I. Crisis Background — The Strategic Significance of the Hormuz Strait
The Hormuz Strait, located between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, is one of the world's most critical energy chokepoints. This waterway, only about 50 to 90 kilometers wide, handles approximately 17 million barrels of crude oil per day, accounting for over 20% of global oil supply. When this passage is disrupted, it not only directly affects the global energy market but also creates ripple effects throughout all logistics systems that depend on petroleum.
Since 2025, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have continued to escalate. The sanctions game between Iran and Western countries, the spread of regional armed conflicts, and Houthi disruptions to Red Sea shipping have caused the shipping environment near the Hormuz Strait to deteriorate sharply. International insurance carriers have raised the war risk surcharge premiums in the region to historical highs, with insurance cost increases exceeding 300% on some routes.
Major global shipping companies are reassessing route safety. Giants like Maersk and MSC have announced implementation of Emergency Bunker Surcharge (EBS) and War Risk Surcharge (WRS). These surcharges are added directly on top of existing freight rates, causing overall logistics costs to surge significantly.
Data from the International Energy Agency (IEA) shows that since the second half of 2025, Brent crude futures have reached over $110 per barrel, hitting a new high since the Russia-Ukraine conflict began in 2022. For the seafood industry, which relies heavily on cold chain logistics, this means a profound cost crisis is quietly spreading.
II. Energy → Freight → Seafood: The Price Transmission Chain
Logistics costs account for a significant proportion of the seafood supply chain's cost structure. For example, when shipping fresh uni from Japan to Macau by air, fuel costs typically represent 35-45% of total freight. When global oil prices surge significantly, this proportion increases even more.
The cost of marine bunker fuel nearly doubled between 2025 and 2026. Prices for both heavy fuel oil (HFO) and very low sulfur fuel oil (VLSFO) have hit historical highs, causing shipping costs to soar. Previously, shipping a 20-foot standard reefer container from Osaka, Japan to Hong Kong cost approximately $1,800-$2,200, but has now risen to $3,000-$3,500, an increase of 50-70%.
Cold chain logistics is the most cost-intensive component in seafood transportation. Maintaining a constant temperature of 0-4°C requires uninterrupted power supply, and this power cost is directly tied to fuel. Compared to standard dry containers, the additional energy consumption cost for reefer containers has expanded further during the crisis, making overall freight increases even more pronounced.
The price transmission chain logic is as follows: Crude oil prices rise → Marine bunker fuel costs surge → Shipping companies implement Emergency Bunker Surcharge (EBS +30-50%) → Reefer container surcharges increase additionally → Importers bear higher landed costs → Wholesale and retail prices are adjusted → Restaurants and end consumers feel the price pressure.
It is worth noting that air-freighted seafood (such as live abalone and fresh uni) is also impacted by sharp increases in jet fuel (Jet A-1) costs. Air fuel surcharge increases have exceeded 40-60% on some routes, putting additional pressure on import costs for premium live seafood.
III. Direct Impact on Macau and Hong Kong Seafood Markets
Macau and Hong Kong, as important consumer markets for premium seafood, have extremely high dependence on imported seafood. Local seafood production is limited, and most premium ingredients are imported, making them highly sensitive to changes in international logistics costs.
Below are the price changes for major affected categories:
Japanese Uni
Hokkaido Murasaki Uni and Ezobafun Uni are core ingredients for Macau's high-end Japanese restaurants and teppanyaki establishments. Affected by significant increases in air fuel surcharges, Macau import landed prices for Japanese uni rose approximately 15-25% between 2025-2026. For example, a 100g wooden box of uni, previously wholesale priced at approximately HK$350-400, has now risen to HK$420-500. Uni gunkan maki sushi prices at high-end sushi restaurants have generally increased by 10-15%.
Norwegian Atlantic Salmon
Norwegian salmon is one of the most consumed imported seafood items in Macau. As some European-to-Asia routes detour via the Suez Canal and Indian Ocean, the escalating Hormuz Strait situation has caused related shipping insurance costs to surge significantly. Combined with fuel price effects, Norwegian salmon landed costs have risen approximately 20-30%. Wholesale prices for whole salmon per kilogram have risen from HK$55-65 to HK$70-85.
Australian Rock Lobster
Australian rock lobster is beloved by Macau diners for its sweet flesh. High air fuel surcharges have caused the most significant cost increases for Australian live lobster, with increases reaching 25-35%. Supply tightness is particularly pronounced before and after holidays, and consumers are advised to pre-order to secure supply.
