China in the Hormuz Crisis: What It Means for Australian Supply Chains
China is the world's largest oil importer, the dominant manufacturer of solar panels, EV batteries, and rare earth-processed materials, the biggest buyer of Australian resources, and the country that has pre-positioned itself most deliberately for the energy transition that every oil shock accelerates. In the Hormuz crisis, it is all of these things simultaneously, which makes its supply chain story far more complex than the headlines suggest.
For Australian businesses, understanding China's position in this crisis is not optional. China sits at both ends of the supply chains that matter most to Australia: as the buyer of our resources, the manufacturer of our goods, and the competitor for the clean energy markets we are trying to enter. The Hormuz disruption is reshaping all three of those relationships at once, and the effects will be felt in Australian procurement, trade, and industry for years.
This article maps China's supply chain position through the crisis, separating short-term pain from long-term structural advantage, and tracing the implications for Australian businesses on both sides of that ledger.
China's Energy Exposure: Bigger Than Most Assume, But Better Buffered Than Most
The numbers on China's Hormuz exposure are striking. Over 55 per cent of China's oil imports come from the Middle East, with the vast majority of that supply transiting the Strait of Hormuz. War on the Rocks Before the war, China received 5.35 million barrels of oil per day via the strait. Foreign Policy That is not a marginal dependency. That is a structural one.
But China did not walk into this crisis unprepared. The PRC has the largest onshore crude stockpiles in the world, with inventory levels estimated at 1.2 billion barrels as of January 2026, implying around 108 days of import cover. Atlantic Council Beijing saw the signals early. In the first two months of the year, China accelerated its efforts to build its oil stockpile, with crude imports soaring 15.8 per cent compared to a year earlier. CNBC
China is 85 per cent energy self-sufficient. War on the Rocks It has significant domestic coal and gas production, an advanced nuclear programme, and the world's largest fleet of renewable energy generation assets. China is also better positioned due to its partnership with Iran and Russia, which has allowed it to continue importing pipeline natural gas over land from Russia. Time And in a geopolitical twist, Iran appears to be offering China preferential treatment: Iran is weighing allowing cargoes traded in Chinese yuan to transit through Hormuz, a move that would tilt energy flows toward China and challenge the US dollar's dominance in global markets. Time
The short version: China has a cushion. It is absorbing a serious supply shock, but it is not facing the kind of acute crisis that Japan, South Korea, or India are experiencing. The more important question is what happens if the disruption extends beyond three months, and what the structural consequences are regardless of when it ends.
The Manufacturing Cost Problem: Where China's Short-Term Pain Is Real
The cushion does not eliminate the pain. It defers it, and it shapes how the pain lands.
Higher energy costs feed directly into production costs for steel, chemicals and electronics, squeezing margins and weakening export competitiveness at a moment of intense trade friction. World Economic Forum This is not theoretical. China dominates roughly 30 per cent of global manufacturing. Since energy is required to power manufacturing and logistics, and China dominates 30 per cent of global manufacturing which impacts 80 per cent of the world, these impacts have ripple effects in the supply chain. Lma-consultinggroup
The sectors most affected within China are the same sectors that supply the world: steel, aluminium, cement, ceramics, petrochemicals, plastics, synthetic textiles, and electronics assembly. All are energy-intensive. All are absorbing cost increases that will flow through into the export prices of Chinese-manufactured goods within weeks. For Australian importers of Chinese-manufactured products, which covers an enormous range of categories from consumer electronics to construction materials to packaging, this is a near-term cost pressure that needs to be factored into procurement budgets now.
The competitive dynamic is also worth noting. China may gain external competitiveness from the Iran crisis, relative to the West. But its domestic demand may be hit unless consumption-targeted fiscal policy comes to the rescue, which looks unlikely in light of Chinese economic policy announcements. Bruegel In other words, Chinese exporters may hold their prices steady or absorb some margin compression to maintain market share, which would dampen the pass-through to Australian importers in the short term. But the underlying cost base is rising, and that will eventually be reflected in pricing.
