Crude refusal: China shuns U.S. oil despite trade war truce

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By and Aizhu

That muted appetite means the United States, which became the world's top producer this year as its shale output hit record levels, will continue to hold only a sliver of China's market even as a wave of new refining capacity starts up there.

It also suggests that is unlikely to use crude purchases to help plug a widening trade gap with the United States, which remains a core source of tensions between the world's top two economies.

The U.S. trade deficit with hit a record $43 billion in October as its firms stockpiled inventory from to avoid higher tariffs that may kick in next year.

"Chinese companies have little incentive to buy U.S. crude due to the wide availability of crude supplies today from and Russia," said Seng Yick Tee, an at Beijing-based consultancy SIA Energy.

"Even though the trade tension between and the U.S. had been defused recently, the executives from the national companies hesitate to procure U.S. crude unless they are told to do so."

China stopped U.S. in October and November after the trade war intensified. It resumed some imports in December, but purchased just 1 million barrels, a minute portion of the more than 300 million barrels of total imports, Refinitiv data showed.

Chinese refineries that used to purchase U.S. oil regularly said they had not resumed buying due to uncertainty over the outlook for trade relations between and Beijing, as well as rising freight costs and poor profit-margins for refining in the region.

Costs for shipping U.S. crude to on a supertanker are triple those for Middle eastern oil, data on Refinitiv Eikon showed.

A with a said his plant had stopped buying U.S. oil from October and had not booked any cargoes for delivery in the first quarter.

"Because of the great policy uncertainty earlier on, plants have actually readjusted back to using alternatives to U.S. oil ... they just widened our supply options," he said.

He added that his plant had shifted to replacements such as North Sea Forties crude, Australian condensate and oil from

"Maybe teapots will take some cargoes, but the volume will be very limited," said a second Chinese oil executive, referring to independent refiners. The sources declined to be named because of company policy.

A sharp souring in Asian benchmark refining margins has also curbed overall demand for crude in recent months, sources said.

Despite the impasse on U.S. crude purchases, China's crude imports could top a record 45 million tonnes (10.6 million barrels per day) in December from all regions, said Refinitiv senior oil

is set to remain the biggest supplier at 7 million tonnes in December, with second at 5.7-6.7 million tonnes, he said.

China's Iranian are set to rebound in December after two state-owned refiners began using the nation's waiver from U.S. sanctions on

(Reporting by and Aizhu; Graphics by Gavin Maguire; Editing by Joseph Radford)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, December 21 2018. 11:33 IST