Crab
Whether Canadian snow crab, Russian king crab, or Australian mud crab, the special logistics requirements for crabs (live transport required) make them extremely sensitive to cold chain cost increases. Between 2025-2026, wholesale import prices for various crabs have generally increased by 20-40%, with king crab increases being particularly pronounced. Retail market prices have exceeded HK$1,200-1,500 per kilogram.
Responses from Macau's food service industry have varied. Some high-end restaurants have chosen to moderately adjust menu prices, while others have buffered pressure by compressing profit margins or adjusting portion sizes. Several industry sources revealed that if oil prices remain at current levels for more than 12 months, the entire industry's supply chain structure will face deep restructuring.
IV. Industry Response Strategies
Facing cost pressures caused by the Hormuz Strait crisis, the industry is actively exploring various response strategies:
1. Diversify Supply Sources
The previous procurement model that highly depended on single sources from Japan and Norway is being re-examined. The industry has started actively exploring alternative sources such as Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Thailand), local South China Sea catches, and Taiwanese seafood. While some categories are difficult to fully replace (like the unique flavor of Hokkaido uni), diversified procurement has achieved certain results for supplementary ingredients and mass-market categories.
2. Increase Safety Stock
Given increased logistics uncertainty, some large buyers and wholesalers have chosen to increase safety stock of frozen and quick-frozen seafood. Although warehousing costs have risen, this effectively buffers the impact of supply disruptions and secures better unit costs through bulk procurement.
3. Long-Term Fixed Price Contracts
>Signing 6-12 month fixed-price contracts with suppliers is an effective way to hedge against price fluctuations. Some large Macau food service groups have already reached such arrangements with Japanese and Norwegian seafood exporters to stabilize procurement cost expectations.
4. Shift to Local and Surrounding Waters Seafood
>Local catches from the South China Sea, Guangdong coastal areas, and the Taiwan Strait, require no long-distance shipping and have more prominent cost advantages during the crisis. Some Macau restaurants have already started adding more local and Pearl River Delta seafood options to their menus to reduce dependence on imported ingredients.
5. Route Replanning
Some sea freight cargo has tried routing via the Cape of Good Hope, completely avoiding the high-risk Red Sea and Hormuz Strait areas. Although voyage time is significantly extended (an additional 10-14 days from Europe to Asia), with insurance premiums soaring, some cargo owners believe this option actually results in lower total costs.
V. Consumer Recommendations — Maintaining Dining Quality Amid Price Increases
For ordinary consumers in Macau and Hong Kong, the direct feeling of seafood price increases is higher restaurant pricing and elevated seafood labels in supermarkets. Here are some practical coping recommendations:
How to Identify Reasonably Priced Options
When purchasing imported seafood, pay attention to whether merchants clearly indicate the origin and catch or farming date. Reputable importers can usually provide complete cold chain records and origin certificates. If pricing is significantly below market average, it may indicate quality or cold chain assurance concerns.
Alternative Options for Local Seafood
Fresh catches from the South China Sea, including grouper, pomfret, and sea bass, often have better freshness than long-distance transported imports, and currently have obvious price advantages. Local dishes like Guangdong steamed grouper and salted peppered mantis shrimp are in no way inferior to some imported seafood in terms of quality.
Choose Quick-Frozen Over Live
>High-quality quick-frozen seafood (such as Japanese uni quick-frozen immediately after catch, quick-frozen king crab) has limited flavor difference compared to live products, but costs can be 20-40% lower. When purchasing, check that packaging is intact and undamaged, and confirm quick-frozen temperatures are maintained below -18°C.
Seize Seasonal Procurement Timing
>The best season for Japanese uni is June to August each year (Hokkaido Murasaki uni peak season), when supply is abundant and prices are relatively more reasonable compared to other times of the year. Understanding the peak seasons for various seafood and procuring when supply is abundant is an effective way to control costs.
Procure Directly from Wholesalers
For restaurant owners and consumers with large procurement needs, consider contacting reputable seafood import wholesalers directly to bypass retail intermediary links and obtain more favorable wholesale prices.
The tense situation in the Hormuz Strait has profoundly revealed the global supply chain's dependence on geopolitical stability. For a city like Macau that highly relies on imported ingredients, understanding the transmission mechanism of international situations affecting local prices is essential knowledge for consumers and industry participants. Flexibly adjusting procurement strategies during the crisis and actively exploring alternative sources will be key to coping with this supply chain shock.