For Australian procurement teams managing Chinese supplier relationships, this is a category management question with two dimensions: understanding which product lines carry the most energy-intensive manufacturing footprint, and building the supplier financial health visibility to know which partners are under genuine stress.
What China's Supply Chain Stress Means for Australian Exporters
China's manufacturing cost pressure creates a direct flow-on effect for Australian exporters of the inputs that feed Chinese industry.
Iron ore is the most obvious. China's steel production is the single largest determinant of global iron ore demand, and Pilbara producers are the dominant supplier. A slowdown in Chinese manufacturing output driven by energy cost pressure is, in historical patterns, a signal for softening iron ore demand in the short term. But the relationship is more nuanced during an energy shock than during a demand recession. Chinese steelmakers are still producing; they are producing with higher input costs and under margin pressure, which tends to drive them toward procurement optimisation rather than volume reduction. In that environment, reliable supply at contracted prices is more valuable than usual. Australian iron ore exporters with long-term supply relationships and reliable logistics are better positioned than spot-market oriented suppliers.
Metallurgical coal follows a similar logic. Energy-intensive Chinese steel production, squeezed by oil and gas cost increases, will be seeking every efficiency it can find. Premium hard coking coal from Queensland, which enables more efficient blast furnace operation, holds its value in that environment in a way that lower-quality thermal coal does not.
The agricultural dynamic is also significant. For China, the main threat from the Iran conflict is that it could retard consumption globally, with obvious consequences for Chinese exports. Bruegel Slowing domestic demand in China as energy-driven inflation erodes household disposable income means that Chinese consumers are spending a larger share of income on energy and a smaller share on discretionary items. For Australian agricultural exporters, the direct food and beverage trade with China is therefore somewhat at risk of volume softening in the short term, even as food prices rise globally. The more valuable opportunity is in the secondary markets: Japan, South Korea, Southeast Asia, all of which are scrambling for food supply security and are turning to Australian suppliers with greater urgency than they were three months ago.
China's Long-Term Structural Position: The Clean Energy Supply Chain Play
Here is where the China story becomes genuinely important for Australian businesses to understand, because it is counterintuitive and underappreciated.
Every oil shock in modern history has accelerated the energy transition policy response proportionally to the pain it inflicts. The 1973 embargo accelerated nuclear in France. The 1979 crisis drove Japan's efficiency push. The Hormuz crisis of 2026 is doing the same across every import-dependent economy simultaneously, but at far greater scale and with far more mature clean energy technology available to deploy.
The structural winner from that global acceleration is China, and the mechanism is its dominance of clean energy supply chains. China controls approximately 80 per cent of global solar panel manufacturing capacity, more than 60 per cent of EV battery production (led by CATL and BYD), the majority of rare earth element processing globally, and a dominant position in wind turbine manufacturing. As the WEF noted, as more importers look towards electrification to become less reliant on oil and gas markets, they could in turn increase their dependence on China due to its dominance of clean energy supply chains. World Economic Forum
Every government that responds to the Hormuz crisis by accelerating EV adoption mandates, renewable deployment targets, or grid electrification investment is, at the level of supply chains, increasing its procurement dependency on Chinese manufacturers. That is true for Japan, South Korea, Germany, India, and Australia alike. The geopolitical tension in that dynamic is real and is already being discussed in policy circles: reducing oil dependency may mean substituting one form of supply chain dependency for another.
For Australian businesses, this long-term dynamic has several practical implications.
The Australian-China Supply Chain Relationship: Three Shifts to Understand
Shift 1: China will remain a dominant manufacturer of inputs to Australia's energy transition, even as Australia diversifies away from Chinese goods in some categories.
