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Ping Shun diverted from Vadinar to Dongying

3 min read
19:51UTC

The tanker Ping Shun was diverted mid-transit from Vadinar in India to Dongying in China earlier in April, a commercial routing signal that Indian buyers were pulling away from GL-U-covered cargo ahead of the 19 April lapse.

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Key takeaway

Ping Shun's India-to-China diversion is a pre-lapse commercial read of Indian buyers retreating from Iranian crude.

The tanker PING SHUN was diverted mid-transit from Vadinar, the Indian port city on the Gujarat coast that houses one of the country's largest refineries, to Dongying, the coastal refining hub in China's Shandong province, earlier in April 1. A mid-transit diversion across nationalities is uncommon outside commercial distress or compliance recalculations; this one sat on the commercial side.

The timing places the PING SHUN's redirection inside the week in which Treasury Secretary Bessent announced GL-U non-renewal on cable television . Indian state refiners carry roughly 60 to 70 per cent of the Iranian crude currently on water. Dongying's refineries on China's eastern coast are among the primary alternative destinations for that tonnage when Indian buyers pull back. The PING SHUN's diversion is a single data point, but it is the kind of data point that compliance and trading desks watch closely: a vessel already en route to an Indian port changed destination mid-voyage to a Chinese one, ahead of a paper cliff Washington had already signalled.

The broader commercial pattern matches. Kpler's blockade Day 2 transit count ran in single digits, a 94 per cent reduction against pre-war volume . PING SHUN's diversion sits inside that reduced-flow window and inside the pre-lapse window where Indian state refiners had days rather than weeks to decide whether the Iranian crude they had contracted for would still be legal to land. The diversion is one answer to that question, given in action rather than in statement.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Ping Shun is a tanker ship that was carrying Iranian oil toward India. Before reaching its Indian destination port ; Vadinar, a major refinery terminal on India's west coast ; the ship changed course mid-ocean and headed instead to Dongying in China. This happened in mid-April, just before the US government let the legal permission for carrying Iranian oil expire on 19 April. Why did this happen? Indian companies that buy oil are now at risk of facing US financial penalties if they receive Iranian crude without that legal permission. Chinese state oil companies face the same penalties in theory, but have a long history of absorbing sanctioned Iranian oil anyway ; they are less worried about US enforcement because their banks are less exposed to US financial systems. The Ping Shun diversion is a small but concrete example of how US sanctions pressure can redirect where oil flows ; away from countries more integrated into the US financial system, toward those less dependent on it.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Indian state refiners face a procurement cost increase after 19 April as they replace discounted Iranian crude with market-price alternatives ; an estimated $200-500 million per quarter at current differential levels.

    Short term · 0.72
  • Precedent

    Mid-transit cargo diversions from India to China ; without a change in the cargo's origin ; establish a new supply-chain pattern that can be replicated across the remaining 325 GL-U-covered vessels as their exposure crystallises.

    Immediate · 0.78
  • Risk

    If Chinese state refiners absorb all 325 GL-U cargoes diverted from India and other secondary-sanction-exposed buyers, Iran retains near-full oil revenue while US sanctions shift the economic pain entirely onto third-country intermediaries rather than Tehran.

    Medium term · 0.68
First Reported In

Update #73 · Russia yes, Iran no: Treasury signs only one waiver

Iran International and NBC News· 19 Apr 2026
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