U.S. Lifts Restrictions on Ethane Exports to China

The Trump Administration has rescinded licensing requirements for U.S. exporters of ethane to China, paving the way to restoring the trade that was upended by the tariff row with Beijing.

The U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security rescinded on July 2 the license requirements set forth in a previous regulation from June 3, ethane producer and exporter Energy Transfer said in an SEC filing.

Last month, the U.S. federal government asked Energy Transfer and Enterprise Products Partners to secure a license in order to continue exporting ethane to China.

All U.S. ethane exports to China come from two terminals on the U.S. Gulf Coast. Enterprise operates a terminal in Morgan’s Point, Texas, and Energy Transfer operates a terminal in Nederland, Texas.

The U.S. firms were required to submit an application for a validated license prior to the export, re-export, or transfer (in-country) of any ethane or butane products when a party to the transaction is located in China, or is a Chinese “military end user,” wherever located, except for certain eligible license exceptions.

China is a major market for U.S. ethane, a natural gas liquid extracted from wet natural gas during processing and is primarily used to produce ethylene.

The trade war with China in the past months has seen ethane and propane trade between the United States and China suffer significant disruption.

The lifting of the license requirement is set to restart U.S. ethane exports to China in a win for American producers and for the tentative trade deal between the world’s two largest economies.

China is the largest destination for U.S. ethane exports, accounting for 47% of U.S. ethane exports in 2024, per EIA data.

In the June Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), the EIA expected U.S. ethane exports to drop this year and next due to the licensing requirements for U.S. exports of ethane to China.

However, the rescinded licensing requirements would now lead the EIA to increase its forecasts for U.S. ethane exports again.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Venezuelan Crude Is Losing Its Appeal in China

    Chinese state-owned giant PetroChina, which hasn’t bought Venezuelan crude since the U.S. imposed sanctions on Venezuela in 2019, is not too keen to start buying again after the U.S. authorized…

    Canada Looks to Boost Energy Exports to India in Strategy Reset

    Canada’s efforts to diversify its energy exports away from the United States go through boosting sales oil, gas, and uranium to the major energy market India, Canadian Energy Minister Tim…

    Have You Seen?

    What Democrats Can Learn From the Trump Energy Playbook

    • January 27, 2026
    What Democrats Can Learn From the Trump Energy Playbook

    Chevron Amasses Largest Fleet in Almost a Year to Ship Venezuelan Oil

    • January 27, 2026
    Chevron Amasses Largest Fleet in Almost a Year to Ship Venezuelan Oil

    Baker Hughes Doubles Data Center Order Target to $3 Billion on AI Power Demand

    • January 27, 2026
    Baker Hughes Doubles Data Center Order Target to $3 Billion on AI Power Demand

    How the US Is Abandoning Joint Climate Action Under Trump

    • January 27, 2026
    How the US Is Abandoning Joint Climate Action Under Trump

    America’s Hatred of ‘Loser’ Wind Farms Is Contagious

    • January 27, 2026
    America’s Hatred of ‘Loser’ Wind Farms Is Contagious

    Saudi Aramco Raises $4 Billion as Oil Prices Remain Under Pressure

    • January 27, 2026
    Saudi Aramco Raises $4 Billion as Oil Prices Remain Under Pressure

    India Sets Sights on $500 Billion Energy Expansion

    • January 27, 2026
    India Sets Sights on $500 Billion Energy Expansion

    Canada Looks to Boost Energy Exports to India in Strategy Reset

    • January 27, 2026
    Canada Looks to Boost Energy Exports to India in Strategy Reset

    Venezuelan Crude Is Losing Its Appeal in China

    • January 27, 2026
    Venezuelan Crude Is Losing Its Appeal in China

    Analysts Explain Tuesday’s USA NatGas Price Drop

    • January 27, 2026
    Analysts Explain Tuesday’s USA NatGas Price Drop