United
Arab Emirates Says It Will Leave OPEC in Blow to Oil Cartel
The Gulf
government has long complained about the group’s quotas, which officials
believe unfairly limited its exports. Its departure is expected to weaken
OPEC’s influence.
Vivian
Nereim Rebecca
F. Elliott
By Vivian
Nereim and Rebecca F. Elliott
Reporting
from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia and New York
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/28/world/middleeast/uae-opec.html
April 28,
2026
Updated
10:08 a.m. ET
The
United Arab Emirates will next month leave OPEC, a cartel of oil-producing
countries, its government said on Tuesday, a decision that will weaken the
group's influence over global energy markets.
Emirati
officials had long floated the idea of quitting the cartel, complaining that
its quotas had unfairly curtailed its oil exports.
The
government is now expected to increase its energy production to serve its own
national interests. Before the war, the Emirates was producing about 3.6
million barrels of oil per day, according to the International Energy Agency —
roughly 12 percent of OPEC’s overall production. OPEC countries supplied more
than a quarter of the world’s oil before the war with Iran.
A
coalition of the world’s largest oil exporters, OPEC was able to steer prices
by setting quotas for those countries. But the organization’s power had slipped
in recent years as U.S. oil production soared.
The
Emirates had belonged to the organization for more than 50 years. Its
government decided to leave in light of its “long-term strategy and economic
vision,” and because it plans to accelerate investment in its domestic energy
production, according to a statement published by WAM, the Emirati state news
agency.
The
statement referred to the government’s desire to meet the demands of energy
markets during a period of geopolitical strain caused by the U.S.-Israeli war
with Iran, which has sent oil and gas prices soaring.
“The
world needs more energy. The world needs more resources, and U.A.E. wanted to
be unconstrained by any groups,” the country’s energy minister, Suhail Al
Mazrouei, said in an interview. The Emirates wanted to exit at a time that
would cause minimal disruption to oil markets, he added.
The price
of Brent crude oil, the international benchmark, pulled back after the
announcement but was still trading 3 percent higher than it was on Monday. Oil
has risen more than 40 percent since the first U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in
late February and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a transit
point for a fifth of the world’s oil.
“We will
remain as a responsible producer,” Mr. Al Mazrouei said.
The
announcement came amid festering tensions between the Emirates and Saudi Arabia
— the de facto leader of OPEC. Once close allies, the two Gulf countries have
diverged in recent years. The Emirates has increasingly gone its own way in the
region, pursuing closer ties to Israel and backing an armed separatist group in
southern Yemen, where the Saudis are supporting the government.
The war
with Iran appears to have hardened that rift, as Saudi Arabia and the Emirates
weigh differing strategies of how to respond to Iran. The Emirates — which
hosts a major U.S. military base — has faced thousands of Iranian missile and
drone attacks. Emirati officials have spoken of their dissatisfaction with the
response of regional multilateral organizations, including the Gulf Cooperation
Council and the Arab League, hinting that they would have preferred a harsher
unified stance against Iran.
“Every
Gulf state had its own policy of containment toward Iran, and all of those
containment policies have failed,” Anwar Gargash, a senior Emirati official,
said in Dubai on Monday. “All our policies have failed miserably.”
Oil
policy has, for years, also been a key source of tensions between the Emirates
and Saudi Arabia.
“While
Saudi Arabia aims to sustain oil markets for the next century, the U.A.E. feels
no such urgency,” said Bachar El-Halabi, senior analyst in Dubai for Argus
Media, a commodities research firm. “Because their economy is more diversified,
they do not require high oil prices to balance their budgets, allowing them to
prioritize volume over price support.”
The
Emirates’ decision comes after Ecuador and Qatar left the cartel in 2020 and
2019. But the Emirates is a much larger oil producer than either country, and
its decision is more consequential as a result.
Abu Dhabi
— now the capital of the U.A.E. — joined OPEC in 1967, several years before the
Emirates became a unified country.
“During
our time in the organization, we made significant contributions and even
greater sacrifices for the benefit of all,” the statement published by the
Emirati state news agency said. “However, the time has come to focus our
efforts on what our national interest dictates and our commitment to our
investors, customers, partners and global energy markets.”
Ismaeel
Naar and Rich Barbieri contributed reporting.
Vivian
Nereim is the lead reporter for The Times covering the countries of the Arabian
Peninsula. She is based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Rebecca
F. Elliott covers energy for The Times.


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