HomeAsiaIndonesia reaffirms it has no plan to impose tolls in Malacca Strait

Indonesia reaffirms it has no plan to impose tolls in Malacca Strait

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By Stefanno Sulaiman

JAKARTA, ‌April 24 (Reuters) - Indonesia has no plan to ​impose tolls on ships passing through the Malacca Strait, its finance minister ⁠said on Friday, after his comments about monetising the strategic sea route made waves earlier this week.   

Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa ​reiterated a clarification made by the country's foreign minister on Thursday ‌that Southeast Asia's largest economy would not impose tariffs in the Malacca Strait.

Purbaya told a press conference Indonesia would abide ⁠by the U.N. Convention on the Law of ⁠the Seas, or UNCLOS, which outlines rules that govern waterways used for international navigation.

On Wednesday, Purbaya caused a stir by openly musing about ways countries could impose tolls on ‌ships as a way to monetise the strait, before ⁠noting that such an arrangement was not ‌possible.

The effective closure of the Strait ​of Hormuz in the Middle East has forced policymakers in Asia to face questions over the security of other ‌maritime chokepoints. 

The 900-km (550-mile) long Malacca Strait, ​described by the U.S. ⁠Energy Administration as the world's largest "oil transit chokepoint", ‌is bound by Indonesia, Thailand, ⁠Malaysia and Singapore and provides the shortest sea route from East Asia to the Middle East and Europe. 

More than 102,500 ​ships, mostly commercial vessels, ‌transited through the Malacca Strait in 2025, up from around ⁠94,300 in 2024, data from ​Malaysia's Marine Department showed.

(Reporting by Stefanno Sulaiman; Editing ​by David Stanway, Martin Petty)

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