UAE to leave OPEC by May 1

tsuke11

Verified User
It looks like UAE is fully aligning with Israel. Aside from the obvious oil impacts id also be interested in the charity impacts of this too. Whenever Lebanon and other resistance countries need funds they usually come running to the GCC. If UAE freeze them out thats a major source of funds gone.

Gaza and Lebanon reconstruction look more unlikely now.
 
It looks like UAE is fully aligning with Israel. Aside from the obvious oil impacts id also be interested in the charity impacts of this too. Whenever Lebanon and other resistance countries need funds they usually come running to the GCC. If UAE freeze them out thats a major source of funds gone.

Gaza and Lebanon reconstruction look more unlikely now.


No, the UAE is not fully aligning with Israel.

The UAE is not offering unconditional or ideological alignment. It consistently criticizes Israeli actions it sees as undermining peace or violating international law:
  • The UAE has repeatedly called West Bank annexation or sovereignty moves a “red line” that would “severely undermine” the Accords and regional integration (e.g., statements in August–October 2025).


  • It has condemned Israeli military decisions in Gaza, settlement expansion, and specific incidents (such as the 2025 strike on a Hamas-related target in Doha, which prompted diplomatic rebukes and canceled Israeli participation in events).


  • The UAE supports a two-state solution, recognizes Palestine, and frames normalization as compatible with Palestinian rights—not a replacement for them.
By early 2026, Israeli media reported the Accords were “near collapse” due to eroded trust: Israeli extremist rhetoric, stalled joint projects (e.g., water-for-electricity deals), blocked investments, and perceived one-sided benefits. The UAE views Israeli policies as aggressive and provocative.
 
No, the UAE is not fully aligning with Israel.

The UAE is not offering unconditional or ideological alignment. It consistently criticizes Israeli actions it sees as undermining peace or violating international law:
  • The UAE has repeatedly called West Bank annexation or sovereignty moves a “red line” that would “severely undermine” the Accords and regional integration (e.g., statements in August–October 2025).


  • It has condemned Israeli military decisions in Gaza, settlement expansion, and specific incidents (such as the 2025 strike on a Hamas-related target in Doha, which prompted diplomatic rebukes and canceled Israeli participation in events).


  • The UAE supports a two-state solution, recognizes Palestine, and frames normalization as compatible with Palestinian rights—not a replacement for them.
By early 2026, Israeli media reported the Accords were “near collapse” due to eroded trust: Israeli extremist rhetoric, stalled joint projects (e.g., water-for-electricity deals), blocked investments, and perceived one-sided benefits. The UAE views Israeli policies as aggressive and provocative.
this was before Iran chose UAE as its primary target. That tends to change things
 

The UAE’s OPEC exit is not about oil; it is the end of Gulf solidarity



The move reflects a widening confrontation with Saudi Arabia and a fundamental realignment of alliances.

For decades, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) functioned as far more than an oil cartel. For its Gulf members, the organisation embodied a form of collective sovereignty over their primary resource: the capacity of Arab producing states to weigh together on the global economy, defend a shared rent and speak with a coordinated voice to Western consumers. That institutional fiction has just collapsed.

When the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced its withdrawal from OPEC and the expanded coalition known as OPEC+, effective May 1, 2026, the immediate reflex was to reach for a technical explanation. Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei carefully dressed the decision in the language of energy policy: flexibility, productive capacity, long-term national interest. Markets noted that the timing, with the Strait of Hormuz partially closed by the US blockade, would limit the immediate price impact. Analysts pointed to the longstanding tension with the quotas imposed on Abu Dhabi National Oil Company’s (ADNOC) ambition.

All of that is real. But focusing on these technical dimensions means missing what matters.

The UAE’s departure is, above all, the visible sign of a deep regional rupture between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi first, but beyond that, between two incompatible visions of what Gulf order should look like.

The Saudi-Emirati fracture is not new, but it crossed a qualitative threshold in late 2025.

On December 29 , Saudi Arabian air strikes targeted an Emirati weapons convoy at the port of Mukalla in Yemen, an act without precedent between two nominal allies. Riyadh then publicly demanded the withdrawal of all UAE forces from Yemeni territory and in early 2026, that call was answered with the dissolution of the Southern Transitional Council (STC), Abu Dhabi’s principal proxy in the country.

This is not a tactical dispute. It is the expression of a deep strategic contradiction. Saudi Arabia seeks to preserve the territorial integrity of Arab states and to position itself as a regional stabilising power. The UAE has built, since 2015, a doctrine founded on force projection through non-state actors in Libya, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen. Riyadh now reads that doctrine not as a partner policy, but as a structural threat to its own security environment.

