Chinese teapots bag cheap crude
Canadian and Iranian barrels being snapped up by China’s smaller refineries amid weaker domestic demand
China’s so-called teapot refineries—small and simple processing facilities that are mostly privately owned—are buying more Canadian and Iranian barrels as they look towards lower-cost sources for succour from lean or even negative margins. The Chinese buying comes amid a slowdown in domestic oil demand, and as both Ottawa and Tehran brace for potential trade friction from President-elect Trump’s incoming administration. The teapots represent one-quarter of China’s refining capacity and are clustered in the eastern province of Shandong. They have been steady buyers of Canadian heavy sour crude exported from the country’s Pacific coast in the six months since the Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX)
Also in this section
17 January 2025
Supply glut or supply deficit are both plausible outlooks, with tariffs and sanctions among the key risks that could swing the pendulum
17 January 2025
European Commission is on its way to meeting clean energy goals, but energy security concerns and higher costs may give it second thoughts
17 January 2025
The CEO of QatarEnergy has highlighted the potential impact a new EU directive could have on energy exports to the continent
16 January 2025
The government’s resource nationalism is aggravating the NOC’s debt position and could yet worsen if also tasked with the decarbonisation shift