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Any US strategy to leverage oil prices against China is likely to fail because China has preemptively built a strategic petroleum reserve of 1.3 billion barrels, dwarfing the US's dwindling 380 million barrels. This provides China with a significant buffer against supply shocks, undermining American geopolitical statecraft.

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Although China is the single largest importer of oil transiting the Strait of Hormuz, this volume only constitutes 6% of its total energy usage. This makes the US-imposed blockade a significant but ultimately "weatherable storm" for China's energy security.

Despite the absence of a real surplus, oil prices are unlikely to surge. China has built massive strategic reserves and consistently sells from them when Brent crude moves above $70 per barrel. This acts as a ceiling on the market, creating a range-bound environment for prices in the $60s.

Analysts create a false “manufactured surplus” by misinterpreting data. They incorrectly count US Strategic Petroleum Reserve additions as market supply and fail to recognize China's massive inventory buildup as a strategic reserve for war or sanctions, not commercial oversupply.

China maintains a strategic petroleum reserve covering over 120 days of imports, exceeding the 90-day international standard. This massive stockpile is not just for economic stability but is a key national security measure, driven by long-standing fears that the U.S. Navy could cut off its seaborne oil supplies during a conflict.

China has stockpiled approximately three to four months' worth of crude oil. This strategic reserve, combined with its ability to shift from natural gas to coal, gives it significant versatility and reduces its vulnerability to supply disruptions from conflicts in the Straits of Hormuz.

China's strategy of building oil inventories provides a key balancing force in the market. During periods of temporary supply disruption and high prices, China can simply slow its stock building. This reduction in purchasing effectively cuts demand and helps offset the disruption, stabilizing prices more quickly.

China is insulated from the worst effects of an oil shock due to its state-controlled supply chain. It can activate coal gasification facilities when crude prices exceed $100 and toggle its power grid between gas, surplus coal, and solar, minimizing the impact on economic growth.

The theory suggests the US is feigning a desire to resolve the Strait of Hormuz conflict. The real goal is to maintain high oil prices, which disproportionately harms China (a major importer) while benefiting the US as a major energy exporter, framing it as a strategic move in the broader AI race.

Faced with geopolitical uncertainty in key supplier nations, China employs a dual strategy for energy security. It has built a massive oil stockpile providing 120 days of cover for supply disruptions. Concurrently, it's rapidly electrifying its transport sector to reduce its long-term dependence on imported oil.

While China's 120-day strategic oil reserve provides a significant buffer against disruptions, it has no equivalent for Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG). With nearly one-third of its LNG imports transiting the Strait of Hormuz from Qatar, any regional conflict creates immediate supply pressure, a vulnerability not present in its oil position.