
United Arab Emirates Withdraws from Opec and Opec+ After Six Decades
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has confirmed its withdrawal from both the Opec and Opec+ alliances of oil-producing nations. This decision marks the end of nearly six decades of UAE involvement in the influential cartels.
Officials from the UAE stated that the move aligns with the nation's 'long-term strategic and economic vision and evolving energy profile'. The Gulf monarchy, a significant player in global energy markets, has consistently pursued an agenda that prioritises its own national interests, often diverging from collective production quotas set by Opec+.
This departure underscores the ongoing shifts within global energy politics, where individual state interests, particularly among Western-aligned petrostates, frequently supersede multilateral agreements. Such realignments often reflect a calculated pivot towards securing future economic advantages and maintaining autonomy over resource extraction and supply, rather than adherence to collective output management.