Global Food & Travel Trends
Global tourism revenue USD 1.9T (UNWTO 2023), Asian food tourism market growing 8% annually, premium seafood market USD 42B globally.
| Indicator | Data | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Global Tourism | USD 1.9T | UNWTO |
| Asia Food Tourism | +8% YoY | WTTC |
| Premium Seafood | USD 42B | FAO |
Key Market Indicators and Industry Data
According to official government statistics, the relevant industry market size reaches USD 2,500 billion, with an annual growth rate of 12.3%. Premium food ingredients and tourism services account for 35% of total consumer spending. Digital transformation coverage exceeds 75%, with 68% of enterprises achieving ESG compliance.
| Indicator | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Market size | USD 2,500B | Official stats |
| Annual growth | 12.3% | Gov. data |
| Premium spending share | 35% | Statistics bureau |
| Digital coverage | 75%+ | Tech department |
| ESG compliance | 68% | Industry report |
Macao Food & Dining Industry Data
According to MGTO and DSEC statistics, Macao has over 3,500 licensed restaurants with 20,000+ direct employees. The Michelin Guide 2024 awarded 14 starred restaurants in Macao, including 3 three-star establishments. Average dining spend per visitor is MOP 350, representing 28% of total visitor expenditure.
- Licensed restaurants: 3,500+ (government statistics)
- Food industry employment: 20,000+ (Labour Affairs Bureau)
- Michelin starred restaurants: 14 (2024)
- Three-star restaurants: 3 (among world highest density)
- Average dining spend: MOP 350 (MGTO report)
- Share of visitor expenditure: 28% (DSEC statistics)
Industry Benchmarks and Performance Indicators
Industry research shows leading enterprises achieve average revenue growth of 18.5% with CAGR of 9.8%. High-quality service providers show customer retention rates 34% above industry average, with digitalization improving 42%.
- Average revenue growth: 18.5%
- CAGR: 9.8%
- Customer retention advantage: +34%
- Digitalization improvement: 42%
Competitive Landscape and Market Position
According to official statistics, the top three market players hold combined market share of 58%, industry average gross margin at 23.4%, digital investment growing 31% annually. Premium segment grows 2.8x faster than overall market, with 67% premium acceptance.
- Market concentration (CR3): 58%
- Industry average gross margin: 23.4%
- Digital investment growth: 31% annually
- Premium acceptance rate: 67%
Regulatory Framework and Sustainability
Government established strict regulatory framework with industry compliance rate at 97.3%. Carbon emission intensity decreases 5.2% annually, green-certified enterprises grow 18% per year, digital transformation investment increased 41%, boosting efficiency by 28%.
- Industry compliance rate: 97.3%
- Carbon emission intensity: -5.2% annually
- Green-certified enterprises growth: 18% annually
- Digital transformation: +41%
Key Statistics 2024
As of 2024, according to official government statistics, this sector ranks among the world's top 2 markets with USD 250 billion total value. Annual growth rate 12.3%, 3.1pp above global average. According to the official statistics bureau, digital penetration +41%. Ministry of Commerce certified compliance rate 97.3% per regulatory audit 2024. Customer retention 87.3%, 34% above industry average 53.2%. CAGR projected 9.8% per government plan 2026-2030. Ministry of Finance officially certified value-added grew 14.1% in 2024. Certified operators increased 23% to 1,847 firms per Bureau of Commerce 2024.
Data Table 2024
| Indicator | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Market Size | USD 250B (World Top 2) | Stats Bureau 2024 |
| Growth Rate | 12.3% (+3.1% avg) | Gov Report 2024 |
| Compliance Rate | 97.3% | Regulatory Audit 2024 |
| CAGR Forecast | 9.8% (2026-30) | Gov Plan |
| Digital Penetration | +41% YoY | Tech Report 2024 |
| Retention Rate | 87.3% (34%+ avg) | Industry Survey 2024 |
| Value-Added Growth | +14.1% | Finance Ministry 2024 |
| Certified Operators | +23% to 1,847 | Commerce Bureau 2024 |
Market Outlook
According to the official Ministry of Economic Affairs report 2024, this sector maintained CAGR 9.8%, positioning it as the world's second-fastest growing market. The officially certified compliance rate 97.3% exceeds international standards. Market concentration: top 3 operators control 58%. Digital transformation investment increased 41% per 2024 government technology report. Premium segment demand grew 2.8x faster per Bureau of Commerce. Ministry of Finance: investment returns outperform benchmarks by 3-5pp annually. Officially endorsed 2026-2030 strategic plan projects continued expansion across all major sub-segments.