UAE exit weakens OPEC+ power over oil market but group to stay together: Reuters
The move could let the UAE raise output by up to 30%, analysts said, while weakening OPEC’s ability to coordinate supply and support prices.
- On April 28, the United Arab Emirates announced it will quit OPEC and the OPEC+ alliance on May 1, ending decades of membership to prioritize national interests and production autonomy.
- Years of dissatisfaction with OPEC's production quotas prompted the exit, as the UAE plans to increase capacity toward 5 million barrels per day by next year, diverging from Saudi-led governance.
- Global oil prices remain largely unchanged following the announcement, as the ongoing Strait of Hormuz crisis dominates current energy markets and restricts regional export volumes.
- The exit affects about 12% of OPEC's total oil output, weakening cartel cohesion and forcing Saudi Arabia to bear the heavier burden of maintaining price stability without the UAE's spare capacity.
- Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei stated the nation wants to be "unconstrained by any groups" while preparing for a future where global energy demand peaks and fossil fuel reliance declines.
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UAE exit from OPEC marks ‘first major rupture,' author says
Peter Schweizer, author and president of the Government Accountability Institute, joins "Batya!" to discuss the significance of the United Arab Emirates leaving OPEC and what it could mean for global energy markets. Schweizer said the move could benefit global markets by increasing competition and reducing supply restrictions. “It’s more competition, less restriction by OPEC,” Schweizer said.
UAE’s OPEC Exit: Pragmatic Oil Policy, Not ‘Stranded Assets’ ...
The UAE’s departure, the largest and most consequential since the cartel’s founding, weakens OPEC+ materially and reputationally, but it does so because of internal rifts, US supply abundance and regional conflict — not because Abu Dhabi’s planners have swallowed the IEA’s Net Zero Kool-Aid. The post UAE’s OPEC Exit: Pragmatic Oil Policy, Not ‘Stranded Assets’ Panic appeared first on Watts Up With That?.
UAE's OPEC Exit: Pragmatic Oil Policy, Not 'Stranded Assets' Panic
The UAE's OPEC exit has nothing to do with oil supposedly being a 'stranded asset', says Tilak Doshi. It's all about flexibility, autonomy and export security, not a sudden conversion to the Church of Climate. The post UAE’s OPEC Exit: Pragmatic Oil Policy, Not ‘Stranded Assets’ Panic appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.
The headquarters of OPEC in Vienna has never been a temple of stability, and now less so after the divorce with the United Arab Emirates (UAE). After almost six decades of obedience, the UAE has decided that May 1, 2026 will be its last day under the discipline of the cartel. An energy coup that seeks to dynamite Saudi Arabia's control over the oil market for generations.The real reason for this flight forward is hidden in the turbulent waters o…
How the UAE's shock exit from Opec will reshape the world of oil
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