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Open original sourceThe UAE announced on April 28, 2026 that it plans to withdraw from OPEC and OPEC+ effective May 1, 2026. The announcement was carried by Kuwait News Agency and reported by major international outlets citing UAE state media. The stated rationale was the country’s long-term strategic and economic vision and the development of its energy sector. Official OPEC material reviewed for this item had, as of April 5, 2026, still listed the UAE among the eight OPEC+ countries participating in coordinated production adjustments.
It remains unclear whether OPEC will issue a formal response, how the UAE will adjust production policy after May 1, whether any transitional arrangements exist with OPEC+, and how key producers such as Saudi Arabia will respond. The immediate market and diplomatic fallout is also not yet clear.
The United Arab Emirates said on April 28, 2026 that it will withdraw from OPEC and the wider OPEC+ group effective May 1, according to state-linked reporting cited by Kuwait News Agency and other major outlets. The confirmed development at this stage is that the announcement was issued; the policy implications for production, pricing and group coordination remain to be tested.nnAccording to the reporting, the UAE framed the move as part of its long-term strategic and economic vision and the development of its energy sector. Associated Press, citing the state-run WAM news agency, reported that the UAE said it would continue to act responsibly and bring additional production to market in a gradual and measured way aligned with demand and market conditions.nnNo immediate formal response from OPEC to the withdrawal announcement was found in official OPEC press materials reviewed for this item. OPECu2019s April 5, 2026 statement had still listed the UAE among the eight OPEC+ countries adjusting production and said those countries were due to meet again on May 3, 2026.nnThe move matters because the UAE has been one of the more significant Gulf producers inside OPEC+, and an exit could complicate supply coordination at a sensitive moment for oil markets. What remains unclear is how quickly the UAE will adjust output policy outside the group, whether OPEC will issue a formal reaction, and how other producers u2014 especially Saudi Arabia u2014 will respond publicly or operationally.