China’s Teapots Fire Up Again as Beijing Opens the 2026 Oil Spigot

China’s independent refiners—the country’s infamous “teapots”— just got their first sip of 2026 crude import quotas. And the timing couldn’t be better for a physical market drowning in unsold sanctioned barrels.

Trade sources say Beijing has handed out roughly 8 million tons so far across 21 refiners, a noticeable bump from the 6.04 million tons issued this time last year. Hengli Petrochemical pulled the biggest ladle at 2 million tons, with Rongsheng taking 750,000 tons and Shenghong and Hongrun getting smaller slices. These quotas can be used immediately for cargoes arriving before year-end — and in China, “year-end” traditionally means “panic-buy whatever is floating off Zhoushan.”

It matters because the teapots, for all their size, move markets.

Teapots are the crowd that keep the world’s misfit barrels moving. These are the discounted Iranian, Venezuelan, and Russian cargoes that show up with half their paperwork in invisible ink. Give these refiners more quota, and they’ll mop up the leftovers fast, which is exactly why prompt sour barrels perk up the minute Beijing loosens the leash. Even the Dubai benchmark, which has looked half-sedated for weeks, gets a little pulse back when China starts shopping again.

The timing is tricky, though. Washington has been busy slapping sanctions on every Shandong outfit that so much as glances at an Iranian tanker, and yet here we are: Beijing quietly reloading the very players the Treasury keeps trying to trip. But sanctions fatigue is creeping in, and Chinese buyers have been shrugging off Treasury press releases in favor of bargain barrels. Increased quotas only deepen the shrug.

Add in the Shandong revival story—three bankrupt refineries resurrected under new owners, now lining up for quotas of their own — and Beijing’s attempt to control overcapacity starts to look like a polite suggestion rather than national policy. Local governments want jobs; refiners want cash flow; Beijing wants order.

For the broader market, the signal is simple: China is buying again.

China isn’t exactly charging into the market with a trumpet section, but the teapots buying again is enough to keep sour barrels from skidding out entirely. There’s still plenty of crude sloshing around Asia and nobody suddenly believes U.S. sanctions have grown fangs overnight, but these new quotas at least stop the floorboards from giving way. It’s modest, it’s messy, and it’s very on-brand for how this market stabilizes: China does a little pre- Black Friday shopping, and everyone else breathes slightly easier.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

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