Remaining within OPEC under an architecture effectively controlled by Riyadh would have meant accepting institutional subordination at the precise moment when the bilateral relationship was hardening into open rivalry. The exit is also an act of sovereign disengagement from that tutelage.

Some will compare this departure to Qatar’s in 2019. That would be an analytical error. Doha left OPEC as a marginal oil producer whose energy identity had long since shifted towards liquefied natural gas. The Qatari exit was a sectoral reorientation, not a political rupture. The UAE was the organisation’s third-largest producer, accounting for roughly 12 percent of its total output. Their departure is an amputation. It signals that even the most central members of the cartel can now calculate that their interests are better served outside the organisation than within it.

The organisation is facing an internal legitimacy crisis that this departure makes brutally visible. Since the invasion of Ukraine, OPEC+ has been perceived in Washington as an instrument serving a price discipline that objectively converges with Russian interests, maintaining oil revenues to finance the war.

The Trump administration said so explicitly, linking American military support in the Gulf to oil prices. By choosing production freedom, Abu Dhabi sends a signal of distancing from that architecture, one whose geopolitical value in Washington is immediately legible.

In doing so, the UAE makes a choice that goes well beyond energy policy. It is purchasing American strategic goodwill with barrels, at the precise moment when its regional alliance framework is collapsing and when it needs a substitute security guarantee.

With Saudi Arabia having shifted into open confrontation mode, Abu Dhabi’s strategic calculus has fundamentally changed. Washington is no longer a preferred partner.
 
Alexander of the Duran in his brief today suggests that the UAE is in much more trouble financially than anyone wants to admit....it is not difficult to imagine that they desperately need the currency swamps, and that the Americans would demand leaving OPEC in return. Lavrov just the other day talked about how the Empire is trying to take complete control of global energy trading so as to dominate all of humanity.
 
It looks like UAE is fully aligning with Israel. Aside from the obvious oil impacts id also be interested in the charity impacts of this too. Whenever Lebanon and other resistance countries need funds they usually come running to the GCC. If UAE freeze them out thats a major source of funds gone.

Gaza and Lebanon reconstruction look more unlikely now.
tRump was just personally gifted with half a billion dollars by their government so he has agreed to do a "currency swap" to the tune of several billion dollars of our money for them
 
tRump was just personally gifted with half a billion dollars by their government so he has agreed to do a "currency swap" to the tune of several billion dollars of our money for them


Trump is falsely claiming that he was in favor of the UAE's defection and thinks it a good move.

The truth is that he was surprised and is attempting to apply his trademark "spin" to gull his credulous countrymen.

The UAE has been plotting revenge against the KSA since at least the waning days of last December.
 
Trump is falsely claiming that he was in favor of the UAE's defection and thinks it a good move.

The truth is that he was surprised and is attempting to apply his trademark "spin" to gull his credulous countrymen.

The UAE has been plotting revenge against the KSA since at least the waning days of last December.
Actually it is good for him. When/if the strait reopens they the UAE will be free to pump as much oils as they like anbd seel it to whomever they choose. we might even see a pricewar between them and OPEC, driving the cost down for everyone .

This is a rare case of tRump accidentally doing something that benefits us instead of just him.

I am assuming it's an accident.
 

The UAE’s OPEC exit is not about oil; it is the end of Gulf solidarity



The move reflects a widening confrontation with Saudi Arabia and a fundamental realignment of alliances.

For decades, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) functioned as far more than an oil cartel. For its Gulf members, the organisation embodied a form of collective sovereignty over their primary resource: the capacity of Arab producing states to weigh together on the global economy, defend a shared rent and speak with a coordinated voice to Western consumers. That institutional fiction has just collapsed.

When the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced its withdrawal from OPEC and the expanded coalition known as OPEC+, effective May 1, 2026, the immediate reflex was to reach for a technical explanation. Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei carefully dressed the decision in the language of energy policy: flexibility, productive capacity, long-term national interest. Markets noted that the timing, with the Strait of Hormuz partially closed by the US blockade, would limit the immediate price impact. Analysts pointed to the longstanding tension with the quotas imposed on Abu Dhabi National Oil Company’s (ADNOC) ambition.

All of that is real. But focusing on these technical dimensions means missing what matters.

The UAE’s departure is, above all, the visible sign of a deep regional rupture between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi first, but beyond that, between two incompatible visions of what Gulf order should look like.

The Saudi-Emirati fracture is not new, but it crossed a qualitative threshold in late 2025.

