The print
JODI's March 2026 primary release shows the top crude oil importers in mb/d:
| Country | mb/d | |---|---| | China | 11.8 | | USA | 6.6 | | India | 4.5 | | Korea | 2.5 | | Japan | 2.1 |
China imports nearly double the US, more than India, Korea and Japan combined.
Why it sets the floor
Three structural reasons China's bid is the marginal price-setter in 2026:
1. Refining capacity addition. Chinese refiners added ~500 kb/d of net new capacity in 2025-26 (Yulong, Sinopec Zhenhai expansion). That capacity has to be fed; the implied imports are mechanical.
2. Strategic stockpiling continues. Beijing's commercial + state-managed reserves are not publicly itemised, but tanker tracking (Kpler / Vortexa) indicates net inventory builds in Q1 2026 above the seasonal norm.
3. Sanctioned-barrel buyer of last resort. Discounted Russian, Iranian and Venezuelan crude finds its commercial home largely in the Shandong independent refining cluster. Removing China's import bid would force those barrels into the floating storage queue, which would in turn collapse the discount.
Implications for the price floor
OPEC+ effective spare capacity sits around 3.8 mb/d on internal IEA estimates. China's import volume is three times that headroom. A 10% Chinese demand softening would absorb the entire OPEC+ spare and then some — the floor would move from around $80/bbl Brent to materially lower.
The May 2026 OPEC MOMR holds the basket at $108.79/bbl. That is consistent with the assumption that Chinese demand stays inelastic in the 11-12 mb/d range.
What we're watching
- China customs monthly crude import data (released around the 13th of the following month)
- Shandong teapot run-rate proxies (RFCC utilisation, asphalt cracker activity)
- US Treasury secondary-sanctions posture on Russian crude after the November US election
Source: JODI Oil Primary March 2026 release; OPEC May 2026 MOMR.