Explainer-China's oil imports have plunged during the Iran war. How much will they recover?

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Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTBy Lewis Jackson and Sam LiFri, July 17, 2026 at 7:40 AM GMT+2 4 min readBy Lewis Jackson and Sam LiBEIJING, July 17 (Reuters) - For five years, China imported an average of 11.5 million barrels of oil per day. Since April, it has averaged just 8 million bpd.The speed at which China has slashed imports — shipments fell to 40% of pre-Iran war levels in June — has kept a lid on global ‌prices and freed up cargoes for other countries.Market observers are puzzled over how the world's biggest oil importer achieved that reduction and want to know how permanent the drop in ‌demand is."It's the million-dollar question," said Michal Meidan, head of China Energy Research at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. "There's a massive level of uncertainty because we don't fully understand what has happened."The uncertainty reflects the lack of visibility into China: the ​size of its stockpile is a state secret, its oil companies are opaque and its data is patchy.Some analysts predict China's oil imports could ultimately decline by 1 million to 2 million bpd after the war from pre-conflict levels, a sharp drop in demand for a country that for decades drove growth in global oil consumption.Following are factors to consider:WHITHER CHINESE FUEL DEMAND?The war has revealed a Chinese transport system able to run on less fuel than thought possible, which has significant implications for crude imports given roughly half are refined into transport fuels.What's less clear is whether the war will greatly accelerate electric car sales, especially as ‌petrol prices have fallen back to pre-war levels after surging by more ⁠than a quarter.Electric and hybrid cars rose to a record 62% of new car sales in June. However, hundreds of thousands fewer cars have been sold this year due to a weak Chinese economy and slowing electrification of a fleet that is still 87% petrol-powered.It does, however, look like the war will accelerate ⁠the destruction of diesel demand after the government launched a plan in June to electrify trucking, aiming to have some busy short-haul routes 80% electrified by 2030.Consultancy Rystad expects Chinese gasoline and diesel use to drop 6.6% and 6.9%, respectively, versus their forecasts of 3.5% and 3% before the war."The crisis has acted as a trigger," says Ye Lin, an analyst at Rystad. "It helped consumers build more confidence in electric cars and trucks."WHAT ABOUT INDUSTRIAL DEMAND?If ​the ​Iran war further slows China's domestic growth or its export markets, it poses further risk for the country's oil ​demand, says Meidan from the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies.Terms and Privacy PolicyEU DSA contactPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info