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By leveraging its teapot refineries to purchase crude from sanctioned nations like Iran and Venezuela, China capitalizes on significant price discounts. A Reuters report calculated that this strategy saved the country approximately $10 billion on crude oil imports in a single year, highlighting a major economic benefit of its geopolitical positioning.

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The recent conflicts in Iran and Venezuela can be framed as a covert economic war against China. Since China buys 90% of Iran's oil and relies on Venezuela's supply, US actions disrupting these nations directly target China's energy security and serve as a tool of economic containment.

China's independent refiners, known as "Shandong teapots," benefit significantly from sanctioned oil. They purchase discounted crude from countries like Venezuela, boosting their margins and supporting local economies. This trade is often conducted in renminbi, furthering China's goal of de-dollarization in energy markets.

Due to sanctions, Iran's oil exports go almost exclusively to China. This monopsony gives Beijing immense leverage, allowing it to demand deep price discounts and pay in yuan. The funds are held in Chinese banks, restricting Iran to using them only for Chinese goods, crippling its ability to buy essentials elsewhere.

The move against Iran is not just a regional conflict but part of a grand strategy to disrupt the China-Russia-Iran-North Korea axis. By attempting to cut off China's access to cheap oil from Iran and Venezuela, the goal is to weaken China’s economic rise, even at the risk of global instability.

The US is disrupting China's oil supply from Iran and Venezuela (which accounts for ~20% of its imports) to gain a stronger negotiating position ahead of major talks. This frames the conflict as a geopolitical chess move rather than just a regional issue.

Unlike Western economies facing severe inflationary threats from the Iran oil crisis, China is in a better position. A slight rise in inflation could actually be beneficial for its economy, helping to counteract recent deflationary pressures without alarming its central bank, the PBOC.

U.S. foreign policy actions against Venezuela and Iran are not primarily about democracy but are strategic moves to disrupt the flow of cheap, sanctioned oil to China. By controlling these sources, the U.S. can directly attack a key adversary's economic and military engine.

As Russia redirects crude, China has become a key buyer, increasing imports so much that they now exceed an informal 20% cap on any single supplier's share. This signals a strategic energy policy shift and highlights China's role as a willing buyer for sanctioned Russian barrels.

China uses small, independent "teapot" refineries to buy sanctioned oil from nations like Iran. These entities are more risk-tolerant than state-owned giants because they have little exposure to the U.S. dollar system. This parallel structure allows China to secure cheap energy while its major firms avoid direct sanctions risk.

While facing economic headwinds from the oil crisis, China is positioning the US-Iran conflict as a geopolitical victory. It portrays the US as a chaotic, destabilizing force, contrasting itself as a stable superpower and capitalizing on the global fallout from what it terms 'poor strategic coordination' by Washington.