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FOREIGN AFFAIRSTOP

UAE’s OPEC departure hints at a new era of flexibility in the world oil market

Abu Dhabi, April 28. The decision by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to quit the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and the wider OPEC+ from May 1 marks a pivotal moment for how the global oil market is managed.

By stepping outside the quota system while pledging “responsible” supply, Abu Dhabi is signalling a shift from cartel-led restraint to market-responsive production.

In a statement carried by the state news agency WAM, the UAE said the decision followed a detailed review of its production policies, current capacity and future expansion plans. It described the step as being driven by national interest and the need to respond more effectively to changing market requirements while remaining a responsible participant in global energy markets.

The announcement comes amid supply uncertainties linked to tensions in the Arabian Gulf and around the Strait of Hormuz, though the UAE noted that medium- and long-term trends continue to point to sustained global demand for energy. It stressed that stability in the oil market depends on reliable, flexible and affordable supply, areas in which it has invested heavily in recent years.

Recalling its association with OPEC since 1967 through Abu Dhabi, and later as part of the federation formed in 1971, the UAE said it had consistently supported market stability and dialogue among producers. The exit, it said, represents an evolution in policy aimed at giving it greater flexibility to respond to market dynamics while continuing to contribute to stability in a measured manner.

The UAE emphasised that it remains a dependable producer of cost-competitive and relatively lower-carbon oil, and that after leaving OPEC it would introduce additional output gradually, based on demand conditions. It said its large resource base and ongoing investments across oil, gas, renewables and low-carbon technologies would help support both economic diversification and global energy system resilience.

While expressing appreciation for the work of OPEC and OPEC+, the UAE said the time had come to prioritise its own strategic and economic interests, as well as commitments to investors, customers and partners. It underlined that the decision does not signal a retreat from cooperation with producers and consumers, but rather an effort to enhance its ability to respond swiftly to evolving market needs.

The statement concluded by reaffirming the UAE’s commitment to responsible production policies guided by market stability, supply-demand balance and long-term engagement in supporting a stable global energy system.

The decision by the UAE to leave OPEC and the broader OPEC+ from May 1 is one of the most consequential shifts in producer alignment since the creation of OPEC+. It alters not just cartel arithmetic, but the psychology, flexibility, and future cohesion of oil market management.

OPEC’s influence rests less on total barrels in the ground and more on members’ willingness to restrain production collectively. The UAE is among the few producers with large spare capacity, low lifting costs, ability to raise output quickly, and strong investment pipeline to expand production

By stepping outside the quota framework, the UAE removes a high-capacity, high-discipline member from the cartel’s compliance system. Even if Abu Dhabi continues to behave “responsibly”, it will no longer be formally bound by coordinated cuts.

This weakens OPEC’s ability to tightly choreograph supply during future price downturns.

The UAE’s language is revealing: “flexibility,” “market dynamics,” “national interest,” and “measured increases aligned with demand”.

This signals a move away from price management through collective restraint toward market share management through responsiveness.

In practice, this means faster production increases when prices rise, less tolerance for holding back capacity to defend prices, and greater sensitivity to customer needs in Asia and Europe.

This is closer to the model followed by non-OPEC producers like the US, Brazil, and Guyana.

For years, Saudi Arabia has borne the largest share of output cuts to stabilise prices. The UAE’s departure sends a subtle but powerful message: the burden-sharing model inside OPEC is under strain.

If a close Gulf partner with aligned geopolitical interests finds the quota system restrictive, other members may also begin to question long-term sacrifices for collective price defence.

This could lead to more internal disagreements over quotas, reduced compliance during downturns, and a gradual dilution of OPEC’s cohesion.

Oil traders and analysts price not just current supply, but future response capability. With the UAE free to raise output without cartel constraints, markets will assume faster supply response to price spikes, reduced probability of prolonged shortages, and a cap on extreme price rallies

This has a psychological dampening effect on oil price volatility, especially during geopolitical crises.

The reference to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz following the US-Israel coalition’s attack against Iran from February 28 is important. This is the world’s most sensitive oil transit corridor.

By exiting now, the UAE is signalling that it wants freedom to increase production quickly if regional instability threatens supplies. OPEC processes are slow and consensus-driven. In crisis conditions, the UAE wants unilateral agility.

The UAE is not positioning itself as anti-OPEC. Instead, it is crafting a new identity as a major producer that cooperates with markets, not cartels. This is significant because it offers a template for others: stay friendly with OPEC;

avoid formal constraints; maintain market credibility; and increase investment-driven output

This could be the beginning of a looser, more informal era of producer coordination.

The UAE explicitly refers to sustained medium-term demand growth. This is a direct counterpoint to energy transition narratives that expect rapid oil demand decline.

By investing heavily and exiting quotas, the UAE is betting that oil demand will remain robust into the 2030s, low-cost producers will gain market share as high-cost barrels exit, and “lower-carbon barrels” will be preferred over expensive, dirtier ones

This is a strategic positioning for the next decade of oil competition.

In practical terms, this move is, bearish in the medium term and stabilising in the short term. In the short term, markets see reliability and crisis-response capacity. In the medium term, there will be expectation of more non-quota supply. And most importantly, in the long term, the UAE’s decision will see erosion of OPEC’s price-setting power.

The UAE’s repeated references to investors, customers, and affordability signal a pivot: from producer solidarity to consumer confidence. This aligns the UAE more closely with large importers in Asia and Europe, who prefer predictable supply over cartel-driven price cycles.

OPEC+ was formed to unite traditional OPEC producers with Russia and others to regain market control after the shale revolution. The UAE’s exit suggests that the shale era’s lesson has been internalised, market share now matters as much as price, rigid coordination may be less effective in a diversified supply world

This could mark the beginning of OPEC+ as a consultative forum rather than a tight supply-management alliance.

The UAE’s exit from OPEC does not mean a supply flood tomorrow. It means something more important: The gradual shift of the oil market from cartel-managed scarcity to investment-driven supply responsiveness. That change affects how traders, producers, and consumers will think about oil for the rest of this decade.

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