China and India Boost Crude Purchases as Global Glut Looms

China and India are buying more crude oil, providing some respite for producers facing expectations of oversupply, Bloomberg reported today, citing unnamed trading sources.

The two large importers have been buying mostly Middle Eastern cargos, the Bloomberg sources said, noting that these were being sold at a discount, with China the bigger buyer and India raising its purchases since the start of the month only marginally.

Purchases so far in November featured more Upper Zakum grade shipments and additional volumes of Kuwaiti crude, the publication reported. Indian refiners also bought West African crude and some Qatari crude.

“There is a lot of supply in the market,” Manoj Heda, executive director of international trade at India’s state-owned Bharat Petroleum, said at an industry event, as quoted by Bloomberg. But “demand centers are only limited to China and India.”

China and India are the biggest buyers of Russian crude, which is currently being squeezed by the latest U.S. sanctions, prompting the buying countries to look for alternatives. Last month, however, Indian oil buyers ramped up their intake of Russian crude ahead of the new sanction package’s entry into effect, Finland-based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air reported. The outlet tracks Russian energy exports on a monthly basis.

Per CREA figures, India imported some 3.1 billion euros, or $3.6 billion, worth of Russian energy commodities, with crude oil making up 81% of the total and oil products making up another 7%. The remainder of Russian energy imports was coal. Crude oil imports from Russia in October booked an 11% increase on September, with two-thirds of that total going to private refiners. State refiners in India also ramped up Russian energy commodity imports, buying almost twice as much of these in October as they did in September. China, meanwhile, remained the biggest buyer of Russian energy commodities last month, ahead of the sanctions.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    TotalEnergies Finalizes Plan for Azeri Absheron Field’s Second Phase

    TotalEnergies expects first gas from the expansion of its Absheron gas and condensate field in Azerbaijan to flow in September 2029, the French supermajor said in an environmental impact assessment…

    EU Considers Naval Action to Reopen Vital Strait of Hormuz

    The European Union foreign ministers are discussing on Monday the potential to move an already operational mission in the Middle East region to try to help unblock the Strait of…

    Have You Seen?

    SPURRED BY GULF WAR, Alaska LNG Aims for Go-Ahead Decisions in 2026-27 and Exports in 2031

    • March 17, 2026
    SPURRED BY GULF WAR, Alaska LNG Aims for Go-Ahead Decisions in 2026-27 and Exports in 2031

    TotalEnergies Finalizes Plan for Azeri Absheron Field’s Second Phase

    • March 17, 2026
    TotalEnergies Finalizes Plan for Azeri Absheron Field’s Second Phase

    Trump Upset as Key US Partners Shun Call for Hormuz Warship Escorts

    • March 16, 2026
    Trump Upset as Key US Partners Shun Call for Hormuz Warship Escorts

    Hormuz Crisis Sparks Urgent Call to Boost UK Gas Storage

    • March 16, 2026
    Hormuz Crisis Sparks Urgent Call to Boost UK Gas Storage

    Iraq To Restore Kirkuk-Turkey Pipeline as Iran War Chokes Off Exports

    • March 16, 2026
    Iraq To Restore Kirkuk-Turkey Pipeline as Iran War Chokes Off Exports

    Middle East War Revives Interest in Alaska LNG

    • March 16, 2026
    Middle East War Revives Interest in Alaska LNG

    EU Considers Naval Action to Reopen Vital Strait of Hormuz

    • March 16, 2026
    EU Considers Naval Action to Reopen Vital Strait of Hormuz

    Pakistan Oil Tanker Transits Hormuz

    • March 16, 2026
    Pakistan Oil Tanker Transits Hormuz

    Kent wins engineering and design contract for Prinos CO2 storage project

    • March 16, 2026
    Kent wins engineering and design contract for Prinos CO2 storage project

    COMMENTARY: US is Quickly Exhausting Tools to Absorb Iran War Oil Shock – Ron Bousso

    • March 16, 2026
    COMMENTARY: US is Quickly Exhausting Tools to Absorb Iran War Oil Shock – Ron Bousso