Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Saudis, Mideast producers vie for China's teapot crude imports

* Middle East export growth to China about half of overall rise

* Saudi exports to China grow less than 1 pct over Jan-Sept

* Russia sales to China grow 25 pct vs yr ago, Angola up 18 pct

* Saudis open to more spot deals, expand storage in Japan

By Rania El Gamal and Florence Tan

DUBAI/SINGAPORE, Oct 28 (Reuters) - Top global oil exporter Saudi Arabia is looking at new ways to sell crude to China, offering more cargoes at spot prices and more lenient payment terms after losing ground in the world's fastest-growing oil import market to Angola, Russia and others.

Independent refiners, known as teapots, have shaken up China's oil industry this year, accounting for most of its crude import growth since receiving import licenses for the first time near the end of 2015.

Most of this new demand is for high quality low-sulphur crude from non-OPEC producers, or for high-sulphur grades that sell at heavy discounts to Saudi prices, making it tough for state-owned Saudi Aramco to maintain market share.

Facing a stubborn global oil glut, and having failed to capitalise on Chinese demand growth, Saudi and fellow Gulf OPEC members have offered to cut their production by 4 percent, sources said on Thursday.

Industry sources say Aramco cannot sustain high output levels for long amid low oil prices.

"Saudi Arabia shifted gears and abandoned the strategy of prioritising market share simply because it proved ineffective," RBC Capital analyst Mike Tran said.

"The Kingdom squandered market share in the U.S. and China and failed to increase its foothold in India."

Middle Eastern sellers have seen their exports to China grow at less than half the pace of others in 2016, their smallest contribution since 2012, pulled down by 1 percent growth from Saudi Arabia.

Teapots refiners instead bought more oil from Angola, which has less sulphur than most Mideast grades, and Venezuela, which offers cheaper high-sulphur grades.

"It's hard at the moment because the heavy crude that we're using is from Venezuela which has a very high sulphur so we cannot add Middle East grades into our mix," said Zhang Liucheng, vice president at Shandong Dongming Petrochemical, the largest Chinese independent refiner.

Teapot purchases, along with buying by state giants such as Sinopec and PetroChina, have propelled China's imports to record highs this year. In September, China eclipsed the United States as the world's top buyer of foreign oil, according to customs data.

TEAPOT BOTTLENECK

Most of China's independent refineries are designed to process crude of about 1.5 percent sulphur, Zhang said. The refiners could buy crudes with that level or lower, or take higher-sulphur grades to blend with sweet grades.