OPEC countries Algeria, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Oman, Russia and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia today said they have increased oil production quota to bolster supply continuity amid the United Arab Emirates’ unexpected withdrawal from the bloc, AFP reported on 3 May.
The seven-member has committed to add 188,000 barrels per day (bpd) to their total production quota for June, as oil prices soar due to the war in West Asia. A statement from the bloc said this is “their collective commitment to support oil market stability”. The countries had an online meeting on Sunday but made no mention of UAE’s Friday (1 May) withdrawal from the bloc.
Oil production increase along expected lines
Oil market analysts had widely expected the increase of 188,000 barrels, similar to the 206,000-barrel daily increases OPEC announced in both March and April when the portion allotted to the was subtracted, the report added.
Rystad Energy analyst Jorge Leon told AFP that the silence on the UAE’s departure was a sign of tense relations. “By sticking to the same production path — just minus the UAE — it’s acting as if nothing has happened, deliberately downplaying internal fractures and projecting stability,” he said.
Strait of Hormuz bottleneck remains
But raising the quota on paper may not have much impact on actual production, which is already short of the limit.
Untapped OPEC reserves are mainly located in the Gulf region, and exports there are trapped by the blockade of the vital Strait of , imposed by Iran in response to the US-Israeli strikes that started the war on February 28.
Leon told AFP that the cartel was looking to send “a two-layer message” that the UAE’s exit would not disrupt how OPEC operates and that the group still exerts control over global oil markets despite massive disruption to oil trade due to the war. “While output is increasing on paper, the real impact on physical supply remains very limited given the Strait of Hormuz constraints. This is less about adding barrels and more about signalling that OPEC still calls the shots,” he added.
The Strait of Hormuz blockade is hitting , Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The latter’s production will no longer count towards OPEC quotas.
“Total with quota fell to 27.68 million bpd in March, against a monthly quota of 36.73 million bpd, a shortfall of approximately 9 million bpd driven almost entirely by war-related disruption rather than voluntary restraint,” said Priya Walia, another analyst at Rystad Energy, ahead of Sunday’s meeting.
, whose exports are now the target of a retaliatory US blockade, is an OPEC member but is not subject to quotas.
Russia, the group’s second-biggest , has been the main beneficiary of the situation. But despite soaring energy prices, it appears to be struggling to produce at the level of its current quotas as its own war in Ukraine drags on and Ukrainian drones hit oil industry facilities.
UAE’s exit is ‘a big deal’
Speaking to AFP, Amena Bakr, an analyst at Kpler, described UAE’s exist as “a big deal” for OPEC. Notably, previous withdrawals from the group by in 2019 and Angola in 2023 were less significant by comparison, Bakr told a video conference on the UAE withdrawal.
The UAE has invested massively in infrastructure in recent years, and state-owned oil company plans to increase output by five million barrels a day by 2027 — far above the country’s last quota of around 3.5 million barrels.
ADNOC also pledged on Sunday to spend $55 billion on new projects over the next two years, confirming that the company is “accelerating growth and delivery of its strategy”.
There is also the risk for that other countries will leave such as Iraq and Kazakhstan, which have faced repeated accusations of surpassing their quotas.
(With inputs from AFP)
