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Rising China
Rising China
In a nutshell ....................................................................................1
Facts & figures .................................................................................2
Top energy consumers by fuel type and share of world consumption............................... 2
CAROLE NAKHLE
As its energy footprint grows, China is intent on maintaining a diversified supply, even with Russian flows
increasing.
Work at the construction site of the No. 4 pipeline of China’s West-East Gas Transmission Project on
November 30, 2022, in Jiuquan, Gansu province, China.
In a nutshell
China exerts a large influence as both an energy supplier and consumer
Russian flows to China are growing, accelerated by its war on Ukraine
Beijing will seek to maintain a diversity of suppliers to meet demand
Over the past decade, the pace of energy consumption in China has significantly outstripped
the global norm. Although it is a major producer (the world’s largest in coal, fourth largest in
natural gas and sixth in oil), Chinese growth in local consumption outpaced domestic supply –
turning the country into a major commodities importer, with significant consequences on
global trade. Oil, gas and coal imports to China account for around 85 percent, 40 percent and 7
percent of the country’s domestic consumption, respectively; and about 18 percent, 16 percent
and 18 percent of the global trade of these commodities.
China’s mixes of electricity consumption and overall energy use are both dominated by coal,
which is by far the worst emitter of greenhouse gases. This makes China the largest emitter of
carbon dioxide, accounting for more than 37 percent of the world’s total and more than double
the next-worst emitter, the United States (14 percent). But it is not only through its CO2
emissions that China affects the energy transition. An important producer of renewable energy,
the country is also a major supplier and refiner of many metals and minerals necessary to
manufacture green technologies, from battery storage to solar panels.
Russia’s war on Ukraine has further amplified the Chinese role in redrawing global energy trade
flows, particularly in oil and gas, with repercussions on prices and competition between
markets and suppliers.
In 2020 and 2021, Chinese oil demand grew by only 1 percent and 3 percent, respectively,
whereas in 2022 demand shrank by 4 percent to reach 14.3 million barrels per day. This is a
significant slowdown given that its oil demand grew at an average of nearly 6 percent annually
between 2009 and 2019. Similarly, China’s gas consumption decreased by around 1 percent in
2022 – the weakest annual growth since the early 1990s. The country subsequently lost its top
rank as the world’s largest buyer of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to Japan.
This slowdown was a boon to consumers in the rest of the world (and particularly in Europe) as
it helped ease pressure on prices, especially following the outbreak of war in Ukraine and
subsequent supply disruptions. Had China’s energy demand been growing at the levels
prevailing before the pandemic, Europe would have faced much higher LNG prices, being forced
to outbid its tough Asian competitor.
China’s reopening in early 2023 has led many observers to fear significant upward pressure on
energy prices, given expectations of a strong recovery in oil and gas demand. For instance,
the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects China to account for 70 percent of the year’s 2.2
million barrels per day of growth in oil demand, driven by transportation fuels (such as gasoline
and jet fuel) and robust support from the petrochemicals sector. Earlier in the year, Goldman
Sachs forecasted that the Chinese market would boost Brent by roughly $15 per barrel.
The IEA also sees Chinese gas demand growing by 6.6 percent in 2023 – at a time when global
demand is otherwise expected to stall – and that China will be the single largest contributor to
global gas consumption growth by 2025.
Market share
For energy exporters, even during a slowdown, China remains a sizable market, accounting for
a significant proportion of the total Asia-Pacific market, which is the largest importing region for
oil and gas and well ahead of Europe.
The Chinese oil market uses 14.3 million barrels per day – nearly equivalent to the oil
consumption of the entire European continent in 2022 and accounting for 40 percent of Asia-
Pacific demand. Its gas market comes to about 376 billion cubic meters (bcm), which equals
nearly three quarters of the European market in 2022 and accounts for 41 percent of regional
demand.
Not surprisingly, China has been the focus of major producers, particularly Russia, which looked
at its Asian neighbor as an alternative to the shrinking European market even before the
invasion of Ukraine. The war has only accelerated the trend.
In 2022, Russian oil exports to China grew by 16 percent, with Russia gaining market share
primarily at the expense of suppliers in West Africa and South America, and to a lesser extent
the U.S. and some Middle Eastern producers (which subsequently redirected some of their oil
to Europe). Russia became the biggest oil supplier to China, representing 16 percent of Chinese
imports and surpassing Saudi Arabia (15 percent of China’s imports), which was the country’s
largest supplier for years. Although Saudi Arabia saw only a small dent in its market share in
China, the kingdom has been taking decisive actions to safeguard its long-term position there.
In 2022, for instance, Saudi Aramco, the Saudi national oil company, finalized plans to build a
$10 billion refinery and petrochemical complex in northeastern China, marking its single largest
investment in the country.
At the same time, China – the world’s second-largest oil refiner after the U.S. – has boosted its
exports of refined oil products. Beijing has taken advantage of cheap Russian crude feedstock to
achieve lucrative margins for domestic refineries while helping to ease pressure on global
consumers, especially after Russia announced a “temporary” ban on fuel exports.
On the gas front, Australia and Qatar historically dominated LNG trade with China, while
Turkmenistan was the largest supplier of pipeline gas to China. Before 2019, Russia supplied up
to 3 percent of China’s gas imports, largely via LNG. But that relationship changed with the
opening of the Power of Siberia 1 gas pipeline, which had a capacity of 38 bcm in 2019. Russia
shifted from being a marginal supplier of gas to China to becoming its fourth-largest supplier,
accounting for 8.5 percent of the country’s gas imports. Between 2021 and 2022, Russian gas
exports to China increased by more than 50 percent. In contrast, American exports to China
dropped by almost 80 percent, heading instead to Europe to fill the gap left by Russia.
Russia’s presence in the Chinese gas market is set to further expand if the Power of Siberia 2
project, a more strategic pipeline with a 50-bcm capacity, is built. If and when that happens, it
would give Russia a replacement for its lost gas exports to Europe. However, China’s would-be
position as the largest buyer of Russian gas might lead Moscow to offer more concessions to
complete the project, and could potentially limit its bargaining power with Beijing.
Security of supply
China’s footprint on global energy markets and trade is notable. It features in the strategy of
every large exporter, particularly in oil and gas, since China is expected to be the main growth
engine for energy demand in the coming years.
Beijing will continue to skillfully maneuver its relationships with various trade partners to
secure its supplies. However, the country is unlikely to overly rely on any single supplier as its
energy security objectives focus on having a balanced portfolio of imports. “We will diversify
and expand the sources of oil and gas imports and maintain the security of strategic channels,”
the government stated in its 14th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development
and Long-Range Objectives for 2035, published in 2021.
Maintaining a diversity of suppliers also gives China greater bargaining power, not only to
negotiate favorable deals but also to retain and obtain additional political leverage. It has
already made itself indispensable for many partners, including Russia.