China's Oil Imports Plunge: Post-Iran War Recovery or Structural Shift?
China slashed daily oil imports from an average of 11.5 million barrels over five years to just 8 million since April, with shipments hitting 40% of pre-war levels in June, capping global prices and freeing cargoes for other markets. Market observers question how the world’s top importer achieved such a sharp drop and whether the decline is structural. Michal Meidan of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies called it a 'million-dollar question,' citing opaque data, secret stockpiles, and unclear policy signals. Analysts project a potential 1-2 million bpd drop post-war, challenging decades of China-led oil demand growth. The transport sector’s ability to operate on less fuel—half of crude is refined into transport fuels—raises doubts about long-term recovery. Electric vehicle adoption hit a 62% record in June but faltered amid weak demand and an 87% gasoline fleet. Diesel demand faces accelerated erosion after Beijing's June plan to electrify trucking, targeting 80% on busy routes by 2030. Rystad revised forecasts downward: gasoline use down 6.6% and diesel 6.9% versus pre-war estimates of 3.5% and 3%. Analyst Ye Lin noted the crisis 'helped consumers build confidence in electric cars and trucks,' though industrial demand risks remain if growth slows further.
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