China Emerges as a Decisive Force in Global Oil Market After Iran War Disruptions
China's growing influence over the global oil market came into sharp focus during the Iran war and disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. With massive crude reserves, reduced imports and rising electric vehicle adoption, Beijing played a key role in stabilizing prices. Analysts say China's future buying decisions could determine the direction of global crude markets and reshape energy dynamics.
As Washington and Tehran work to finalize a lasting agreement aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz and restoring normal crude flows, analysts increasingly believe that Beijing's decisions could shape the future of the global energy market. China has become both the world's largest swing buyer and a major absorber of energy demand.
The closure and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz removed access to more than 11 million barrels of oil per day at the height of the conflict, affecting nearly one-fifth of global crude flows. Historically, such a shock would have caused a dramatic surge in prices. During the 1973 Arab oil embargo, a disruption involving around seven to eight percent of global oil supply pushed prices higher by more than 130 percent.
Despite a much larger disruption during the recent crisis, crude prices rose but remained well below predictions that had projected prices reaching 200 dollars per barrel. According to Sourav Mitra, Partner for Oil and Gas at Grant Thornton Bharat, the relatively moderate impact resulted from years of preparation by China rather than emergency interventions.
Mitra said that while the United States-Iran war choked the Strait of Hormuz and removed nearly 20 percent of global crude supply, expectations of a much sharper shock did not materialize because of China's quiet recalibration.
That adjustment had been developing over several years. China entered the crisis with one of the world's largest crude stockpiles after years of purchasing discounted oil from Russia and Iran. Estimates indicate that the country now possesses more than one billion barrels across strategic and commercial reserves.
As supplies tightened, Beijing did not rush into the market. Instead, Chinese refiners relied on existing inventories. China also sharply reduced crude imports during the crisis period. Analysts estimate that imports declined by nearly three million barrels per day, a volume large enough to influence global balances.
According to Mitra, China simply purchased less. He noted that the country had the flexibility to cut imports by approximately three million barrels per day, effectively releasing crude back into the market when it was needed most.
The consequences were immediate. A major source of demand disappeared at the same time that global supply remained under pressure, preventing an even sharper increase in oil prices.
China's influence extends beyond strategic reserves. The country's rapid transition toward electric mobility has begun reducing oil demand on a scale few nations can match. Nearly half of all new passenger vehicles sold in China are now electric or hybrid models. According to estimates by the International Energy Agency, China's electric vehicle fleet alone displaced around one million barrels of oil demand per day last year.
Simultaneously, Beijing tightened fuel export quotas while refiners reduced processing rates, lowering the requirement for additional crude purchases. These factors combined to create what analysts describe as an invisible hand in the market. Rather than competing aggressively for limited supplies, China stepped back, creating a demand cushion that benefited other economies, including India.
However, analysts believe the situation could soon change. The same stockpiles that helped stabilize the market have been partially depleted and will eventually require replenishment.
Mitra said that if prices continue to soften, China is likely to return as a significant buyer. He added that the flexibility works both ways because reserves drawn down during the crisis must eventually be refilled.
This could become increasingly important if the Strait of Hormuz reopens completely and production across the Middle East returns to normal. The International Energy Agency has already warned that concerns over shortages could shift to fears of oversupply by 2027.
Additional output from Gulf producers, combined with a possible increase in Iranian exports, could flood the market. Whether that oversupply becomes reality may depend heavily on China's appetite for crude.
If Beijing chooses to rebuild reserves aggressively, a substantial share of excess barrels could quickly be absorbed. If it decides against large-scale purchases, crude prices could face prolonged downward pressure.
For India, these developments provide both relief and an important lesson. Softer crude prices have helped moderate import costs during a period of geopolitical uncertainty, and analysts believe that some of this stability resulted from reduced Chinese buying.
Mitra said that India has successfully diversified suppliers and developed credible reserve capacity, but greater scale remains necessary. According to him, strategic reserves measured in weeks rather than months leave countries reacting to decisions made elsewhere instead of influencing outcomes themselves.
The global oil market is entering unfamiliar territory. For decades, traders focused on signals from Riyadh, Moscow and Washington. Now, they may need to watch Beijing just as closely. China's ability to cut imports, draw from enormous reserves, accelerate electrification and later re-enter the market as a major buyer has given it influence that few nations possess. The next major movement in global oil markets may no longer originate from a tanker departing the Persian Gulf, but from a purchasing decision made in Beijing, underlining China's emergence as a new energy superpower with the ability to shape crude prices worldwide.

Comment List