اليابان وكوريا الجنوبية: اقتصادات تعتمد على هرمز في خطر — تحليل الأثر الاستراتيجي
Japan and South Korea — which receive 80-90% of their crude oil through the Strait of Hormuz — face existential energy supply risk from the conflict. Combined additional energy costs exceed $85 billion annually, forcing both nations to activate strategic reserves, accelerate nuclear restarts, and fundamentally reconsider Indo-Pacific energy architecture.
Overview
Japan and South Korea represent the most Hormuz-dependent advanced economies in the world. Japan imports approximately 3.3 million barrels per day of crude oil, of which 88% transits the Strait of Hormuz. South Korea imports approximately 2.8 mb/d, with 80% transiting the same chokepoint. Neither nation has meaningful domestic hydrocarbon production, and both rely on LNG imports — partially from Qatar, which also ships through Hormuz — for power generation and industrial feedstock. The Iran-Coalition conflict has exposed a vulnerability that Japanese and Korean defense planners have war-gamed for decades but never confronted operationally. The 26% reduction in Hormuz throughput, combined with war risk insurance surcharges and shipping delays, has added approximately $45 billion to Japan's and $40 billion to South Korea's annual energy import bills. Both nations have activated strategic petroleum reserves for the first time since the 2011 Fukushima disaster response (Japan) and the first time ever in response to a supply disruption (Korea). Tokyo has fast-tracked the restart of seven additional nuclear reactors, reversing post-Fukushima caution, while Seoul has accelerated its own nuclear expansion program. The conflict has catalyzed a strategic rethink: both nations are pursuing long-term supply diversification through equity stakes in non-Gulf production, expanded US crude and LNG procurement, and investment in green hydrogen and ammonia fuel chains that bypass hydrocarbon chokepoints entirely.
Impact Analysis
Crude oil supply security and cost impact critical
Japan's crude oil procurement cost has increased from approximately $95 billion annually to a projected $140 billion, a $45 billion surge that represents 0.9% of GDP consumed by energy import inflation alone. South Korea faces a proportional impact, with its crude import bill rising from $82 billion to $122 billion annually. Both nations source predominantly from Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Kuwait — all of which ship through Hormuz — with limited alternative pipeline or non-Gulf sourcing. Japanese refiners have attempted to increase Alaskan North Slope and US Gulf Coast crude purchases, but tanker logistics for trans-Pacific routes add 25-30 days compared to Gulf-Japan voyages, creating working capital and inventory management challenges. South Korea's refining sector, which operates significant export-oriented capacity (Hyundai Oilbank, SK Energy, S-Oil), faces the additional problem of compressed export margins as feedstock costs rise faster than product prices in destination markets. The Korean won has depreciated 6.8% against the dollar, amplifying the won-denominated import cost increase beyond what dollar crude prices alone would suggest.
| Metric | Before | After | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Japan annual crude oil import cost | $95 billion (FY2025) | $140 billion (FY2026 projected) | +$45 billion (+47%) annualized increase |
| South Korea annual crude import cost | $82 billion (2025) | $122 billion (2026 projected) | +$40 billion (+49%) annualized increase |
| Hormuz-transit share of Japan crude imports | 88% of total imports | 88% — dependency unchanged, volume at risk | No diversification achieved yet; structural vulnerability intact |
LNG supply and power generation severe
Both Japan and South Korea are among the world's largest LNG importers, and the conflict has tightened the global LNG market that both depend on. Japan imports approximately 70 million tonnes per year (mtpa) of LNG, making it the world's second-largest buyer after China. Approximately 12% of Japan's LNG supply comes from Qatar, which ships through Hormuz. South Korea imports roughly 45 mtpa, with 10% Qatari-origin. The disruption extends beyond direct Qatari supply: global LNG spot prices have surged from $11/MMBtu to $19/MMBtu as Asian buyers compete for non-Gulf cargoes, and several long-term contract cargoes from Qatar have been delayed by Hormuz transit complications. Both nations have turned to the US as an emergency LNG supplier, but Sabine Pass, Cameron, and Freeport LNG terminals are already operating at capacity. Japan has restarted oil-fired power generation at facilities mothballed since 2014, adding 4.2 GW of backup capacity at significantly higher marginal cost. South Korea has extended the operational life of two coal plants slated for retirement. The combined effect is a power generation cost increase that hits industrial competitiveness — Japanese and Korean manufacturers already operate in the world's most expensive industrial electricity environments.
