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| US energy trade, China |
China tariff relief bypasses US energy trade in the latest preliminary deal. The headline reduction excludes crude and LNG. Therefore, China tariff relief bypasses US energy trade and preserves steep energy tariffs. As a result, China tariff relief bypasses US energy trade while easing pressure on farm goods.
Energy tariffs stay despite broader deal signals
The agreement suspends many retaliatory tariffs announced since March. However, it does not touch China’s February energy duties. The cumulative tariff on US LNG remains about 50pc. Meanwhile, the effective rate on US crude stays near 22.5pc. Therefore, US oil and gas flows to China remain uneconomic. The US will cut its broad headline tariff by 10 points. Even so, energy-specific duties still block trade recovery. Beijing has not confirmed exact terms in its statements. Market participants should assume energy tariffs persist for now.
Shipping fees ease, but fuel flows remain constrained
The US will suspend new port fees on Chinese vessels. In response, China will suspend its countermeasures on US vessels. Consequently, logistics friction should decline for many cargos. Yet energy economics depend on tariff arithmetic, not fees. LNG offtake needs long-term price certainty and access. Crude flows need competitive landed costs into China. Until energy tariffs fall, trade lanes will stay muted. Therefore, suppliers must pivot toward alternate Asian buyers. US producers may target Korea, Japan, and Southeast Asia.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The deal separates agriculture from hydrocarbons, preserving leverage over energy. Watch for a second-stage negotiation that explicitly addresses crude and LNG. If Beijing maintains February duties, Atlantic LNG spreads and US crude differentials will keep steering barrels elsewhere.

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