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India allocates $11 billion to develop Great Nicobar as strategic hub

India is spending $11 billion to turn Great Nicobar into a strategic military and economic hub to monitor the Strait of Malacca, where 80% of China's oil imports pass. The project risks environmental harm and indigenous displacement but aims to counter China's dominance in a critical global trade route.

Is the Great Nicobar Island Indiaโ€™s Hormuz-like chokepoint against China?
Al Jazeera โ€” 3 June 2026
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India is turning its southernmost island, Great Nicobar, into a major military and economic outpost with an $11bn project that could give it control over a key shipping chokepoint near China. The remote island, closer to Thailand and Indonesia than to Indiaโ€™s mainland, has no full census and fewer than 10,000 residents, yet Prime Minister Narendra Modiโ€™s government sees it as vital for regional power. The plan includes a deep-water port, airport, power plant, and a city for 350,000 peopleโ€”all justified by trade benefits but increasingly framed as a strategic necessity to monitor the Strait of Malacca, where a third of global trade passes.

The Strait of Malacca is the worldโ€™s busiest shipping lane, linking the Indian Ocean to East Asia. For China, itโ€™s especially critical: 80% of its oil imports and two-thirds of its trade flow through this narrow 2.8km-wide channel near Singapore. By developing Great Nicobar, just 994 miles from the mainland, India could gain a strategic vantage point to track ships entering and leaving the straitโ€”just as Iran monitors the Strait of Hormuz. โ€œItโ€™s a great place to monitor all the traffic,โ€ said Shekhar Sinha, a former Indian Navy vice chief. โ€œIt would give India an edge in maritime domain awareness.โ€

The government has shifted its messaging from economics to security, especially after recent tensions over Hormuz highlighted the risks of relying on unstable chokepoints. Critics warn the project risks environmental damage and displacement for indigenous communities, but officials argue its location makes it indispensable. โ€œThis island has a strategic value because it sits right at the mouth of Malacca,โ€ Sinha said. โ€œIf itโ€™s developed as a commercial setup, no one would object.โ€

With Chinaโ€™s reliance on the strait growing, Great Nicobar could become Indiaโ€™s answer to regional influenceโ€”both as a trade hub and a military watchtower. The projectโ€™s success hinges on balancing economic ambitions with environmental and humanitarian concerns, but its geopolitical stakes are clear: whoever controls this corner of the Bay of Bengal controls a gatekeeper to the worldโ€™s most critical sea route.

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