China’s Energy Imports Sink as Hormuz Crisis Begins Reshaping Global Commodity Trade

China’s Energy Imports Sink as Hormuz Crisis Begins Reshaping Global Commodity Trade
China’s Energy Imports Sink as Hormuz Crisis Begins Reshaping Global Commodity Trade
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China’s oil and gas imports fell sharply amid Middle East tensions

China’s energy imports declined significantly in April as disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz impacted crude oil and natural gas shipments.

According to Chinese customs data, crude oil imports dropped nearly 20% year-on-year to 38.47 million tons, the lowest level since July 2022. Gas imports also fell around 13% to 8.42 million tons.

The decline comes after shipping activity through the Strait of Hormuz slowed sharply following escalating tensions involving Iran, the US, and Israel.

The Middle East remains one of China’s biggest energy suppliers, accounting for nearly half of its crude imports and about one-third of LNG purchases.

Hormuz Crisis India’s Economic Impact
Hormuz Crisis India’s Economic Impact

What Happens If Hormuz Remains Blocked?

If the Strait of Hormuz stays blocked for weeks or months, the impact could become one of the largest global economic shocks since the 1970s oil crisis.

Around 20% of the world’s oil and LNG supply normally passes through Hormuz, making it the world’s most important energy chokepoint.

Global Commodity Prices During Hormuz Crisis (May 2026)

Commodity Approx Price (May 2026) Trend Impact on Markets
Brent Crude Oil $101–126/barrel 🔺 Very High Volatility Biggest inflation driver globally as Hormuz disruption choked oil supply
WTI Crude Oil $90–106/barrel 🔺 Strong Uptrend US oil benchmark surged amid Middle East supply fears
Natural Gas (US) ~$2.8/MMBtu 🔺 Moderate Rise LNG disruptions increased global gas volatility
European Natural Gas €48–60/MWh 🔺 Sharp Spike Europe faced LNG supply concerns from Qatar disruptions
Thermal Coal ~$130/ton 🔺 Rising Asian utilities shifted from LNG to coal
Gold ~$3,300–3,450/oz 🔺 Safe-Haven Rally Investors moved into gold during geopolitical uncertainty
Copper ~$6.1–6.2/lb 🔺 Strong Recovery Supply fears and infrastructure demand supported prices
Iron Ore ~$105–115/ton 🔺 Stable to Positive Chinese imports remained resilient despite slowdown
Aluminum ~$2,700–2,900/ton 🔺 Moderate Rise Gulf supply risks supported aluminum prices
Urea Fertilizer +50% from pre-war levels 🔺 Explosive Increase Fertilizer shortages emerged due to Gulf disruptions
Soybeans ~$12–13/bushel 🔺 Positive Chinese imports rose sharply from US and Brazil supply
Steel Mixed / Weak 🔻 Under Pressure Chinese exports weakened as Middle East demand slowed
Helium Supply Shortage 🔺 Strong Spike Qatar LNG disruption hit helium supply chains

Read More : OpenAI, Anthropic and Google’s New AI Strategy Is Triggering Fresh Fears for Indian IT Stocks

India Angle: Why the Hormuz Crisis Matters So Much for India

India is among the world’s most vulnerable major economies to a prolonged Strait of Hormuz disruption because the country imports nearly 85–88% of its crude oil needs and a large portion of its LPG and LNG requirements.

India Impact Table

Area Impact on India Risk Level
Crude Oil Imports Import costs surge sharply Very High
Petrol & Diesel Prices Potential price hikes or higher subsidy burden High
Rupee Weakens against US dollar High
Inflation Fuel and food inflation rise High
Stock Market Volatility increases High
Airlines Jet fuel costs rise sharply High
Oil Companies Upstream firms benefit, OMCs suffer Mixed
Fiscal Deficit Subsidy burden may rise Medium-High
GDP Growth Growth slows if oil stays above $100 Medium-High
LPG Supply Supply-chain disruptions possible High

Here’s what happened today and why traders reacted

Markets reacted after the latest trade data highlighted growing pressure on China’s energy supply chain.

Oil imports were lower both year-on-year and compared to March levels. Earlier shipments had already departed before tensions escalated in late February.

Ship-tracking firm Kpler said China’s LNG imports dropped to an eight-year low in April as shipping disruptions intensified.

The data increased fears of tighter global energy supplies and higher price volatility.

“Supply concerns are beginning to reshape commodity trade flows globally,” analysts tracking the energy market said.

Key developments investors tracked today:

  • China’s crude imports fell to the lowest since July 2022
  • LNG imports touched an eight-year low
  • Refined fuel exports plunged sharply
  • Coal demand rose as industries searched for alternatives
  • Commodity markets saw higher volatility

China is prioritising domestic fuel security over exports

As supply risks increased, Beijing reportedly shifted focus toward protecting domestic fuel availability.

China’s refined fuel exports dropped around 38% year-on-year to 3.12 million tons, the lowest level in nearly a decade.

The move suggests authorities are prioritising diesel and gasoline supplies for local consumption instead of overseas markets.

Coal demand also strengthened as industries looked for alternatives to expensive gas imports. However, coal imports still declined around 13% as China relied more on domestic production.

“The energy disruption is forcing countries to depend more heavily on internal supply chains,” market observers noted.

Metals and industrial commodities are also seeing pressure

The Hormuz disruption is beginning to impact industrial metals and commodity flows as well.

China’s aluminum exports rose nearly 15% to 598,000 tons, supported by strong domestic production. Steel exports, however, fell around 9% as Middle East demand weakened.

Copper imports showed mixed trends.

Refined copper imports edged slightly higher to 452,000 tons due to lower global prices. But copper concentrate imports fell nearly 20% compared to last year.

Iron ore imports remained relatively stable at nearly 104 million tons.

Commodity trends investors are watching:

  • Aluminum exports increased sharply
  • Steel exports weakened amid slower demand
  • Copper concentrate imports declined
  • Iron ore demand remained stable
  • Coal consumption continued rising domestically

What impact could this have on global markets and investors?

For investors, the biggest concern is the risk of prolonged disruption in global energy routes.

The Strait of Hormuz handles a major portion of global oil and LNG shipments. Any extended blockage could increase volatility across energy, shipping, refining, and commodity markets.

Higher fuel costs may also increase inflation pressure globally.

Meanwhile, China’s reduced refined fuel exports could tighten fuel supplies across parts of Asia.

“Energy security is now becoming a central market theme again,” analysts said.

Soybean imports into China also rose nearly 40% as US and Brazilian supplies increased ahead of fresh trade discussions in Beijing next week.

The latest data signals that the Hormuz crisis is now influencing not only geopolitics, but also global trade flows, commodity pricing, and investor sentiment worldwide.

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Sourabh loves writing about finance and market news. He has a good understanding of IPOs and enjoys covering the latest updates from the stock market. His goal is to share useful and easy-to-read news that helps readers stay informed.

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