China Halts Fuel Exports Amid Global Market Squeeze

China has told energy companies to suspend new fuel export contracts and try to cancel already arranged fuel shipments abroad as global fuel markets tighten amid the Middle Eastern war that has effectively frozen most traffic through one of the world’s biggest oil and fuel chokepoints.

Citing unnamed trading and energy industry sources, Reuters reported today that the call, made by the authorities in Beijing to fuel exporters, excluded jet fuel contracts for refuelling for international flights and bunkering fuel contracts.

Bloomberg, for its part, noted that the government had insisted the suspension of exports is implemented immediately. If true, this suggests that China is concerned about fuel supply availability despite its abundant oil in storage volumes, accumulated last year at a rate of close to a million barrels daily.

China is a top-three fuel exporter in Asia, after South Korea and Singapore; as such, it has been undermining other countries on the continent with refining industries. A suspension of fuel exports could have boosted the refining industries of other countries had it not been prompted by tightening crude oil supply due to the traffic disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. Per Bloomberg, there is virtually no outbound tanker traffic through the chokepoint.

Related: How China’s Rare Earth Ban Backfired into a U.S. Tech Breakthrough

China’s government issued the first batch of fuel export quotas in December, including gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. In addition to those, Beijing also issued export quotas for 8 million tons of low-sulfur bunkering fuel. The bulk of the quotas, at over 70%, are going to state-owned energy majors Sinopec and CNPC. The two together received fuel export quotas for a total of 13.76 million tons of gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel.

Reuters cited LSEG data as showing Chinese refiners had already exported some 70,000 tons of jet fuel, 35,000 tons of diesel, and 35,000 tons of gasoline since the start of the month.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Exxon Ships U.S. Gasoline to Australia

    Exxon has scheduled its first-ever gasoline shipment from the U.S. Gulf Coast to Australia amid a global fuel export crunch because of the war in the Middle East. The shipment…

    Are We Heading for an All-Out War in the Middle East?

    Are we heading for an all-out war in the Middle East?   That’s the question Rigzone asked Benjamin Zycher, a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and Doug Bandow, a…

    Have You Seen?

    EU’s energy act welcomed as industry urges gradual rollout of ‘Made in Europe’ rules

    • March 5, 2026
    EU’s energy act welcomed as industry urges gradual rollout of ‘Made in Europe’ rules

    Analysis: Fertiliser markets brace for disruption as Gulf crisis threatens ammonia and urea supply

    • March 5, 2026
    Analysis: Fertiliser markets brace for disruption as Gulf crisis threatens ammonia and urea supply

    China Halts Fuel Exports Amid Global Market Squeeze

    • March 5, 2026
    China Halts Fuel Exports Amid Global Market Squeeze

    Exxon Ships U.S. Gasoline to Australia

    • March 5, 2026
    Exxon Ships U.S. Gasoline to Australia

    Are We Heading for an All-Out War in the Middle East?

    • March 5, 2026
    Are We Heading for an All-Out War in the Middle East?

    Gulf crisis global impact ‘could be more critical’ than 2022

    • March 5, 2026
    Gulf crisis global impact ‘could be more critical’ than 2022

    Iran Claims It Has “Complete Control” Over Strait of Hormuz

    • March 5, 2026
    Iran Claims It Has “Complete Control” Over Strait of Hormuz

    U.S. and Japan Ponder Nuclear Energy Project in Massive $550 Billion Deal

    • March 5, 2026
    U.S. and Japan Ponder Nuclear Energy Project in Massive $550 Billion Deal

    U.S. Gives Rosneft’s German Refinery Network Open-Ended Sanctions Exemption

    • March 5, 2026
    U.S. Gives Rosneft’s German Refinery Network Open-Ended Sanctions Exemption

    Can the US Gulf insurance plan ensure safe shipping?

    • March 5, 2026
    Can the US Gulf insurance plan ensure safe shipping?