China is in direct negotiations with Iran to create a safe passage arrangement for Chinese-owned vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, according to The Jerusalem Post and Iran International. Iran's strait closure announcement reportedly omitted Chinese-flagged vessels from explicit targeting. If the arrangement holds, roughly 60% of Gulf oil — the share that flows to Asian buyers — could resume transit at prices and terms Beijing sets. The 40% bound for Western refineries stays locked behind more than 150 vessels at anchor in the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea , with every major Protection & Indemnity club having cancelled war risk cover.
The shift from rhetoric to commerce happened fast. Days ago, Bloomberg reported that China entered direct talks with Tehran pressing Iran specifically not to attack oil tankers, gas carriers, or Qatari LNG export facilities — a move described then as a qualitative change from general calls for restraint to targeted infrastructure protection. The Hormuz lane goes further. It is not a request to spare assets; it is a bilateral regime in which Chinese credentials become a transit permit through waters the US Fifth Fleet has patrolled since 1995. China's Special Envoy Zhai Jun was already en route to the region ; this negotiation gives him a deliverable that neither the Egypt-Turkey-Oman Mediation bid nor Washington's stalled diplomacy can match.
The leverage is structural, not incidental. China is Iran's largest remaining oil customer. In the years when US secondary sanctions constrained Iranian crude sales, Chinese state refineries — particularly the independent "teapot" refineries in Shandong province — continued purchasing through ship-to-ship transfers and labelling arrangements that Washington could not or chose not to enforce. Tehran needs China's market to survive the war's economic damage; China needs Gulf energy to fuel an economy still recovering from its property sector contraction. The arrangement satisfies both while imposing costs exclusively on Europe, the United States, and their allies.
The geopolitical consequence extends beyond oil pricing. If a two-tier Hormuz becomes operational, China gains a permanent card in any future negotiation — over sanctions enforcement, over Iran's nuclear programme, over the terms of a Ceasefire. Beijing is not mediating this war. It is building an economic architecture around it, one in which the strait's openness depends on Chinese diplomatic relationships rather than American naval power. For Gulf producers weighing which relationships guarantee market access, the signal is difficult to misread.
