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- Safe Passage at Hormuz: Why Malaysia’s Special Deal with Iran Won't Lower Your Petrol Price
Safe Passage at Hormuz: Why Malaysia’s Special Deal with Iran Won't Lower Your Petrol Price
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Yesterday, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim delivered what sounded like a victory speech: Malaysia has secured a "special reprieve" from Tehran. Our vessels, tankers carrying the lifeblood of our economy, are being granted safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz while the rest of the world watches the horizon for missiles.
On paper, this is a diplomatic masterstroke. But at the petrol pump, the truth is much grimmer. Despite the safe passage, the market price for unsubsidized RON95 has just hit RM3.87/L.
If our ships can pass, why is the price still skyrocketing? It comes down to three technical realities that no "special deal" can fix.
1. The "War Zone" Insurance Premium
Even if Iran promises not to pull the trigger, the global insurance market doesn't trade on promises. The Strait of Hormuz is currently classified as a High-Risk Area (HRA).
When a tanker enters these waters, "War Risk Insurance" kicks in. In the last week of March 2026, these premiums have surged by over 400%. Whether the ship belongs to MISC or a global giant, the cost to protect that cargo has spiked. That cost is baked into every drop of fuel you pump in Subang or Shah Alam.
Read: Strait of Hormuz to Malaysia: Why We’re Paying for a War 6,000km Away
2. We Are a "Net Importer" of the Stuff You Use
Here is the technical detail most people miss: Malaysia is a net exporter of Crude Oil (the expensive, high-quality stuff), but we are a net importer of Refined Petroleum (the stuff that actually goes into your Myvi).
- The Reality: Nearly 50% of our refined fuel supply is still dependent on the Strait of Hormuz.
- The Problem: Even if our tankers pass, the global supply chain is fractured. With 20 million barrels of oil a day normally passing through that 39km-wide gap, any disruption sends global Brent Crude prices toward the US$120/bbl mark. We might have a "VIP pass," but we’re still buying at "World Prices."
3. The "Subsidy Burn" and the 200L Cap
The most direct impact of this conflict isn't just the price, it's the BUDI95 Quota.
Because the government's subsidy bill jumped from RM700 million to a staggering RM3.2 billion in just seven days, the "Safety Net" is shrinking. Starting April 1, your subsidized 300-litre limit is being cut to 200 litres.
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The Math: If you drive a 1.5L SUV and commute 50km daily, you will likely burn through that 200L by the third week of the month. After that, you aren't paying the "Special Deal" price; you're paying the RM3.87/L war-market price.
Read: Fuel Subsidy Update: Your 300L Monthly Quota Could Drop to 200L This April
The Bottom Line
The deal with Iran ensures our pumps don't run dry, but it doesn't ensure they stay cheap.
The "Safe Passage" is a shield against a total energy collapse, but it isn't a discount card. As the PM urged a return to Work-From-Home (WFH) policies, the message is clear: The best way to save money in 2026 isn't finding a cheaper petrol station, it's not moving your car at all.
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Read: Saudi Arabia Cuts Oil Supply to Asia: Are EVs Now the Only 'War-Proof' Cars?
Read: Fuel Price Shock: Diesel Spikes to RM5.52, Unsubsidised RON95 Jumps 60 Sen
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Written By
Sofea Najmi
A Bachelor of English Language and Literature graduate with an obsession for the finer details. Sofea uses her background in translation to decode the technicalities of automotive innovation. She is dedicated to delivering impactful, meticulously researched articles that provide a narrative far beyond the spec sheet. LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3C018vv