Reports emerge of China’s sulphuric acid export ban from May

Reports have surfaced of a ban on sulphuric acid exports from China effective in May, worsening a supply squeeze from Gulf conflicts. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively blocked since military strikes began on February 28, stalling shipments from a region accounting for a quarter of global production.

A military conflict in the Gulf initially squeezed sulphuric acid supplies, with the effective blockage of the Strait of Hormuz stalling shipments from the region—which accounts for a quarter of global production—since strikes began on February 28. Prices have risen as a result.

Reports then emerged of an export ban on sulphuric acid from China to take effect in May. The country accounted for 45 per cent of the nearly 10 million tonnes shipped from Asia last year and about 23 per cent of global exports.

According to the Observatory of Economic Complexity data platform, China’s sulphuric acid export value reached US$290 million last year, with main destinations including Chile, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Morocco and India. In 2024, the value was US$349 million, with the United States among top importers.

Analysts said the move would have “significant implications” for the chemical’s global supply and prices, showing China has quietly become a “linchpin” in the trade of sulphuric acid and other critical metals and chemicals. Foreign firms fear more halts.

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US and Israeli forces struck Iran on February 28, prompting Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to declare the Strait of Hormuz unsafe for commercial passage. Vessel traffic fell by roughly 70% within hours. The closure compounds pressures on fashion supply chains already strained by Red Sea disruptions, tariffs, and rising freight costs.

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US importers have cut orders from Hong Kong firms and shifted to short-term contracts amid a global oil crisis triggered by war in the Middle East. Business leaders warn of eroding profit margins and strained liquidity, urging the government to bolster ties with Central Asia and Asean nations to diversify market risks. Executive Council member Jeffrey Lam Kin-fung said the situation will impact SMEs' cash flow.

 

 

 

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