The United Arab Emirates ended its membership of OPEC on May 1 after what officials describe as a three-year deliberation over the group’s rules and the country’s long-term fiscal strategy.
Anwar Gargash, a senior adviser to the UAE president, framed the decision as a response to a belief that global reliance on hydrocarbon fuels is nearing its endpoint. He said that, with that perspective, the country must take advantage of current demand to maximize oil-related revenue.
Gargash identified OPEC production quotas as the principal constraint motivating the exit, saying those limits had kept the UAE’s output well below what the country can produce. "We see that we are close to the sort of autumn of the hydrocarbon age," Gargash said. "And as a result, if you have the ability to produce and generate income and use that income in other investments, that’s what you should do."
Official capacity figures cited by UAE authorities put national production capability at 4.85 million barrels per day (bpd). The country has plans to raise that capacity to 5 million bpd by 2027. Prior to leaving OPEC and the broader OPEC+ arrangement - which includes other oil producers led by Russia - the UAE’s production target was nearer to 3.5 million bpd.
Market observers noted that the UAE’s departure is not expected to have a major immediate effect on global supply balances because Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to restrict flows through that key maritime route. However, officials and analysts cited in reporting have warned the exit could reduce OPEC’s ability to manage supplies once disruptions ease and normal flows through the Strait resume.
Contextual commentary in official statements emphasized revenue optimization and reinvestment. The UAE indicated it would seek to employ additional oil receipts to finance other investments, consistent with the adviser’s statement about monetizing capacity ahead of a presumed energy transition.
The decision marks the end of nearly 60 years of formal membership in OPEC for the UAE and represents a structural shift in how the country intends to align its production policy with long-term fiscal and investment objectives.