Trump-Xi Summit Leaves Oil Market in the Dark

Date:

A high-stakes summit between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping has concluded, but a crucial topic was conspicuously absent from public statements: Russian oil. This silence has thrown Chinese refiners, the world’s largest crude importers, into a state of confusion.
The lack of clarity comes at a time of extreme market uncertainty. Western policy aims to cut off Russia’s war funding, and China’s next move is critical.
In response to this “muddle” and new sanctions, Chinese state-owned giants like Sinopec and PetroChina are already canceling Russian cargoes. This retreat is a direct reaction to new US sanctions targeting Russian producers Rosneft and Lukoil.
The fear isn’t limited to state-run firms. Private “teapot” refiners are also shunning Russian crude. They are reportedly terrified after the UK and EU blacklisted Yulong Petrochemical, sending a clear warning to the market.
This “buyers’ strike” has already delivered a heavy blow to Moscow. Prices for its ESPO crude have plunged, and an estimated 400,000 barrels per day of oil flow are affected.

Related articles

The Energy Security President Trump Wanted — and the EV Market He Didn’t

The political tension at the center of the current EV moment involves a president who has championed American...

US Oil Prices Grip American Households as Iran War Blocks Key Oil Arteries

The Iran war is gripping American households through its direct impact on US oil prices, with key global...

No Deal Without a Fee: How Trump Made $10 Billion the Price of TikTok’s US Survival

For TikTok to survive in the United States, its investors had to agree to one extraordinary condition: a...

Oman, Iraq, Bahrain: How Iran’s Campaign Is Closing Off the Gulf’s Oil Exits

Iran's systematic targeting of oil export infrastructure across the Gulf is closing off the region's energy exits one...