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China snaps up Russian oil India shuns — how Beijing is cushioning Moscow

China snaps up Russian oil India shuns — how Beijing is cushioning Moscow

China snaps up Russian oil India shuns — how Beijing is cushioning Moscow

Key points


What’s happening in plain language

As a big buyer of discounted Moscow barrels, India has historically been able to absorb volumes that Western buyers avoided after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. But recent data show India sharply cut imports of Russian crude in January and February 2026. Traders, ship-tracking analytics and market data point to a clear substitution: Chinese independent refiners — the so-called “teapots” and other non-state buyers — stepped in and snapped up many of the cargoes India left behind.

That buying helped Russia avoid an abrupt drop in export receipts by redirecting barrels to a market willing to take them at steep discounts. Analysts say the movement has been driven by price (Russian crude trading $9–$12 a barrel below Brent in recent weeks) and by China’s refinery economics — independent players can profit from processing cheap heavy barrels into diesel, fuel oil and exports.


The data behind the shift

These are near-term snapshots: flows can change quickly as freight, insurance and sanctions-related frictions evolve.


Why India pulled back — short explanation

India’s retreat from Russian barrels reflects a mix of strategic and commercial forces: pressure from Western partners, a desire to deepen trade ties with the U.S., and the need to maintain access to certain financial and shipping channels that could be affected by sanctions. New Delhi has also been buying more Middle Eastern crude (Saudi and others) to replace some volumes. The result: a meaningful drop in India’s Russia exposure — which Russian sellers then sought to cover by lowering prices and courting other buyers.


Why Chinese refiners can (and did) step in

Chinese independent refiners are flexible purchasers that can profit from processing deep-discount heavy crudes into high-value refined products. In the current environment they benefit from:

Because these refiners operate on thinner margins and faster turnaround cycles than many state refiners, they can absorb spot cargoes that larger buyers might pass on. This practical advantage allowed them to “sweep up” Indian-destined barrels at a price that still left room for profit.


Market and policy implications

  1. Short-term relief for Moscow. By moving volumes to China, Russia limits the immediate drop in hard currency receipts. That reduces the blunt impact of a near-term buyer retreat.
  2. Sanctions elasticity. The dynamic shows how flexible trading networks, discounts and willing third-country buyers can blunt the effect of sanctions or political pressure — not by nullifying them, but by raising the cost and complexity of enforcement.
  3. Price and grade effects. Heavy discounts for Urals and other Russian grades can make those crudes the marginal barrels that define regional refinery economics — boosting exports of refined products from China while depressing Urals price realizations.
  4. Geopolitical signaling. India’s pullback reflects diplomatic calculations — a willingness to rebalance trade to strengthen ties with Western partners — while China’s uptake signals its continuing strategic latitude in energy sourcing.

What consumers and businesses might notice


What to watch next


Bottom line

Chinese refiners’ quick uptake of discounted Russian crude has temporarily plugged a hole left by India’s decision to cut purchases. That arbitrage — deep discounts met by nimble buyers — shows both the resilience and the fragility of global oil flows: markets reallocate quickly, but policy tools (sanctions, insurance constraints, trade diplomacy) can still shift the balance in weeks, not just months. For traders, refiners and policymakers, the coming data releases will reveal whether this substitution is a short-term blip or a more lasting realignment.

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