
- Rerouting, premium spikes, demand destruction, and cascade failures across tangentially related markets (LNG, fertilizer, Asian petrochemicals).
- A multilateral coalition forming around the principle that governance of the waterway is a global responsibility rather than a bilateral one.
- A diplomatic track that credibly points toward reopening.
The one piece that distinguishes 1957 from 2026 is that the Suez Canal Authority was designed and built during that narrow reopening window. In 2026, the Paris Initiative for Maritime Navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is in its first week. Thirty nations have had one substantive meeting. A follow-up military planning summit is scheduled at Northwood next week. A draft charter has not been written. A funding model has not been agreed. A pilot rate schedule has not been published. The technical work exists — it is on this site, and in parallel work by the Suez Canal Authority and the Autoridad del Canal de Panamá — but the political work has barely started.
If the strait physically reopens before the political work is done, the institutional momentum collapses. Every chokepoint analyst, every underwriter, and every flag state knows this. The only question is whether the relevant decision-makers move fast enough to catch the window.
What a thirty-day action plan looks like
Three concrete deliverables inside the next thirty days would close the governance gap while the political window is open:
1. A draft charter published by the Paris initiative within two weeks
A potential draft legal instrument created as a result of the Paris summit could define the Hormuz authority’s legal independence, its board composition, its rate-setting process, its revenue allocation rule, and its dispute-resolution forum. The Paris initiative has the necessary convening power; what it needs is a draft text on which states can begin consultations with their shipping industries, their P&I clubs, and their flag registries. The Suez Canal Authority’s founding documents and the Autoridad del Canal de Panamá’s constitutional charter are the obvious templates.
2. An interim authority seeded from Operation Aspides infrastructure
The European-led Operation Aspides already has the command structure, the rules of engagement, the multinational participation, and the operational experience for defensive maritime missions in the region. Extending and rebadging that capability as an interim Hormuz Maritime Authority — with its existing assets becoming the initial escort and VTS fleet — requires a memorandum of understanding, not a treaty. It can be done in thirty days. Formal treaty ratification can follow over the subsequent year.
3. A published pilot toll schedule adopted by participating flag states
Participating flag states would agree that vessels of their registry, transiting the strait, pay a published toll — initially into an escrow account managed by the interim authority — in return for documented access to VTS, escort, and emergency-response services. The rate schedule on this site (or one structured on the same principles) is a working draft. Adoption by ten flag states would produce a live, auditable pilot that tests the billing infrastructure, the payment rails, and the service-delivery model before the authority’s formal treaty enters into force.
None of this requires Iran’s participation in the first instance. A non-belligerent multilateral authority can operate without the consent of the strait’s northern coastal state, just as the Suez Canal Authority has operated across multiple periods of regional conflict that did not formally include Egypt as a combatant. Tehran can join later, on negotiated terms, once the authority’s operational credibility is established.
Why this window matters more than the reopening itself
The strait will reopen eventually. That is not the open question. What is open is whether the reopening is the end of the crisis or the beginning of the governance solution.
The 1988 Tanker War ended with reopening. The 2019 tanker attacks ended with reopening. In both cases, the shipping industry returned to the status quo ante, and the underlying vulnerability persisted. Nobody built an institution. The same pattern has repeated on a cycle of roughly fifteen years for four decades. The 2026 crisis is the third iteration. If the reopening is managed the same way — bilateral diplomacy, back to business, no institutional change — the fourth iteration is a matter of when, not if.
The Paris initiative, the Pouyanné commercial endorsement, the Trump toll remarks, the IEA declaration, the TotalEnergies-scale CEO commitment, and the Macron-Starmer coalition are all artefacts of the current moment. They exist because the crisis is acute. They will attenuate as the crisis recedes. The question for every actor in the Paris process right now is whether the institutional work gets done before the attenuation sets in.
What we offer at the moment
The technical work that any functioning Hormuz authority will need is already done and currently freely available on this website:
- A complete rate schedule covering thirteen vessel types, four size classes, and the full surcharge-and-discount structure.
- A working toll calculator that operationalizes the rate schedule with multi-currency support, scenario comparison, and share-link functionality.
- A side-by-side comparison with the Suez Canal Authority and the Autoridad del Canal de Panamá showing how the model benchmarks against seventy years of operational precedent.
- A frequently asked questions page that addresses the design choices, the rejection of per-barrel pricing, and the critique of ad-hoc flat-fee alternatives.
- A glossary and vessel guide covering every tonnage measure, classification standard, and operational term that a billing system needs to reference.
The rate schedule has been published as a good starting point. The methodology is well documented. The comparisons with existing authorities are transparent. If any participant in the Paris initiative wants a reference model to start from, it is here, shelf-ready, free to adopt and adapt.
The bottom line
The Strait of Hormuz will reopen. The diplomatic track is moving in that direction, the economic pressure on both parties is extreme, and the mediation channels are active. When it reopens, ships will move, markets will normalize, and the acute phase of the 2026 crisis will end.
Whether the reopening is the end of the story or the start of a genuine institutional solution is the question that will be decided in the next thirty days, not the next thirty months. Every participant in the Paris process, every shipping industry leader, every flag state registrar, and every insurer has a decision to make in that window.
The 1957 moment only comes around once per chokepoint per generation. This is ours.
Explore the reference model: calculator, rate schedule, Suez and Panama comparison, glossary. All published, free to adopt, all designed for exactly this moment.