Hengli, China’s silk-to-petrochemicals empire, faces the chill of US sanctions

By Colleen Howe and Chen Aizhu BEIJING/SINGAPORE, May 22 (Reuters) – The Hengli Group, built by a husband and wife duo over three decades from a bankrupt textile mill into a Fortune Global 500 giant and one of China’s largest private oil refiners, has been thrust into the centre of a geopolitical power struggle. Last…


Hengli, China’s silk-to-petrochemicals empire, faces the chill of US sanctions

By Colleen Howe and Chen Aizhu

BEIJING/SINGAPORE, May 22 (Reuters) – The Hengli Group, built by a husband and wife duo over three decades from a bankrupt textile mill into a Fortune Global 500 giant and one of China’s largest private oil refiners, has been thrust into the centre of a geopolitical power struggle.

Last month, its Hengli Petrochemical arm, which runs a 400,000 barrel-per-day refinery in โ€Œthe northeastern city of Dalian, was hit with sanctions by the United States for buying Iranian oil, which the group denied.

The blacklisting of Hengli and about 40 shipping firms and vessels came as Presidents โ€ŒDonald Trump and Xi Jinping prepared to meet and as Washington looked to Beijing to pressure Tehran to accept a deal to end the conflict that started when the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran in February.

Hengli is the largest Chinese refiner sanctioned by the U.S.

Beijing, which has โ€‹long rejected such unilateral measures, rushed to its defense, invoking for the first time a 2021 law to stop companies complying with foreign sanctions.

Previously, Washington had targeted peripheral players including small Chinese independent refiners known as teapots, the main Iranian crude buyers, since reimposing sanctions on Tehran in 2018.

“Hengli is no teapot refinery. It is a world-class, world-scale plant that is representative of the large integrated refining and petrochemical facilities in which Beijing increasingly wants to consolidate its refining capacity,” said Erica Downs, senior research scholar at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy.

“This is probably why Beijing felt compelled to use its anti-sanctions law for the first time,” she said.

Hengli and its billionaire founders, Chen Jianhua and his wife Fan Hongwei, did โ€Œnot respond to a request for comment.

IMMEDIATE IMPACT

The sanctions had an immediate impact.

Hengli’s โ main offshore unit, a Singapore trading arm that employed about 100 people, is set to shut this month, Reuters reported. China’s Wanhua Chemical, meanwhile, suspended a long-term agreement to buy benzene from Hengli Petrochemical.

The sanctions could jeopardise a preliminary agreement reached in 2024 with oil giant Saudi Aramco to take a 10% stake in Hengli Petrochemical, traders said. Aramco declined โ to comment.

However, Hengli’s mostly domestic focus, and Beijing’s backing, means it can continue operating largely as usual despite the sanctions. It has said it continues to buy oil in Chinese yuan – outside the dollar settlement system.

There is precedent: last year, rival Shandong Yulong Petrochemical was hit with British and European sanctions for dealing in Russian oil, which meant it ended up relying even more on Russian crude.

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