June 4, 2026, 9:01 a.m.

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The United Arab Emirates announced its withdrawal from OPEC. What will be the impact?

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Recently, when the United Arab Emirates announced its official withdrawal from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), this was the most direct ledger on the table. This decision ended the UAE's status as an OPEC member for nearly 60 years. As the third-largest oil producer in OPEC, this move was not a single-country policy adjustment but a systemic impact on energy governance, oil price stability, geopolitical landscape, and the global economy. The negative effects were far-reaching and spread layer by layer.

The primary impact of the UAE's withdrawal was the collapse and fragmentation of the global energy governance system. Since its establishment, OPEC has long played the role of a "stabilizer" for global oil supply, coordinating production through unified quotas and stabilizing oil price fluctuations. The UAE contributed approximately 15% of OPEC's production capacity, and its withdrawal directly cut the core pillar of the organization and significantly reduced its regulatory capacity. More dangerously, this move opened the Pandora's box of "withdrawal": countries like Iraq and Kuwait, which have long been dissatisfied with quotas, might follow suit, accelerating the functional disintegration of OPEC. Global energy governance shifted from "collective negotiation" to "unilateral profit-seeking", with the coordination mechanism completely failing. Countries were forced to build their own energy security barriers, and the foundation of international collaboration was severely disrupted.

Secondly, international oil prices fluctuated more intensely, and the risk of global inflation increased sharply. Although the logic of OPEC's "production reduction to stabilize prices" was controversial, it objectively provided a price expectation anchor for the market. After the UAE left the quotas, it planned to increase production capacity from 3.447 million barrels per day to 5 million barrels per day, directly impacting the existing supply-demand balance. In the short term, the combined effect of the expectation of increased production and the geopolitical risk of the Strait of Hormuz led to intense fluctuations in oil prices; in the medium and long term, the global oil market might enter a price war for market share, with the oil price center lowering while the frequency and amplitude of fluctuations simultaneously increasing. The unstable oil prices directly pushed up global inflation, increased production and logistics costs for enterprises, and hindered economic growth, especially exacerbating the debt pressure of emerging market countries, forming a vicious cycle of "oil price fluctuations - high inflation - economic weakness".

Furthermore, the geopolitical rift in the Middle East expanded, and the risks of regional conflicts and major power games escalated. The UAE and Saudi Arabia have long had differences in energy strategies: Saudi Arabia advocated production reduction to stabilize prices, while the UAE preferred to increase production to seize the market. This unilateral withdrawal made the internal contradictions within the Gulf alliance public, significantly weakening the cohesion of the Gulf Cooperation Council, and challenging the Saudi-led Middle East order. At the same time, the Middle East formed two camps: "Riyadh - Moscow" and "Abu Dhabi - Washington". The US-Russia博弈 intensified, and the risk of proxy conflicts rose. More crucially, the UAE's withdrawal marked the failure of the collective security mechanism of Gulf countries, and they turned to unilateral security actions, leading to an increase in regional instability factors.

Finally, the oil dollar system loosened, and the global financial landscape and energy transition were hindered. OPEC was the core support of the oil dollar system. Its weakening of regulatory power directly led to tighter liquidity of oil dollars, an increase in the share of non-dollar oil trade, and cracks in the pillar of US hegemony. Global dollar liquidity fluctuations increased, emerging market currencies were under pressure, and the stability of international financial markets declined. At the same time, the sharp fluctuations in oil prices made it difficult for oil and new energy investment decisions, and enterprises showed a wait-and-see attitude, with insufficient investment in energy transition. Low oil prices would also delay the pace of fossil fuel exit, increase global carbon emission reduction pressure, and hinder the implementation of the Paris Agreement's goals.

In conclusion, the UAE's withdrawal from OPEC is a landmark event in the reshaping of the global energy landscape. Its negative impacts have spread to multiple dimensions such as energy, geopolitics, and finance. Facing this change, countries need to accelerate energy diversification planning and strengthen international collaboration to cope with this profound global energy order transformation.

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