July 16, 2026
China’s legal framework for countering foreign sanctions has now moved from background risk to active deployment. Earlier this year, China’s Ministry of Commerce issued its first formal prohibition order under the 2021 blocking rules, barring recognition, enforcement, or compliance with certain U.S. sanctions imposed on five Chinese oil refiners. This marks the first time China has formally used these rules to block specific foreign sanctions measures, transforming what had been a growing structural risk into a live conflict-of-laws regime.
As we noted in our earlier client alert on China’s new supply chain regime, multinational companies were already facing increasing exposure to overlapping Chinese, U.S., UK, and EU legal frameworks that could create “legal collisions” around sanctions, diligence, and sourcing decisions. This latest development confirms that the collision is no longer theoretical. China has now used its countermeasures architecture not merely to signal opposition to foreign restrictions, but actually to prohibit compliance with them.
The immediate trigger was the U.S. designation of five Chinese refiners for alleged involvement in Iranian oil transactions. In response, China prohibited parties that are subject to Chinese jurisdiction from recognizing or complying with those sanctions. The order sits within a broader trend: China in May also invoked another anti-extraterritorial mechanism against an EU foreign subsidy investigation, underscoring that the country is now willing to operationalize these tools beyond rhetoric.
For companies operating across China and Western markets, the result is increasingly stark. Complying with U.S. sanctions or similar foreign measures may create exposure under Chinese law; declining to comply may trigger U.S. penalties, including restrictions tied to the U.S. financial system. The more integrated the company’s cross-border operations, financing, counterparties, and internal decision-making structures, the harder it becomes to contain the resulting risk.
This development is especially significant because uncertainty around public enforcement does not eliminate risk. China’s blocking framework creates potential administrative exposure, but it also allows Chinese parties to pursue claims where they suffer loss as a result of another party’s compliance with blocked foreign measures. That creates a path for private disputes to become a practical enforcement mechanism even where regulators act selectively. As seen in other blocking-statute contexts, the real pressure point may be commercial litigation, contractual fallout, and intra-group conflict—not just state investigations and penalties.
Against that backdrop, companies facing exposure across competing legal regimes should consider several steps now.
China’s first blocking order confirms that its anti-foreign sanctions regime is no longer simply part of a broader geopolitical backdrop. It is now an operative legal system capable of placing multinational companies in direct conflict with foreign sanctions expectations. For companies with exposure to China, the challenge is no longer just how to monitor a shifting risk landscape, but how to take and defend legally exposed positions across jurisdictions before those positions harden into regulatory, commercial, or litigation disputes.