

Iran will require oil tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz to pay a $1 per barrel transit fee in Bitcoin, aiming to avoid sanctions. This move follows a recent ceasefire and could escalate tensions with other oil exporters.
In the wake of a two-week ceasefire reached last night between the United States and Iran, Iranian leaders have announced a Bitcoin-centered plan to retain control of the Strait of Hormuz while allowing oil tankers to resume normal traffic through the crucial waterway.
The Iranian government will levy a fee of $1 per every barrel of oil that passes through the strait, and the fee will have to be paid in Bitcoin, according to a Wednesday report in the Financial Times.
Every ship seeking to pass through the Strait of Hormuz will have to email Iranian authorities about the contents of its cargo, then wait for approval. Upon receiving the green light, the shipâs operators will have âa few secondsâ to send a Bitcoin payment to an Iran-controlled wallet.
Such a system will ensure the fees âcanât be traced or confiscated due to sanctions,â an Iranian official told the Financial Times.
Iran says the system is intended to ensure weapons arenât sent through the Strait during the two week period in which the United States and Iran have just agreed to cease hostilities. The conditions and logistics of the Hormuz toll were determined by Iranâs Supreme National Security Council.
Iran seized control of the Strait of Hormuz shortly after the United States and Israel launched attacks on the nation in late February. Roughly a third of the worldâs crude oil supply passes through the narrow waterway every year, and the ongoing war has sent oil prices skyrocketing.
Other oil exporters in the region, however, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar, are likely to balk at the notion of Iran controlling the shared Strait for an extended period.
On Wednesday morning, President Donald Trump told ABC News he hoped the United States and Iran might charge tolls in the Strait of Hormuz together as a âjoint venture.â The president called the idea âa beautiful thing.â
No such notion of a joint toll system was mentioned by Iranian officials who outlined the Bitcoin-centered toll plan on Wednesday.
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Oil tankers must pay a transit fee of $1 per barrel in Bitcoin to pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
Using Bitcoin for payments makes transactions harder to trace or seize, which helps Iran circumvent international sanctions.
The proposal may raise tensions with other oil exporters over control of the Strait and complicate international shipping routes.






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