The United Arab Emirates has announced that it will exit the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) from next month. With this exit UAE ending the almost six decades of the membership. The decision comes as the UAE seeks the greater flexibility to increase the oil production after important investments in the capacity expansion. Some of the experts believe that this move could reshape the global oil markets and will weaken the OPEC’s influence.
Why UAE is Leaving OPEC
The UAE’s decision is largely driven by the its ambition to boost the oil production without the quota restrictions which are imposed by OPEC and OPEC+.
Key Reasons Behind the Exit
- The desire for the greater production flexibility.
- Also the frustration over OPEC production limits as per the quotas.
- Also the heavy investments in the expanding oil capacity.
- The rising need to meet the growing global energy demand.
According to analysts the UAE has felt the constrained by OPEC’s policies and specially when the other members did not strictly follow production rules.
What is OPEC and Why It Matters
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was established in the year 1960 by the various countries like Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
Role of OPEC
- It coordinates with the oil production among member nations.
- Also maintains the stable oil prices.
- And it also protects the interests of the oil-exporting countries.
The UAE has joined the OPEC in 1967 and its exit will reduce the OPEC’s strength both economically and strategically.
Impact on The Global Oil Markets
The UAE’s departure from the group can be seen as a significant shift in the global energy dynamics.
Possible Effects
- The lower oil prices due to the increased supply.
- Also the higher market volatility in the long term.
- The weakening of the OPEC’s control over the production.
- The risk of other countries with the exiting OPEC.
The Role of Geopolitics and the Strait of Hormuz
The decision comes at that time when the tensions are rising in the Middle East and specially around the Strait of Hormuz which is the critical route. Via this route nearly the 20% global oil supply passes.
The World Bank has warned that the currently ongoing conflicts in the region have caused the record oil supply disruptions which could push energy prices up by around 25% this year.
UAE’s Production Advantage
One of the important reasons behind the UAE’s bold move is its the low cost of oil production.
- UAE produces about the 2.9 million barrels per day as per the 2024.
- It has one of the lowest break-even costs worldwide.
- It can remain profitable even when the oil prices fall.
Impact on OPEC and Saudi Arabia
The exit if the UAE from the OPEC expected to put the pressure on Saudi Arabia which is considered as the de facto leader of OPEC.
Challenges for OPEC
- Could face the loss of about 15% production capacity influence.
- Also the difficulty in enforcing the production discipline.
- Ans will increased the burden on Saudi Arabia to stabilize markets.
Some analysts have even described that it is the beginning of the end of the OPEC.


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