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Why UAE’s exit from Opec is good news for Asia’s energy security

South China Morning Post Biman Mukherji 1 переглядів 2 хв читання
Why UAE’s exit from Opec is good news for Asia’s energy security
AdvertisementUS, Israel war on IranThis Week in AsiaEconomicsWhy UAE’s exit from Opec is good news for Asia’s energy security

Once free of Opec’s production caps, the world’s sixth-largest oil producer plans to flood the market with 5 million barrels a day

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An oil technician climbs down a tower at a refinery in Jebel Ali, UAE. Photo: AP
Biman MukherjiPublished: 11:23am, 29 Apr 2026Asia’s oil import-dependent economies will benefit from the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) exit from Opec, though the ongoing closure of the arterial Strait of Hormuz may not offer any immediate relief from soaring prices, analysts say.

Global oil prices continued to surge on Wednesday, with benchmark Brent crude oil prices hitting US$111 a barrel and US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) approaching US$100 a barrel. Before the Iran war, Brent was trading around US$70 a barrel, while WTI was about US$65 per barrel.

“The Strait of Hormuz closure is masking the immediate impact of this departure, but once the strait reopens, a UAE pumping freely towards 4.8 million barrels per day represents a real shift of 1 to 2 per cent of global demand,” Rystad Energy’s Middle East senior vice-president Aditya Saraswat said.AdvertisementThe country is currently producing 3.4 million barrels a day under the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ quota-capped membership. With proven reserves exceeding 100 billion barrels, the UAE – the world’s sixth-largest oil producer – is expanding capacity towards 5 million barrels per day.
UAE’s energy minister Suhail Mohamed Al Mazrouei arrives at the Opec headquarters in Vienna on December 6, 2019. Photo: Reuters
UAE’s energy minister Suhail Mohamed Al Mazrouei arrives at the Opec headquarters in Vienna on December 6, 2019. Photo: Reuters

“For Asia’s import-heavy economies like Japan, India and South Korea, that’s structurally good news on prices long-term, even if the near-term picture is painful with Asian refineries already cutting runs sharply,” Saraswat said.

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