Yesterday, on April 28, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced it will leave OPEC and OPEC+ effective May 1, marking a significant break for one of the world’s most important oil groups. The timing caught member countries, veteran oil analysts and market participants by surprise, as the decision comes amid the ongoing US-Iran conflict and disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz—both of which have already unsettled oil markets.
Officially, the UAE’s Energy Minister said the move followed a review of the country’s production strategy. The UAE has invested heavily to expand capacity and has grown increasingly frustrated with alliance-imposed limits preventing it from fully using that capacity. In the past, like other members, the UAE did not always adhere to the quotas assigned. Reuters reports that Abu Dhabi has targeted production of around 5 million barrels per day by 2027—above recent OPEC-linked quotas. Prior to the conflict the country produced approximately 3.4 million barrels per day.
While the UAE and Saudi Arabia remain close partners, they have increasingly differed on regional priorities, foreign policy and how to manage oil markets. Earlier tensions surfaced when the UAE pushed back against quota rules in prior years. According to geopolitical analysts, this latest move suggests Abu Dhabi sees greater value in policy autonomy than in remaining bound to cartel discipline.
In the near term, the market impact may be limited because war-related shipping disruptions and export risks are already the larger driver of prices. That said, further escalation, particularly direct attacks by Iran on Gulf states, remains a key risk. Any direct impairment to the UAE production or export facilities would likely send crude prices sharply higher and could postpone any meaningful increase in production levels toward stated targets.
Over the longer term, the outlook becomes more complex as the UAE exit tests OPEC cohesion and raises the question of how other members respond. The key question is whether other members will follow the UAE’s exit strategy, particularly higher-risk producers such as Venezuela or Nigeria. If discipline weakens, more barrels could eventually come to market as producers prioritize national interests over coordinated cuts. It would be a fine line for producers to walk, as they balance their own interests against the risk of provoking Saudi Arabia into a more forceful response aimed at enforcing compliance and restoring cohesion within the alliance. Saudi Arabia retains the largest spare capacity and could respond with higher production once markets stabilize. We have observed such actions in the past.
That dynamic could keep the front end of the oil curve firm while increasing expectations for greater supply later on, pressuring futures prices lower. Over time, that could benefit global consumers through lower prices, easing inflation pressures and giving central banks more room to operate. However, it would pressure exporter revenues as producers balance price versus volume, and challenge US shale producers, which have remained relatively disciplined during this cycle as Saudi Arabia has demonstrated its willingness to defend its market share.
Overall, this remains a very fluid situation with meaningful longer-term implications, and we will continue to monitor it closely.