BEIJING, May 27 (Reuters) - Chinese Premier Li Qiang called for expanding the country's reserve capacity during visits to oil ...
There’s a high chance the Chinese government is injecting petroleum from a strategic supply into the market, Rory Johnston ...
Corn and soybeans saw early pressure with doubts about the trade deal with China casting a shadow over prices.
Morgan Stanley strategists say that oil prices are lower relative to other supply shocks thanks to two global forces working ...
China has drastically cut its oil imports, freeing up supplies for other Asian countries as the logjam in the Strait of ...
China and the U.S., the world's two largest economies, wield great influence over the oil market and are using it to help plug the supply gap.
For more than a decade, leader Xi Jinping has overseen a transformation within the Chinese economy with one aim: making it energy-secure.
China, the world’s largest importer of energy, has so far weathered the global energy shock brought on by war in the Gulf well compared with some of its Asian neighbors.
China relies heavily on crude oil imports from the Middle East but those supplies are mostly cut off due to Iran's blockade ...
Sinopec's Jiyang shale base hit 2 million tons of cumulative output and posted a 15% production gain as China pushes to reduce its dependence on imported crude.
China is no longer only the world’s largest importer of crude oil. It has become the invisible central banker of oil markets.
The Treasury Department on Friday announced new sanctions on a Chinese oil refinery and dozens of shipping firms and vessels, including those with ties to Hong Kong, in a bid to disrupt Iran’s oil ...