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Markets Politics
Jack Hughes
29 April 2026
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Why the UAE decided to quit OPEC

The UAE’s departure from the oil producers’ group was a surprise to many, but the move can be traced back to a single point five years ago

The decision by the UAE to leave OPEC and OPEC+ stunned the world—but it did not emerge out of thin air. It was the culmination of a structural shift that can be traced with unusual precision to a single moment: a confrontation five years ago within OPEC+. By the summer of 2021, OPEC+, the alliance dominated by Saudi Arabia and Russia since its creation in 2016, was trying to put together a production strategy for post-COVID energy markets. The pandemic had collapsed oil demand and prices, and the producers had to figure some way for an orderly return of barrels and the restoration of price stability after the wild gyrations of the previous year. All OPEC+ members would have to apply product

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Why the UAE decided to quit OPEC
29 April 2026
The UAE’s departure from the oil producers’ group was a surprise to many, but the move can be traced back to a single point five years ago
Letter from the US: This crisis Is different
Opinion
28 April 2026
Oil traders warning of $200/bl oil are wrong, and the market should be wary of proclamations that the impact of the oil shortage has only begun to be felt and a that a ‘harsh adjustment’ is coming—even for industrialised nations
Middle East oil’s multi-step recovery plan
28 April 2026
Restoring supply from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Iraq involves complexities far beyond simply adjusting operational controls

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