The policy direction in Australia is clear: accelerate renewable deployment, electrify transport, build sovereign battery manufacturing capability. The supply chain reality is that the components required to execute that transition, solar panels, battery cells, inverters, EV drivetrains, and associated electronics, are overwhelmingly sourced from Chinese manufacturers. That dependency is not resolved in the short term. Australian businesses and government agencies planning major energy transition capital programmes need to understand that their tier-one supplier is increasingly price-competitive and domestically stressed simultaneously, which creates both opportunity (lower prices on some categories) and risk (delivery reliability as Chinese manufacturers manage their own input cost pressures).
Shift 2: China's resource procurement from Australia is becoming more, not less, strategic.
As China's oil import vulnerability has been exposed, Beijing's interest in securing alternative energy supply chains has intensified. Australian lithium, cobalt, nickel, and rare earth elements are not just commodities in that context. They are strategic inputs to the supply chain through which China will maintain its clean energy manufacturing dominance. That gives Australian resource exporters considerably more leverage in commercial negotiations than a spot commodity framework would suggest. Long-term contracts with price escalation clauses tied to the critical minerals market cycle, rather than simple volume offtake agreements, are worth revisiting in the current environment.
Shift 3: Australian manufacturing that competes with Chinese imports is facing a temporary reprieve that will not last.
Chinese manufactured goods are becoming marginally more expensive in the short term as energy costs inflate. For Australian manufacturers in sectors where they compete directly with Chinese imports, such as aluminium fabrication, certain plastics and resins, building products, and some food processing categories, this creates a brief window of relative cost competitiveness. That window is likely to close within 12 to 18 months as the crisis resolves or as Chinese manufacturers optimise around higher energy costs. It is not a strategic shift; it is a cyclical one. Building a business case for Australian manufacturing investment on the assumption that Chinese cost advantages will persist at the current reduced level would be a mistake.
The Rare Earths Chain: Where Australia and China Are on Different Sides
One supply chain where Australia and China sit in genuine strategic tension is rare earth elements. China processes approximately 85 to 90 per cent of the world's rare earths, even though Australia produces a significant share of the raw ore. The Hormuz crisis has accelerated already-existing Western policy intent to diversify rare earth processing away from Chinese control, for exactly the same reasons it has accelerated energy diversification: the lesson that strategic dependency on a single supplier or chokepoint is a systemic risk.
Lynas Rare Earths, headquartered in Perth, is the only significant producer of separated rare earth materials outside China at scale. Its position in the post-Hormuz strategic environment is considerably stronger than it was before February 2026. Australian government policy supporting domestic rare earth processing, combined with allied nation demand for non-Chinese supply, creates a genuine industry-building opportunity that is now much easier to make the case for politically.
For Australian government and defence sector clients working on sovereign industrial capability and critical supply chain strategy, the rare earths processing question is live, consequential, and now has the political momentum it previously lacked. The supply chain design work required to build that capability is complex: processing infrastructure, logistics from mine to plant, offtake contracting with allied nation buyers, and workforce planning for a skills set that barely exists in Australia today. This is exactly the kind of strategy and network design challenge that requires both technical supply chain expertise and sector knowledge.
The China-Led LNG Pricing War: What It Means for Australian Producers
One underappreciated dynamic in the LNG market is playing out between China and European buyers. The current crisis may reverse the 2022 pattern. As the loss of Qatari supply tightens global LNG markets, Asian buyers may be willing to outbid Europe for available cargoes. China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan together accounted for approximately three-quarters of all LNG imported across Asia in 2025. Atlantic Council
For Australian LNG producers, this creates an interesting commercial environment. Asian buyers who are outbidding European buyers for spot LNG cargoes are also, simultaneously, accelerating their shift to long-term contracts with non-Gulf suppliers. Australian LNG is at the top of that preferred supplier list for Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, not just because of geography and reliability, but because the geopolitical calculus of a stable democratic supplier has never been more explicitly valued.
The commercial implication for Woodside, Santos, and the major joint venture operators is that the contracting window for long-term supply agreements at favourable terms is open now, and it will not remain open indefinitely once the crisis resolves. The operational implication is that throughput optimisation and logistics reliability are now actively monitored by customers in a way they were not before the crisis. Any disruption to Australian LNG delivery in the current environment would be noticed and remembered by buyers making twenty-year contracting decisions.
