# [FLASH] UAE Confirms Exit From OPEC Amid Iran War and $111 Oil

*Tuesday, April 28, 2026 at 5:08 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-28T17:08:01.567Z (2d ago)
**Tags**: oil, OPEC, UAE, MiddleEast, IranWar, energyMarkets, OPECPlus, Hormuz
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4965.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 16:37 and 16:57 UTC on 28 April 2026, the United Arab Emirates publicly confirmed it will withdraw from OPEC and the OPEC+ alliance effective 1 May, triggering sharp moves in global oil markets already stressed by the Iran–US confrontation and Hormuz disruption. The decision removes one of OPEC’s largest and most flexible producers from cartel discipline and adds a new structural risk layer to an already fragile energy system.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

Between 16:37 and 16:57 UTC on 28 April 2026, multiple open-source reports (Reports 4 and 22) state that the United Arab Emirates has announced its withdrawal from OPEC and the OPEC+ framework, effective 1 May. The language explicitly notes that the UAE, one of OPEC’s largest producers, is leaving both the core cartel and the wider OPEC+ alliance. Parallel commentary in Report 4 places this move in the context of stalled war talks with Iran, an ongoing US-led blockade, and Iranian offers to ease the Strait of Hormuz chokehold in exchange for mutual de-escalation. Oil is cited as trading around $111 per barrel, over 50% above its prewar level.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The key actor is the UAE leadership, likely acting through its energy and foreign policy chain: President Mohammed bin Zayed, the energy ministry, and Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC). On the other side is OPEC’s core leadership, dominated by Saudi Arabia and including Iraq, Kuwait, and others, plus the OPEC+ partners led by Russia. This decision signals a strategic policy break between Abu Dhabi and Riyadh/Moscow over production strategy, revenue needs, and the UAE’s desired flexibility during a regional war that directly threatens Gulf export routes.

3) Immediate military/security implications

The announcement comes as the region faces a Hormuz crisis already serious enough that the UN Economic Commission for Europe has created a land-corridor observatory and the US Navy is interdicting tankers bound for Iran. The UAE’s move does not directly change the military balance, but it alters the political geometry among key Gulf producers at a time of war:
- It may reduce Abu Dhabi’s incentive to strictly align oil policy with Saudi Arabia, potentially creating a more national-interest-driven production strategy.
- It could complicate any future coordinated output cuts or increases intended to stabilize prices during escalations in the Iran–US–Israel–Gulf confrontation.
- It signals that core Gulf states are hedging and seeking autonomous levers as the war’s outcome and sanctions regime remain uncertain.

4) Market and economic impact

Near-term market impact is already visible: oil reportedly at ~$111/bbl, more than 50% above prewar levels. The UAE exit increases perceptions that OPEC cohesion is weakening precisely when spare capacity and coordinated management are most needed. Key effects:
- Crude oil: Higher volatility and a structural risk premium in Brent, WTI, and Dubai benchmarks. Traders will reprice expectations for future coordinated cuts or increases and may anticipate more aggressive UAE output over time once outside OPEC quotas.
- Refined products: Bullish for diesel, jet fuel, and gasoline, especially given ongoing Russian refinery and depot disruptions (Tuapse and Orenburg incidents already flagged) and the elevated risk in Hormuz shipping.
- Currencies and fixed income: Likely support for petrocurrencies (NOK, CAD, some EM exporters), pressure on large importers (INR, JPY, TRY, EU periphery), and wider spreads on energy-importing sovereigns. Gulf sovereign debt may see mixed moves—higher revenues but higher geopolitical risk.
- Equities and inflation: Positive for energy majors, oilfield services, and LNG-related plays. Negative for airlines, shipping, chemicals, and broader global equities through higher inflation expectations and potential for more aggressive monetary policy where inflation is not yet fully anchored.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

Expect urgent diplomatic traffic between Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and key OPEC+ players (Russia, Iraq, Kuwait) to clarify whether there is room for a partial accommodation or if the break is definitive. Markets will look for any follow-up from ADNOC on capacity and export plans, and for signals from Saudi Arabia on whether it will adjust its own production policy to offset lost cartel discipline. In parallel, the Iran–US war dynamic and the Hormuz blockade will remain the primary driver of the direction of oil prices; any further tanker incidents or Iranian moves around the strait will magnify the price impact of the UAE decision.

Investors should prepare for elevated intraday volatility in energy futures and related equities, potential upgrades of inflation forecasts, and a renewed bid in safe havens such as gold and high-grade sovereign bonds as markets digest the combination of cartel fragmentation and active conflict in the world’s key oil transit corridor.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Very high. Bullish for crude and refined products in the near term due to cartel fragmentation amid wartime supply risk; increases volatility in Brent/WTI and Middle East benchmarks, widens risk premia on Gulf sovereign debt, and supports gold. Potential pressure on energy-importing currencies and equities, while boosting energy exporters and oil majors.