| Metric | Before | After | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asian LNG spot price (JKM benchmark) | $11/MMBtu (Oct 2025) | $19/MMBtu (Mar 2026) | +73% surge in LNG procurement cost |
| Japan oil-fired power generation restarts | 0 GW oil-fired capacity operational | 4.2 GW restarted from mothballed plants | Emergency backup at 3x normal marginal cost |
| Korea industrial electricity rate | KRW 112/kWh ($0.084/kWh) | KRW 148/kWh ($0.111/kWh) | +32% increase in industrial power costs |
Strategic petroleum reserve activation severe
Both nations have activated strategic petroleum reserves in coordinated IEA releases, representing the most significant peacetime drawdown in East Asian history. Japan holds approximately 470 million barrels in combined government and private-sector reserves — roughly 200 days of net imports — making it one of the best-prepared nations globally. Tokyo has released 30 million barrels through IEA coordination and authorized private-sector reserve drawdowns of an additional 15 million barrels. South Korea holds approximately 96 million barrels in strategic reserves (roughly 90 days of net imports) and has released 12 million barrels. However, both governments are acutely aware that SPR releases are a finite bridge, not a solution. Japanese policymakers have publicly stated that reserve releases should not substitute for structural supply diversification. The releases have modestly dampened domestic fuel price increases but cannot offset the fundamental repricing of global crude. Both nations are accelerating SPR refill plans for the post-conflict period, with Japan allocating JPY 800 billion ($5.8 billion) for reserve replenishment and South Korea budgeting KRW 4.2 trillion ($3.1 billion) for the same purpose.
| Metric | Before | After | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Japan SPR release volume | 470 million barrels total reserves | 425 million barrels after releases | -45 million barrels released (govt + private) |
| South Korea SPR release volume | 96 million barrels total reserves | 84 million barrels after releases | -12 million barrels released |
| Combined Japan-Korea SPR refill budget | N/A — reserves at target levels | $8.9 billion allocated for post-conflict refill | Major fiscal commitment to rebuild strategic buffer |
Nuclear energy restart and expansion moderate
The Iran conflict has provided decisive political momentum for nuclear energy expansion in both Japan and South Korea. Japan, which shuttered all 54 nuclear reactors after the 2011 Fukushima disaster, had painstakingly restarted only 12 units by October 2025. The energy crisis has accelerated the Nuclear Regulation Authority's review process, with seven additional reactors receiving restart approval in the first quarter of 2026 alone — more than the previous three years combined. Prime Minister has declared nuclear energy a 'national security imperative,' fundamentally reframing the political discourse from safety concerns to energy sovereignty. South Korea's President has similarly accelerated the Shin Hanul 3 and 4 reactor construction, shortened the licensing timeline for APR-1400 units, and announced plans for two additional reactor sites. Both nations view nuclear as the only scalable, dispatchable, low-carbon alternative to hydrocarbon imports that can meaningfully reduce Hormuz dependency. The conflict has effectively ended the post-Fukushima period of nuclear hesitancy in East Asian energy policy, with public opinion in both countries shifting significantly in favor of nuclear restarts when framed as energy security rather than purely environmental policy.
| Metric | Before | After | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Japan operational nuclear reactors | 12 reactors operational (Oct 2025) | 19 reactors approved for restart (Mar 2026) | +7 additional reactor restarts fast-tracked |
| Japan nuclear share of electricity generation | 8.5% (2025) | 14% projected (2027 with restarts) | +5.5pp increase in nuclear contribution |
| South Korea new reactor construction timeline | Shin Hanul 3-4 completion: 2032 | Shin Hanul 3-4 completion: 2029 (accelerated) | 3-year acceleration of construction schedule |
Affected Stakeholders
Japanese manufacturing sector (automotive, electronics, chemicals)
Japanese manufacturers face compound energy cost increases — electricity up 24%, industrial diesel up 38%, petrochemical feedstock up 45%. Toyota, Honda, and major auto exporters report $2,800-3,500 per vehicle in additional energy-related production costs, eroding competitiveness against US and Chinese manufacturers with cheaper domestic energy.
Major manufacturers are accelerating production shifts to North American facilities with cheaper energy. Toyota has increased Kentucky plant output by 15%. The Keidanren (business federation) has lobbied aggressively for nuclear restarts and negotiated bulk LNG procurement through Japan's JOGMEC to reduce spot market exposure.
South Korean refining and petrochemical industry
South Korea's refining sector — the fourth-largest in Asia, with 3.3 mb/d capacity — operates significant export-oriented production. Higher feedstock costs have compressed export refining margins from $8/bbl to $3/bbl on some product lines, as Korean refiners cannot fully pass through costs to competitive Asian product markets.
SK Energy and Hyundai Oilbank have diversified crude sourcing toward US WTI and Canadian crude via trans-Pacific routes, accepting higher logistics costs in exchange for non-Hormuz supply security. S-Oil (Saudi Aramco subsidiary) has priority access to Saudi crude via dedicated VLCCs with military escort.
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF)
The conflict has placed unprecedented demand on JMSDF escort capabilities. Japan has deployed destroyers to participate in coalition Hormuz escort operations — the most assertive Japanese naval deployment since World War II — stretching operational readiness and sparking domestic constitutional debate about collective self-defense.