What Australian Supply Chain Leaders Should Take From the China Story
The China lens on the Hormuz crisis produces several specific actions for Australian businesses.
For procurement leaders managing Chinese supplier relationships, the immediate task is a manufacturing energy intensity review. Identify which product categories and which specific suppliers carry the highest energy cost exposure in their production processes, and model the likely pricing impact over a 90-day horizon. Build that into budget forecasts before the invoices arrive.
For businesses importing Chinese manufactured goods, the more complex question is what a structurally more expensive China means for sourcing strategy over a two to three-year horizon. The Hormuz crisis is compounding cost pressures that were already building from demographic change, rising Chinese labour costs, and geopolitically motivated supply chain diversification by Western multinationals. The crisis is not the cause of a China plus one strategy; it is an accelerant of one that was already rational. For Australian FMCG and manufacturing clients, that conversation is worth having now rather than after the next disruption forces it.
For resource exporters, the strategic framing of commercial relationships with Chinese buyers needs to reflect the new geopolitical context. Resources that feed China's clean energy manufacturing dominance are strategic commodities, not bulk commodities. Contracting structures, pricing mechanisms, and relationship management should reflect that.
For government and policy clients, the rare earths and critical minerals processing question is now a genuine near-term opportunity, not a long-term aspiration. The political will, the allied nation demand, and the private capital interest are all converging in a way they were not before February 2026. The supply chain design and capability-building work needs to start now.
How Trace Consultants Can Help
Trace Consultants works with Australian businesses across resources, FMCG, retail, hospitality, government, and defence on the supply chain challenges the Hormuz crisis is surfacing in the China relationship.
Chinese supplier exposure mapping. We help procurement functions understand their tier-two and tier-three exposure to Chinese manufacturing energy intensity, identifying which categories carry the most risk of cost pass-through and which suppliers are under genuine financial stress. Explore our procurement service.
Strategic sourcing review for China-exposed categories. For businesses where China plus one diversification is now a live question, we provide the sourcing strategy, supplier market analysis, and transition planning to make that shift without disrupting operational continuity. Explore our strategy and network design service.
Critical minerals and resources supply chain design. For Australian resource exporters and government clients building sovereign processing capability, we bring the network design, logistics strategy, and contracting framework expertise to turn strategic ambition into operational plans. Explore our government and defence sector work.
Supply chain resilience frameworks. For any business whose China exposure was not mapped before this crisis, a multi-tier resilience assessment is the starting point. We build frameworks that give leadership genuine visibility into where supply chain risk sits, rather than a compliance document that sits on a shelf. Explore our resilience and risk management service.
Explore our supply chain solutions or speak to an expert at Trace.
Where to Begin
If your business has significant China exposure, on either the import or export side, three questions define your starting position.
First: which of your Chinese suppliers carry high energy intensity in their manufacturing process, and have you modelled what a sustained 20 to 30 per cent increase in their input costs does to your landed cost? If you have not, that analysis needs to happen in the next two to four weeks, not the next quarter.
Second: if you are an Australian exporter with China as a primary market, how much of your commercial relationship is structured around spot or short-term arrangements? The current environment is one where Chinese buyers have reasons to lock in reliable supply from stable partners. That is a contracting opportunity worth pursuing now.
Third: if your business is planning capital investment in energy transition infrastructure, what assumptions have you made about the supply chain for the components you will need? The Hormuz crisis has not made Chinese manufactured solar, battery, and EV components unavailable. It has made the strategic dependency on them more visible, and more likely to attract policy and procurement responses that will reshape those supply chains over the next five years.
The businesses that navigate this well will be the ones that looked at the China supply chain story clearly, without either dismissing the short-term risks or overstating the long-term structural shifts. Both are real. The task is to manage both at the same time.

















