China Stockpiles Soften the Blow of the Global Oil Shock

The world’s top crude oil and LNG importer, China, is not as exposed and vulnerable to energy deliveries from the Middle East as one might think. China has been amassing crude volumes in storage for months, it has been working for years to diversify oil and gas supply sources and routes, and has boosted the…


The world’s top crude oil and LNG importer, China, is not as exposed and vulnerable to energy deliveries from the Middle East as one might think.

China has been amassing crude volumes in storage for months, it has been working for years to diversify oil and gas supply sources and routes, and has boosted the share of transport electrification, which has reduced demand for road transportation fuels.

As the Middle East crisis choked off supplies via the world’s most critical oil and gas chokepoint, the Strait of Hormuz, China is more resilient to the supply shock than other regions and countries, including Europe, India, Japan, South Korea, or Southeast Asia, analysts say.

Inventory Buffer

One might think that China, as the biggest crude oil importer, would feel the supply squeeze immediately and acutely.

Yet, its supply buffer of an estimated 1.2-1.3 billion barrels of crude in strategic and commercial stockpiles could last up to four months, Rush Doshi, director of the China Strategy Initiative at the Council on Foreign Relations, told CNBC on Monday, when oil prices briefly hit $118 per barrel.

“China has taken the last 20 years to reduce some of its dependence on maritime oil flows,” Doshi said.

With pipelines and more renewable energy in the electricity mix, China depends on flows via the Strait of Hormuz for 40-50% of its seaborne crude oil imports, Doshi reckons.

Moreover, China has been amassing crude in strategic and commercial reserves for nearly a year. This oil hoarding is paying off in the unpredictable and already highly disruptive war in the Middle East.

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China’s energy security strategy and plan to aggressively buy cheaper crude, including sanctioned barrels, is insulating the world’s second-largest economy, to some extent, from short-lived supply disruptions.

Beijing is estimated to have been amassing crude into commercial and strategic inventories for nearly a year—taking advantage of lower international prices and even lower prices for sanctioned supply out of Iran, Venezuela, and Russia.

Unlike the United States, China does not report inventories. Analysts are looking at overall supply (domestic production plus imports) and refinery processing rates to estimate how much crude is going into strategic or commercial reserves and how much is being processed into fuels.

Analysts estimate that China’s total reserves stand at between 1.2 billion barrels and 1.3 billion barrels.

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