JMSDF has deployed two Aegis destroyers and one helicopter carrier to the Gulf region, the largest Japanese naval task force deployed abroad since 1945. The deployment is justified under 2015 security legislation but faces legal challenges from opposition parties questioning Article 9 constraints.
East Asian airlines (ANA, JAL, Korean Air, Asiana)
Japanese and Korean airlines face jet fuel cost increases of 70-85%, adding approximately $12-18 billion in combined annualized fuel costs. Pacific and European routes remain profitable but Asian regional and domestic routes face margin pressure. Fuel hedging programs provide partial protection but coverage is declining as contracts roll over at higher rates.
Airlines have imposed fuel surcharges of $80-150 per long-haul ticket and $20-40 per domestic ticket. Korean Air and Asiana have suspended several unprofitable Southeast Asian routes. ANA and JAL have accelerated fleet modernization toward fuel-efficient 787 and A350 aircraft, retiring older 777-200 variants ahead of schedule.
Timeline
Outlook
The bull case hinges on rapid conflict de-escalation restoring full Hormuz transit by Q3 2026, combined with successful nuclear restarts (Japan reaching 19 operational reactors by 2027) and LNG supply additions from US Gulf Coast expansions coming online in late 2026. Under this scenario, Japan and Korea's energy import bills normalize within 12-15 months, and the crisis catalyzes structural improvements — more nuclear capacity, diversified crude sourcing, and expanded SPR capacity — that leave both nations more resilient than before. The bear case involves sustained Hormuz disruption through 2027, a cold 2026-27 winter depleting LNG reserves, and insufficient nuclear restarts to compensate for fossil fuel supply tightness. In this scenario, Japan and Korea face industrial energy rationing, GDP contraction of 1.5-2.5%, and a manufacturing competitiveness crisis that accelerates production offshoring to Southeast Asia and North America. The most probable outcome falls between: painful adjustment through 2026, with energy costs shaving 0.8-1.2 percentage points from GDP growth, but the crisis permanently reshaping East Asian energy policy toward nuclear, renewables, and supply diversification away from the Hormuz chokepoint.
Key Takeaways
- Japan and South Korea receive 80-88% of their crude oil through the Strait of Hormuz, making them the most supply-vulnerable advanced economies in the world — combined additional energy costs exceed $85 billion annually.
- Both nations have activated strategic petroleum reserves in the largest peacetime drawdowns in East Asian history, releasing a combined 57 million barrels through IEA coordination.
- The conflict has catalyzed Japan's most significant nuclear energy policy shift since Fukushima, with 7 additional reactor restarts fast-tracked and nuclear reframed as a national security imperative rather than solely an environmental choice.
- JMSDF's deployment of Aegis destroyers to Hormuz escort operations represents the largest Japanese naval force deployed abroad since 1945, marking a watershed moment in Japanese defense policy.
- The Asian crude buyers' collective proposed by Japan, Korea, and India signals a structural effort to rebalance pricing power away from OPEC producers and reduce individual nation vulnerability to chokepoint disruptions.
Frequently Asked Questions
How dependent is Japan on oil from the Strait of Hormuz?
Japan receives approximately 88% of its crude oil imports through the Strait of Hormuz, making it the most Hormuz-dependent advanced economy in the world. Japan imports about 3.3 million barrels per day with virtually no domestic production. Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Kuwait — all shipping through Hormuz — are Japan's top three crude suppliers.
Has Japan restarted nuclear power because of the Iran conflict?
Yes. The conflict has dramatically accelerated Japan's nuclear restart program. Seven additional reactors received restart approval in Q1 2026 alone — more than the previous three years combined. The Prime Minister declared nuclear energy a 'national security imperative,' and public support for restarts has risen from 38% to 58% when framed as energy security rather than purely environmental policy.
How much more are Japan and South Korea paying for energy?
Japan's annual crude oil import bill has increased by approximately $45 billion (from $95B to $140B), while South Korea's has risen by approximately $40 billion (from $82B to $122B). Combined with LNG cost increases and currency depreciation, the total additional energy cost for both nations exceeds $85 billion annually — equivalent to roughly 1% of their combined GDP.
Is Japan deploying military forces to the Strait of Hormuz?
Yes. Japan has deployed two Aegis destroyers and one helicopter carrier to participate in coalition Hormuz escort operations — the largest Japanese naval task force deployed abroad since World War II. The deployment is legally justified under 2015 collective self-defense legislation but faces opposition challenges regarding Article 9 constitutional constraints.
Can Japan and South Korea get oil without going through the Strait of Hormuz?
Partially. Both nations can increase purchases of US, Canadian, Brazilian, and West African crude that doesn't transit Hormuz, but these routes add 25-30 days of shipping time compared to Gulf-Asia voyages. Saudi Arabia's East-West Pipeline can bypass Hormuz for some Saudi crude via Red Sea ports, though this route faces Houthi threats. Complete Hormuz bypass is logistically impractical for the volumes both nations require.