The Bitcoin community is currently discussing reports that Iran might accept BTC payments for oil tanker tolls. This comes after a Financial Times article suggested the Iranian government was looking at cryptocurrency as a way to avoid U.S. sanctions. The Strait of Hormuz, where these tolls would apply, handles about 20% of the world’s oil supply, which makes this a pretty significant development if true.
But here’s the thing – there’s some confusion about what exactly Iran plans to accept. Alex Thorn from Galaxy Research points out that other reports suggest stablecoins or Chinese yuan might be the actual payment methods. It’s hard to know which version is accurate, honestly.
Bitcoin advocate Justin Bechler makes an interesting point about why stablecoins might not work for Iran. He notes that stablecoins can be frozen by their issuers, and with compliance controls like the GENIUS framework, U.S.-dollar stablecoins could be problematic for a sanctioned country. “Bitcoin has no issuer, no compliance officer to pressure, and no freeze function,” he said. That structural reality might explain why Iran would consider Bitcoin.
If Iran does start accepting Bitcoin for these payments, it would be a major boost for Bitcoin’s credibility as a neutral settlement layer. I mean, we’re talking about international oil transactions here – that’s serious business.
The Financial Times report mentioned that ships would have just “a few seconds” to complete payments. That timeline suggests they’d probably use the Lightning Network, which processes Bitcoin transactions much faster than the main blockchain. But Thorn notes there’s a limitation – the largest known Lightning transaction so far has been $1 million.
Each oil tanker would need to pay between $200,000 and $2 million in tolls. That’s a substantial amount, especially for Lightning Network payments. Thorn thinks a more likely scenario would involve Iranian authorities providing QR codes or Bitcoin addresses to ships after approving their passage requests.
This whole situation highlights how Bitcoin’s unique properties – its decentralized nature and lack of central control – make it potentially useful for countries facing sanctions. It’s not about whether you agree with Iran’s policies or not, but rather about how technology can circumvent traditional financial barriers.
Still, I think we should be cautious. These are just reports at this point, and conflicting information keeps emerging. The actual implementation might look different from what’s being discussed. But the fact that this conversation is happening at all shows how Bitcoin continues to find new use cases in unexpected places.
What’s interesting to me is how this would work in practice. Would tanker captains need to set up Bitcoin wallets? How would exchange rate fluctuations be handled? There are plenty of practical questions that would need answers before this becomes reality.
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