China turns to Middle East as it shuns US oil imports

Not a single tanker has loaded crude oil from the United States bound for China since the start of August

Tugboats dock the oil tanker "EAGLE VARNA" carrying imported crude oil at the Port of Zhoushan in Zhoushan city, east China's Zhejiang province, 4 July 2018. China has issued a second batch of crude oil import quotas for independent refiners and some trading companies with a total volume of 11.91 million tonnes, three trade sources said on Thursday, citing official documents. Of the 26 companies that received quotas, 21 were independent refiners, they said. The first batch of quotas for this year totaled 121.32 million tonnes and were issued to 44 companies in December.  (Imaginechina via AP Images)
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Chinese oil importers are shying away from buying US crude as they fear Beijing's decision to exclude the commodity from its tariff list in a trade dispute between the world's biggest economies may only be temporary.

Not a single tanker has loaded crude oil from the United States bound for China since the start of August, Thomson Reuters Eikon ship tracking data showed, compared with about 300,000 barrels per day (bpd) in June and July.

The United States and China have been locked in a tit-for-tat trade fight over the past few months, but crude was dropped from China's final list of tariffs on $16 billion in US goods announced last week.

The move underscored the growing importance of the United States as a key global oil producer and critical alternative supply source for top importer China.

However, would-be buyers in China fret the commodity could be used as a bargaining chip in future negotiations with Washington, potentially getting added to tariff lists if the trade conflict takes a turn for the worse.

"Since it takes months to get US crude [to China] ... this [not buying US shipments] is a precautionary measure to avoid any distressed selling in case the government puts tariffs on US crude oil," said Sushant Gupta, research director at energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie.

A source with a Chinese refiner said the company was "watching and seeing" how the situation develops before placing new orders for US oil. He declined to be identified.

That comes after the country's main oil importer, Unipec, earlier this month suspended shipments from the United States.

Another petroleum source familiar with the Chinese market said US crude may have been left off the tariff list to "facilitate clearing shipments" that have already been committed to.

"[The government] probably wants to impose tariffs when there is no more US crude on the water, so I won't take it as a reversal of the political stance on US crude," said the source.

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To replace US oil, China has been turning to the Middle East, West Africa and Latin America, according to shipping data and traders.

That has been helped as a narrow price-spread between Brent and Dubai crude allows Atlantic basin oil to be profitably shipped to Asia. The spread on Wednesday had nearly halved from a month ago to $1.63 per barrel

Although China's biggest oil suppliers are the Middle East, Russia and West Africa, the United States has become an important global supplier since it opened up its market for exports in 2016.

Beyond the short-term complications of finding replacements for American oil, the Sino-US trade dispute also poses risks to economic growth.

"Any further escalation in the trade conflict between them is clearly an important downside risk and could lead to a further slowdown in oil demand growth for 2019, leading to downward pressure on oil prices," said Mr Gupta.