Global Commodities: Supply insecure—China’s imports of commodities at all-time highs and likely to stay that way
Jul 5, 2024
auto_awesome
Natasha Kaneva, Head of Global Commodities Research, discusses China's record-high commodity imports despite economic challenges, highlighting the nation's reliance on foreign resources. She explores China's strategies for securing commodities through domestic development, overseas partnerships, and strategic stockpiles as its imports continue to grow.
China's import of commodities is at all-time highs due to reliance on foreign resources.
To secure strategic commodities, China is focusing on domestic development, overseas partnerships, and building strategic stockpiles.
Deep dives
China's Surging Imports of Commodities
China's imports of major commodities surged in 2023, beating previous records in iron ore, agriculture, metals, and energy. Despite economic challenges, China's imports increased by 16% in 2023 and continued with a 6% rise in the first five months of 2024. China, being the world's second largest economy, heavily depends on foreign natural resources, consuming nearly 40% of the world's commodities.
China's Three-Pronged Resource Strategy
China's strategic resource approach consists of an inward-oriented focus on domestic exploration and production, an outward-facing strategy securing commodity imports from diverse sources, and a focus on strategic stockpiling of critical resources. The strategy aims to increase domestic production of critical resources, such as oil and natural gas, while also emphasizing resource recycling and energy efficiency.
China's Expansion of Storage Capacity for Energy and Resources
Driven by the need for energy security, China has significantly expanded its storage capacity for commodities. China currently holds a substantial percentage of global physical inventories for commodities like copper, aluminum, corn, rice, wheat, soybeans, and crude oil. With a strategic petroleum reserve and aggressive expansion of gas and grain storage facilities, China is aiming to enhance its energy security and meet rising demand for essential resources.
Natasha Kaneva, Head of Global Commodities Research
China’s imports of commodities are at all-time highs, in stark contrast to the wider, faltering macroeconomic growth in the country. As the world’s single largest consumer of commodities, China has three main sources of vulnerability: (i) it has abundant domestic resources of coal and rare earth but is relatively poor in others, (ii) with only 7% of the world’s arable land and limited fresh water resources, the country feeds about 20% of the world’s population, and (iii) most commodities are shipped to China via eight marine choke points—including the Strait of Malacca—over which the US has significant influence. To ensure the long-term security of strategic commodities, China is pursuing a three-pronged strategy: (i) more efficient development of domestic mineral and agricultural resources, (ii) establish control of resource bases overseas via equity stakes and partnerships, and (iii) build-up of strategic stockpiles. Given the increasing share of China-owned assets in the country’s total commodity import mix and China’s goal to boost its strategic reserves, the nation’s imports of natural resources will continue to grow.