How UAE's exit could affect Opec's influence over the oil price
Here, in five charts, we explain how Opec influences oil prices and what the UAE's departure could mean. What is Opec and who is in it?
The number of members has fluctuated over the years. In addition to its five founders it includes Algeria, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Libya, Nigeria and the Republic of the Congo.
What does Opec do? Opec aims to influence the global price of oil by agreeing how much its oil members sell.
That policy came alongside a co-ordinated cut to oil production.
More recently, when the price of crude oil crashed due to a lack of buyers during the coronavirus pandemic, Opec+ slashed production to boost prices.
Over the past few decades Opec's influence on oil prices has "varied", says Maurizio Carulli, global energy analyst at Quilter Cheviot. A historic difficulty in Opec being effective in influencing the oil price is because when it has made a decision, individual members "often do not actually respect the commitment" and either produce more because they want a greater market share, or less due to technical difficulties.
This doesn't take into account current global events which have had a significant impact on oil exports, sending the price of crude rocketing. The Strait of Hormuz - a vital artery through which about a fifth of the world's supplies of oil and liquefied natural gas usually travels - has been effectively closed for eight weeks.
How much oil does the UAE produce?
The UAE is Opec's fourth biggest oil producer.
According to the Opec data, the UAE produced 3. 1 million barrels of oil a day in 2025. Saudi Arabia, Opec's de facto leader, produced over nine million barrels per day.
Opec's changing influence Opec is less important to world oil markets than it was in the 1970s, as it now holds a smaller share of internationally traded oil. Oil is also less important to the world's economy.
7% of global crude oil - down from over half (52. 5%) in 1973, according to its figures. Non-Opec countries, such as the US, Canada and Brazil have taken some of its diminished share, says Quilter Cheviot's Carulli.
Globally, the US is the main oil producing nation - and has been since 2018 - producing 13.
6 million barrels a day.
1 million barrels a day.
Charts by Chris Clayton. Additional reporting by Jonathan Josephs
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: