(Oil & Gas 360) By Greg Barnett, MBA – As the United States leverages its LNG and crude oil exports amid geopolitical turmoil, its economic relationship with Asia is coming sharply into focus.
Tightening trade balances, tariff dynamics, and energy diplomacy are reshaping ties with China, Japan, South Korea, and India , each driven by their own urgency to diversify energy sources and rebalance trade.
China: Trade Deficit, Tariffs Dampening Energy Imports
In 2025, the U.S. goods deficit with China reached $202.1 billion, down from $295.5 billion in 2024, supported by declining bilateral trade volumes. The U.S. services surplus with China remained robust at $33.2 billion in 2024.
Yet U.S.–China energy trade remains stymied by ongoing tariff barriers. Beijing maintains a 15% tariff on U.S. LNG, citing Section 301 retaliatory tariffs despite a temporary 90-day tariff truce established in mid-2025. Tensions persist: Chinese energy firms effectively ceased U.S. LNG imports in early 2025, citing uneconomical pricing under tariff structures.
In 2024, China imported just 4.3 million tons of U.S. LNG, approximately 6% of its total and 6% of U.S. exports. While the U.S. remains the world’s top LNG exporter, China heavily relies on sources like Australia, Qatar, Russia, and Malaysia. The tariff environment has significantly limited U.S.–China energy flows, even as broader trade deficits shrink.
Japan: Insurance Against Middle East Disruptions
The U.S. goods deficit with Japan was $63.9 billion in 2025, an improvement over 2024’s $69.4 billion. Services trade with Japan produced a surplus of $6.9 billion in 2024.
Energy imports tell a different story. Japanese refiners have aggressively turned to U.S. crude, securing more than 60MM barrels slated for May delivery, the highest level in three years, to plug holes left by Middle East supply disruptions. Concurrently, firms like JERA inked long-term U.S. LNG deals, securing up to 5.5 million metric tons annually for loading around 2030. Japan also made commitments to U.S. gas-fired and crude export infrastructure, part of tariff easing efforts with Washington.
Despite this pivot, environmental and economic critics highlight concerns within Japan over U.S.-linked fossil fuel projects that could increase greenhouse gas emissions by up to 20% for the country.
South Korea: Free Trade Offset by Energy Deficit
The U.S. carried a $56.4 billion goods deficit with South Korea in 2025, reduced from $65.9 billion in 2024. Services trade showed a surplus of $11.5 billion in 2024.
Under the Korea–U.S. FTA (KORUS), tariffs on energy imports remain minimal. That has enabled strong Korean demand for U.S. LNG, with South Korea among the world’s top LNG importers, and increasing crude oil purchases aimed at diversifying away from Middle Eastern supplies. Local refiners have used increased purchases of U.S. Midland and Eagle Ford barrels to negotiate more favorable tariff terms under KORUS and recent tech‑trade adjustments.
India: Pivoting Energy Strategy to Ease Trade Pressures
India’s strategic repositioning is more explicit. In FY26 (April 2025–March 2026), goods exports rose slightly to $441.8 billion while goods imports fell to $775 billion, propelled by a 36% drop in Middle Eastern petroleum imports. The resulting goods delta reduced India’s current account deficit significantly.
Indian Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal affirmed that buying U.S. crude, LNG, and LPG aligns with New Delhi’s interests in energy diversification, decisions to be influenced by buyers and commercial firms, not by trade negotiators. As of early 2026, India imported approximately $15 billion in U.S. energy products, signed deals for 10% of its LPG needs from U.S. suppliers, and negotiated LNG liquefaction equity for Indian firms.
U.S. Ambassador Sergio Gor and Indian Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri emphasized expanding coordination across hydrocarbon and clean‑energy sectors, including LNG, LPG, crude, renewables, and hydrogen.
Tariff Landscape Shaping Energy Trade
Across the Asian landscape, tariff policies remain pivotal:
- China continues to enforce high retaliatory tariffs: up to 125% on U.S. goods and 15% on U.S. LNG. A temporary 90-day tariff truce in 2025 brought them down to 10%, but energy goods largely remained excluded.
- Japan faced U.S. tariffs: initially 25% during high-tension phases, later scaled back to 15% under a $550 billion trade agreement including energy‑sector investments.
- South Korea under KORUS sees low energy tariffs, further boosted by strategic trade‑investment agreements signed in late 2025.
- India pursues reciprocal trade co-leveraging: growing imports of U.S. commodities while seeking tariff relief and long-term contracting in LNG, LPG, and crude for enhanced trade balance.
Energy Supply Realignment and Outlook
The closure and conflict in the Strait of Hormuz in March‑April 2026 disrupted roughly 20% of global crude and LNG transport. This prompted a sharp reduction in Middle Eastern exports and triggered a global energy scramble.
- U.S. LNG exports surged to an estimated 5.5 million tons in 2025, with major Asian shipments to Japan, South Korea, India, Vietnam, and Thailand.
- U.S. crude shipments to Asia reached roughly 5 million barrels per day in May 2026, replacing nearly all shortfalls from the Gulf region. The queue of VLCCs off U.S. Gulf Coast ports was described as “the biggest queue of vessels ever seen at sea”.
- Indian LNG flows, particularly from U.S. and Russia, are expanding as New Delhi seeks supply resilience. A two-week ceasefire also eased LNG and LPG margins for Indian marketers.
Balancing Diplomacy, Markets and Domestic Priorities
U.S. energy has evolved into a strategic diplomatic lever. It helps fill Asia’s supply void and deepens economic partnerships, yet it carries domestic trade-offs and geopolitical risk:
- Domestic impact: Increased exports may lead to upward pressure on U.S. fuel prices, complicating inflation control at home.
- Geopolitical leverage: Energy trade reinforces U.S. leadership in Asia, but may entangle the U.S. in Asian diversification efforts away from Middle Eastern suppliers or towards adversary-linked countries (e.g., Russia-to-India).
- Market volatility: U.S. LNG and crude markets may face pricing instability amid tariff shocks and shifting Asian demand.
Conclusion
- America’s role as Asia’s alternative energy supplier is reshaping regional trade dynamics. China’s tariff-imposed barrier contrasts with Japan’s active realignment and winners under KORUS. South Korea’s free-trade regime has enabled smooth energy integration, while India’s energy pivot is tightly tethered to broader trade rebalancing efforts.
- In 2026, U.S. LNG and crude exports surged as Asia scrambled to replace lost Gulf supply. Yet long-term stability depends on tariff adjustments, domestic price impact, environmental considerations, and Asia’s accelerating energy transition.
As Congress and the White House calibrate future trade terms, including tariff ceilings and energy carve-outs, Washington will need to synchronize its diplomacy, energy policy, and market impacts to sustain its role. The balance struck will shape U.S.–Asia energy ties for years ahead.
By oilandgas360.com contributor Greg Barnett, MBA.
The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Oil & Gas 360. Please consult with a professional before making any decisions based on the information provided here. Please conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.
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