Ignoring the U.S., China accelerates imports of Russian crude
China's oil refineries steadily increase crude oil imports from Russia, after India delays purchases from the impact of U.S. tariff measures.
China and India were once major importers of Russian oil; after Western nations began boycotting Moscow in the wake of the recent 2022 Ukraine incident, US President Donald Trump announced an additional 25% increase in tariffs on imports of goods from India effective August 27, arguing that India continues to buy energy from Russia; the new measure resulted in state refineries in India temporarily suspending imports of crude oil from Russia, which had previously accounted for up to 36% of the entire country's imports.
According to Muyu Xu, a senior analyst at Kpler, China's major public and private refineries have ordered at least 13 Russian oils for October and two for November, using shipping routes from the Arctic and the Black Sea, formerly India's main routes.
China benefits from Russian oil prices that are about $3 a barrel lower than the Middle East and will likely increase imports, if the United States continues to put pressure on India; despite Trump's previous threats to implement tariff measures against China as well, no immediate enactment has been made.
The Indian side has no official statement yet, but Bloomberg and Reuters reported that India has resumed buying Russian oil, with Indian Oil and Bharat Petroleum shipping for September and October, reaffirming its stance that it "will value energy security over politics."

















































































