
The United Arab Emirates will withdraw from the Opec and Opec+ oil cartels to focus on “national interests”, it announced yesterday, causing fresh shockwaves as energy prices soar over the Middle East war.
The UAE, one of the world’s top oil producers, which has previously chafed at Opec production quotas, will pull out on Friday, a statement carried by the official WAM news agency said.
The UAE has been an Opec member through the emirate of Abu Dhabi since 1967, four years before the former British protectorate became a country. The last Opec member to withdraw from the cartel was Angola in 2024.
“This decision reflects the UAE’s long-term strategic and economic vision and evolving energy profile,” the UAE statement said.
“During our time in the organisation, we made significant contributions and even greater sacrifices for the benefit of all,” it added.
“However, the time has come to focus our efforts on what our national interest dictates.”
The decision, in the midst of the biggest oil shock since the 1970s, is likely to weaken Opec, dominated by the UAE’s neighbour Saudi Arabia, indicating further turbulence for markets, analysts said.
Gulf oil shipments are currently being strangled by Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which flows past the UAE and normally carries one-fifth of the world’s oil.
Given the restrictions on oil shipments in the strait, the UAE did not want to be constrained by quotas once the situation was back to normal, a source close to the energy ministry told AFP.
The UAE, hard-hit by Iranian attacks, has also faced trouble in its relationship with Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, after a stand-off between rival forces backed by the two countries in Yemen.
Pre-war, the UAE was the fourth biggest producer in the 22-member Opec+, behind Saudi Arabia, Russia and Iraq.
Jorge Leon, an analyst at Rystad Energy, said its withdrawal may not immediately impact oil markets while Hormuz shipments remain on hold.
Jamie Ingram, managing editor for the Middle East Economic Survey, posted that Opec is losing 13% of its production capacity with the UAE’s departure, citing the International Energy Agency.
Founded in 1960, the 12-member Opec cartel in 2016 partnered up with 10 other producers to form Opec+ to gain more clout.
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