On December 29 , Saudi Arabian air strikes targeted an Emirati weapons convoy at the port of Mukalla in Yemen, an act without precedent between two nominal allies. Riyadh then publicly demanded the withdrawal of all UAE forces from Yemeni territory and in early 2026, that call was answered with the dissolution of the Southern Transitional Council (STC), Abu Dhabi’s principal proxy in the country.

This is not a tactical dispute. It is the expression of a deep strategic contradiction. Saudi Arabia seeks to preserve the territorial integrity of Arab states and to position itself as a regional stabilising power. The UAE has built, since 2015, a doctrine founded on force projection through non-state actors in Libya, Sudan, Somalia and Yemen. Riyadh now reads that doctrine not as a partner policy, but as a structural threat to its own security environment.

Remaining within OPEC under an architecture effectively controlled by Riyadh would have meant accepting institutional subordination at the precise moment when the bilateral relationship was hardening into open rivalry. The exit is also an act of sovereign disengagement from that tutelage.

Some will compare this departure to Qatar’s in 2019. That would be an analytical error. Doha left OPEC as a marginal oil producer whose energy identity had long since shifted towards liquefied natural gas. The Qatari exit was a sectoral reorientation, not a political rupture. The UAE was the organisation’s third-largest producer, accounting for roughly 12 percent of its total output. Their departure is an amputation. It signals that even the most central members of the cartel can now calculate that their interests are better served outside the organisation than within it.

The organisation is facing an internal legitimacy crisis that this departure makes brutally visible. Since the invasion of Ukraine, OPEC+ has been perceived in Washington as an instrument serving a price discipline that objectively converges with Russian interests, maintaining oil revenues to finance the war.

The Trump administration said so explicitly, linking American military support in the Gulf to oil prices. By choosing production freedom, Abu Dhabi sends a signal of distancing from that architecture, one whose geopolitical value in Washington is immediately legible.

In doing so, the UAE makes a choice that goes well beyond energy policy. It is purchasing American strategic goodwill with barrels, at the precise moment when its regional alliance framework is collapsing and when it needs a substitute security guarantee.

With Saudi Arabia having shifted into open confrontation mode, Abu Dhabi’s strategic calculus has fundamentally changed. Washington is no longer a preferred partner.

I agree with this. UAE is part of OPEC (oil), GCC (security), and arab league.

My opininion is the UAE actually wants to leave the GCC and arab league but wont since those give tangible benefits. They are leaving the OPEC because its the least impactful one which still signifies their alignment towards India and Israel. I think this is also about encouraging Trump to attack Iran.

If were being honest as well theres nothing stopping UAE and Saudi from coordinating diplomatically to coordinate oil supply just like they did with the OPEC.
 
Trump is falsely claiming that he was in favor of the UAE's defection and thinks it a good move.

The truth is that he was surprised and is attempting to apply his trademark "spin" to gull his credulous countrymen.

The UAE has been plotting revenge against the KSA since at least the waning days of last December.

Trump is in favor of this. It signifies UAE completely welding itself to the US.

If were being honest i dont even think the emirates consider themselves arabs anymore.

If you think about it they are a country made out of expats and with a 1.5 trillion soverign wealth fund they are also a country that operates like expats with multiple holdings all accross the globe that earn profits for them.

This is why its complete BS that KSA and UAE would ever run out of money before Iran as both countries can survive for 50 years without any income.
 
Actually it is good for him. When/if the strait reopens they the UAE will be free to pump as much oils as they like anbd seel it to whomever they choose. we might even see a pricewar between them and OPEC, driving the cost down for everyone .

This is a rare case of tRump accidentally doing something that benefits us instead of just him.

I am assuming it's an accident.


It is not "good" for America. Trump is blustering.

The Strait will still be closed by order of Trump.

No Gulf oil will move safely as long as the conflict zone remains an insurance issue for Western shippers.

Bab Al Mandeb has risks, too, and no Gulf nation currently has the ability to move oil ovelands at scale.
 
Trump is in favor of this. It signifies UAE completely welding itself to the US.

If were being honest i dont even think the emirates consider themselves arabs anymore.

If you think about it they are a country made out of expats and with a 1.5 trillion soverign wealth fund they are also a country that operates like expats with multiple holdings all accross the globe that earn profits for them.

This is why its complete BS that KSA and UAE would ever run out of money before Iran as both countries can survive for 50 years without any income.


It does no such thing. It is purely "payback" for the KSA's actions against the UAE.

UAE oil break exposes deepening Saudi rift as Gulf power shifts

 
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