UAE’s OPEC Withdrawal: ‘Political Rebellion’ Vs Saudi Dominance

UAE’s OPEC Withdrawal: ‘Political Rebellion’ Vs Saudi Dominance



Dubai: Analysts are calling the United Arab Emirates’ Tuesday announcement to leave OPEC and OPEC+ a game-changer for West Asia, signalling the close of an era where Abu Dhabi bowed to Saudi economic leadership in energy matters.

PSIFOS Consulting Group’s latest analysis labels this step a “political rebellion” rather than a simple policy shift, spotlighting Riyadh’s outsized sway over Gulf oil strategies.

This development reflects a key realignment in UAE diplomacy, steering the country toward stronger partnerships with the US, Israel, and fast-expanding markets in Asia, as reported by The Economic Times.

Roots Of Rivalry & Production Push

For years, friction has built inside OPEC+ between these two economic heavyweights.

Abu Dhabi prioritizes grabbing larger market shares over propping up prices, thanks to its broader economic base and cheap extraction costs. Experts note the UAE aims to ramp up output volumes, even at slightly reduced rates.

“The UAE withdrawal marks the formal conclusion of its economic deference to Saudi-led policies,” states the PSIFOS report, which charts the duo’s path from tight partnership to fierce rivalry.

A key motivator is the UAE’s worry over “stranded assets”—reserves that could turn worthless before extraction as worldwide oil demand peaks by 2040. To cash in now, Abu Dhabi has committed more than $122 billion to hit 5 million barrels per day by 2030.

Yet OPEC quotas kept UAE production pinned at 2.6-3.1 million barrels daily. Ditching the group allows the UAE tap its huge infrastructure spendings, free up cash for green shifts like hydrogen and solar centres.

Moreover, Abu Dhabi seeks to elevate Murban crude to global benchmark status alongside Brent and WTI, which conflicts with OPEC’s rigid production caps.

Global Ripples & Market Warnings

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump cheered the UAE’s OPEC split, tying it to cheaper global fuels. “That’s a good thing for getting the price of gas down, getting oil down, getting everything down. They have it all. He’s a great leader, actually. I’m okay. They’re having some problems in OPEC,” he remarked, nodding to UAE leader Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Observers argue this unravels the Saudi-Russian hold on oil prices and weak

ens the alliance’s power to manipulate supplies.

The UAE now stands poised to ink straight-line, favoured deals with China and India—the new hubs of oil hunger—skirting OPEC’s unified pricing.

In the Gulf, Saudi Arabia grows more alone. The UAE once offset Russia’s excess pumping; without that anchor, forecasters caution Riyadh might spark a “destabilising price war” to whip members into line.

PSIFOS warns that UAE’s departure could fracture the Gulf Cooperation Council into opposing groups.

Long-Term Price Pressures

“This is not merely a technical adjustment,” the analysis sums up. “It is an earthquake that reshapes the geopolitical architecture of Gulf energy relations… with consequences that will reverberate across regional politics, global markets, and international alliances for years to come.”

Meanwhile, ICICI Securities’ report suggests the UAE exit’s instant effects may stay muted due to Strait of Hormuz chaos from West Asia strife, but anticipates more UAE barrels long-term as logistics clear.

The nation holds ample idle capacity ready to hit markets.

“We believe this move may help soften prices in the longer term, although volatility in the markets may spike owing to lower cohesive supply management from OPEC,” the report notes.

It also hints the departure might nudge other OPEC states to weigh their options, given revenue dips and regional turmoil.

The PSIFOS Consulting Group report concludes that the UAE’s departure risks fracturing the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) into competing blocs.

“This is not merely a technical adjustment,” the analysis concludes. “It is an earthquake that reshapes the geopolitical architecture of Gulf energy relations… with consequences that will reverberate across regional politics, global markets, and international alliances for years to come.”

Meanwhile, another report by ICICI Securities noted that while the immediate impact of the UAE’s exit from OPEC may remain limited due to ongoing disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz amid the conflict in West Asia, the long-term outlook points to increased production from the UAE.

The country has already built significant spare capacity, which could enter global markets once logistical constraints ease.

“We believe this move may help soften prices in the longer term, although volatility in the markets may spike owing to lower cohesive supply management from OPEC,” the report said.

The report also flagged broader implications for the cartel, suggesting that the UAE’s exit could prompt other member nations to reassess the benefits of remaining within OPEC, particularly amid declining revenues and geopolitical disruptions.

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