Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
18APR

UAE quits OPEC effective 1 May

4 min read
14:57UTC

Suhail Mohamed al-Mazrouei announced Abu Dhabi's exit on 28 April without consulting Riyadh or any other GCC member, citing Hormuz blockage and Gulf inaction over Iranian attacks.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The UAE chose 1 May to exit OPEC, the same Friday Washington's War Powers Resolution clock expires.

United Arab Emirates Energy Minister Suhail Mohamed al-Mazrouei announced on Tuesday 28 April 2026 that the UAE will leave OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries) and OPEC+ effective Friday 1 May 2026, without consulting Saudi Arabia or any other Gulf Cooperation Council member. Al-Mazrouei cited the inability to export freely through the Strait of Hormuz and disappointment with Gulf allies' response to Iranian military action in the strait. Reuters, Bloomberg, CNBC, NPR, Al Jazeera, The National and Dawn independently confirmed the announcement.

The exit takes effect at 00:01 GMT on the same calendar day the War Powers Resolution 60-day clock expires at 12:01 EDT in Washington. OPEC+ pairs OPEC members with Russia and aligned non-OPEC producers; the UAE's departure removes its third-largest producer, behind only Saudi Arabia and Iraq. Abu Dhabi has been pushing Riyadh for higher quotas for years, but the catalysing agent is the war: Hormuz transits sat at 9 vessels on 24 April per Windward , a fraction of the 50-plus daily baseline that gave Emirati cargoes free passage. Al-Mazrouei chose 28 April to announce and 1 May to take effect, the same Friday Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi told Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg that Tehran would gate any Hormuz reopening through its own conditions .

The break will be priced into every cargo loaded after Friday. Vienna's next ministerial sits without an Emirati seat for the first time since OPEC seated the UAE in 1967, and Saudi Arabia loses its long-running quota counterweight inside the bloc. Russia, the largest non-OPEC producer in OPEC+, becomes the second-largest voice in a smaller coalition, shifting the balance of any post-war production cut towards Moscow. Abu Dhabi can lift output above its previous 3.0 mb/d ceiling without a Vienna vote once the strait reopens, freeing roughly 1.0 mb/d of barrels the bloc had held under quota. The 2018 Qatar exit was political, refocused on LNG, and absorbed without spare-capacity dispute. This one is structural, denominated in barrels Abu Dhabi has been waiting to ship.

OPEC loses a moderating voice inside its quota debate at the very moment the bloc's collective slack barrels remain trapped behind the closed strait. European insurance underwriters writing post-war Hormuz cover lose a Gulf-state OPEC anchor in their sovereign-risk models. The structural premium will not unwind on a Ceasefire alone.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OPEC is a club of major oil-producing countries that agree to limit how much oil they each produce. By keeping production capped, they keep oil prices higher than they would be if everyone pumped as much as they wanted. The UAE has just quit the club. That means it can now produce and sell as much oil as it likes, without OPEC's permission. In the short term this is rattling oil markets because it signals the club is breaking apart, and a weaker OPEC means less predictable oil prices. The UAE made the move because Iran has been blocking the main shipping route for Gulf oil, and other Gulf countries in the club have not done anything about it.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Abu Dhabi has been building toward production capacity of 5 mb/d by 2030 under the ADNOC Expansion Plan signed in 2022. At current quota allocations, the UAE would be constrained to roughly 3.0 mb/d, leaving over 30% of its capital investment idle. The Hormuz blockage, which has prevented UAE exports from reaching their post-quota ceiling anyway, has now created a political moment to formalise a break that the economics of ADNOC's investment programme have made structurally necessary.

The GCC's failure to mount a collective response to Iranian military action in the Strait exposed a second structural vulnerability: Saudi Arabia's implicit security guarantee to smaller Gulf states has eroded following fifteen months of Saudi-Iran normalisation diplomacy. Abu Dhabi read the absence of GCC condemnation as evidence that Riyadh placed the normalisation framework above Gulf solidarity, removing the political incentive to maintain OPEC unity as a gesture of intra-GCC cohesion.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Saudi Arabia faces a binary choice between retaliating with a production increase that crashes prices (punishing the UAE) or accepting the exit and negotiating a bilateral side agreement on market share, with either path weakening OPEC's institutional authority.

    Short term · 0.8
  • Risk

    Iraq, OPEC's second-largest producer after the UAE exit, has a history of informal overproduction and may now treat UAE departure as political cover to lift its own output without formal withdrawal.

    Medium term · 0.7
  • Precedent

    The first Gulf-state exit citing a security event rather than a political grievance sets a precedent that any member facing force-majeure export disruption can exit without consulting the bloc, undermining the cartel's collective-discipline model.

    Long term · 0.75
First Reported In

Update #83 · UAE quits OPEC, war signs nothing

Dawn· 29 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
UAE quits OPEC effective 1 May
OPEC has not lost a Gulf member since Qatar's 2019 exit, and the UAE leaves with roughly 1.0 mb/d of stranded spare capacity locked under bloc quotas. The withdrawal takes effect on the same calendar day the War Powers Resolution 60-day clock expires at 12:01 EDT, breaking a quota-management architecture Saudi Arabia built around an Emirati seat that has held since 1967.
Different Perspectives
Hengaw and Iranian protest detainees
Hengaw and Iranian protest detainees
Hengaw documented three secret executions of protest-linked detainees at Isfahan and Karaj on 15 and 16 July, including Mohammad Amini Dehaghani, hanged over a January arson charge with no public trial record. Tehran is carrying out capital punishment against 2026 protesters while global attention stays fixed on the war with the US.
Russia
Russia
OFAC named Moscow aviation firm Avratek OOO and its principals Mariya Selina and Vadim Druzhbin directly for the first time in this war's Iran arms track, under an Executive Order 13382 designation issued 15 July. The designation converts years of rhetorical claims about Russian arms supply to Iran into named, sanctionable individuals and a documented company.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain sounded air-raid sirens during Iran's 14 July Gulf-wide barrage and was struck again in the 16 July Artesh claim against Sheikh Isa air base, home to the US Fifth Fleet. Manama's air-defence stocks were already reported near-exhausted before this second strike claim against the same base in a week.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's armed forces intercepted the drones Iran's Army claimed against Ali Al Salem air base on 16 July and separately reported intercepting missiles and drones in Iran's Gulf-wide barrage on 14 July. Kuwait now absorbs strikes from two rival Iranian commands while hosting Camp Arifjan, the US logistics base Iran also claims to have destroyed.
Iran (Artesh and IRGC)
Iran (Artesh and IRGC)
Iran's regular Army claimed the 16 July drone strikes on Kuwait's Ali Al Salem and Bahrain's Sheikh Isa air bases under its own banner, Operation Saeqeh phase ten, while the IRGC separately claimed a mine strike closing Hormuz on 18 July. Two Iranian institutions are now claiming parallel operations, with neither claim confirmed by Kuwait, Bahrain or CENTCOM.
United States
United States
CENTCOM bombed the interior cities of Ahvaz and Yazd for the first time overnight into 17 July, Marines began boarding vessels including the tanker Wen Yao, and Treasury let General License X1 lapse at 12:01am the same day. Washington closed every remaining channel for de-escalation without a new executive action, a posture of attrition rather than a wind-down.