
By Uzma Ehtasham
Every morning brings a fresh twist to the long, tortured saga between Washington and Tehran. One day the whispers from Vienna or Doha suggest a deal is imminent, that both weary adversaries have finally stumbled towards an accommodation. The next, verbal grenades are launched across the Gulf, and the world holds its breath, suspended between the thin hope of détente and the grim certainty of more brinkmanship. Just as global markets were learning to live with that perpetual ambivalence, a far more consequential tremor has now shaken the very ground beneath the world’s energy architecture. The United Arab Emirates has announced that, from the first of May, it will withdraw from both OPEC and the broader OPEC+ alliance. And it has done so at a moment when the illegal Israeli war on Iran has already conjured an historic energy crisis, pushing crude prices to heights not seen in a generation.
To understand the sheer weight of this decision, one must look past the usual diplomatic footnotes. The UAE is not a marginal player. It is the third‑largest oil producer inside OPEC, trailing only Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and its share of the cartel’s total export value stands at roughly $77 billion – nearly seventeen per cent of the group’s collective revenue. When a member of that size tears up the rulebook, it is not a mere defection; it is a structural earthquake. The immediate fear, voiced quietly by energy analysts in London and Houston, is that Abu Dhabi’s walkout will not stand alone. Kazakhstan and Iraq are now said to be weighing their own options. If either follows, the dominoes could fall with terrifying speed, and the organization that has managed global oil supplies for more than six decades would find itself reduced to a shell.
Consider what OPEC has always done best. It has absorbed sudden supply shocks. It has smoothed the violent swings between feast and famine. It has given producers a collective voice, however imperfect, against the relentless logic of boom and bust. Without that coordinating mechanism, the rules of the oil market become a free‑for‑all. In the short term, the UAE might gain an individual advantage. Freed from production quotas, it could pump an extra million barrels a day – roughly one per cent of global daily demand. That sounds reassuring, but it is the kind of reassurance that ignores the bigger picture. That extra crude will not calm the market; it will further shred the fragile trust that holds OPEC together. What follows is not a gentle correction but a Hobbesian scramble, where every producer rushes to maximize output before the next price collapse, thereby guaranteeing the very chaos they sought to avoid.
The timing could not be worse. The ongoing war on Iran has already conjured the specter of a closed Strait of Hormuz, through which nearly a fifth of the world’s petroleum passes. By March, that pressure had pushed Brent crude above one hundred dollars a barrel for the first time since 2022. Now, on top of that war premium, comes the crumbling of OPEC’s internal discipline. Economists have long held a grim rule of thumb: every ten‑dollar increase in the price of oil knocks roughly 0.3 per cent off global GDP. Apply that to a world economy already staggering from post‑pandemic debt, supply chain fractures and inflationary hangovers, and the numbers become terrifying. A sustained spike to one hundred and twenty dollars or higher would push Europe and much of the developing world into outright recession. For countries like Pakistan, Egypt or Turkey, already drowning in external debt, the effect would be nothing short of catastrophic.
This is not a distant academic threat. It evokes the energy crisis of the 1970s, when severe supply shortages, wild currency fluctuations, spiraling inflation and the menace of recession engulfed the entire planet. But there is a crucial difference. In the seventies, OPEC was a unified actor, an organized cartel that could at least be negotiated with. Today, the collapse of that unity promises a different kind of nightmare: a market with no referee, no shared playbook, and no one willing to act as a swing producer. The UAE’s departure from OPEC+ is especially poignant, because it is the plus – Russia and other non‑OPEC allies – that had given the group much of its recent leverage. Without Abu Dhabi, that leverage dissipates, and Moscow and Riyadh are left to manage an alliance that suddenly looks far less formidable.
The G7, the International Energy Agency and the major consuming nations of Asia must consider emergency measures: coordinated releases from strategic petroleum reserves, temporary demand restraints, and a diplomatic surge aimed at persuading the UAE to reconsider or at least to delay its exit until the current crisis abates. More fundamentally, the episode is a reminder that the post‑war order of managed energy security is fraying beyond repair. The transition to renewables cannot come soon enough, but for the next decade the world will remain hostage to the whims of a handful of producers. If the current pressures are allowed to fester, a global economic crisis could take root – one whose devastating aftermath might take years, if not a decade, to undo. That is a risk no responsible nation can afford to take. The time for half‑measures and hopeful statements is over. The oil market is sending a warning; it would be folly to pretend it is just another headline.
(The writer is a public health professional, journalist, and possesses expertise in health communication, having keen interest in national and international affairs, can be reached at uzma@metro-morning.com)


