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Iran Conflict 2026
15MAY

OFAC sanctions Hengli, China's number two teapot

4 min read
13:51UTC

OFAC designated Hengli Petrochemical of Dalian on 24 April, the first Chinese refinery sanctioned in the 2026 war, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attached nuclear-programme language to a shadow-fleet action for the first time.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

First Chinese refinery sanctioned in the war; first nuclear-programme language on a shadow-fleet action.

OFAC designated Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) Refinery Co. Ltd on 24 April under press release sb0472, alongside 19 shadow-fleet vessels and 20 shipping companies across Hong Kong, Panama, Marshall Islands, the UAE, Vietnam, Liberia and the Cayman Islands 1. Hengli is China's second-largest independent "teapot" refinery, processing roughly 400,000 barrels per day, and the first Chinese refinery designated in the 2026 war. Five Chinese entities were already on the SDN list; Hengli is the largest by volume. It received Iranian crude from Sepehr Energy Jahan Nama Pars, the oil sales arm of Iran's Armed Forces General Staff, generating what Treasury called "hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for the Iranian military".

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent framed the action in terms no shadow-fleet designation has used before: "Economic Fury is imposing a financial stranglehold on the Iranian regime, hampering its aggression in the Middle East, and helping to curtail its nuclear ambitions." 2 Prior shadow-fleet rounds carried Hormuz, missile or oil-revenue framing; this is the first time Treasury press machinery has attached a nuclear-programme rationale to a teapot-refinery action.

The legal architecture matters. Shadow-fleet OFAC rounds typically sit under Executive Order 13846 (Iran sanctions) or 13224 (counter-terrorism). Nuclear framing invokes separate statutory authority under the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act and potentially INARA's expanded enforcement provisions, which widens the toolkit for future rounds. The action paired with the 24 April NSPM-2 missile and drone designations of fourteen targets , so Treasury produced two signed instruments inside 24 hours while the National Security Council was preparing envoys for Pakistan and was told to stand down.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran sells most of its oil to China. To get around US sanctions, the oil travels on ships that hide their identity, switch flags, and use shell companies registered in places like Hong Kong, Panama, and the Cayman Islands. This network is called the 'shadow fleet'. The US has been sanctioning parts of this network throughout the war. Friday's action went further: it named Hengli Petrochemical, one of China's biggest oil refineries, as a buyer of Iranian oil that was generating hundreds of millions of dollars for the Iranian military. The most significant new element is the language Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent used: he publicly said these oil sales were funding Iran's nuclear programme. That framing matters because it signals the US may use nuclear-weapons-specific laws on top of standard sanctions, which carry heavier penalties for anyone doing business with the designated companies.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Iran Nuclear Agreements Review Act (INARA) requires the administration to certify every 90 days whether Iran is compliant with nuclear commitments. Treasury has been building a sanctions architecture under NSPM-2 and the September 2025 UNSC snapback authority. Bessent's nuclear framing on the Hengli designation fills the gap between OFAC's oil-revenue authority and INARA's nuclear-programme authority, allowing Treasury to pursue both simultaneously without a new presidential executive order.

Brent closed at $105.73 on 24 April, 57% above the pre-war baseline. Designating China's second-largest teapot refinery sends a structural signal to the oil market that supply disruption is being actively tightened, reinforcing the price pressure without a new military action.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The nuclear framing on a shadow-fleet designation creates a template for applying INARA enforcement provisions to oil-revenue actions, bypassing the need for new presidential executive instruments.

    Medium term · 0.78
  • Risk

    China's Ministry of Commerce may announce retaliatory trade measures against US firms operating in China in response to the Hengli designation, as it did after the Huawei action.

    Short term · 0.62
  • Consequence

    The General License V wind-down with no published deadline creates compliance uncertainty for Hengli's 400,000 b/d customer base; buyers must choose between continuing under legal risk or switching supply immediately.

    Immediate · 0.85
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