
This is due to the crisis after the beginning of the US-Israeli war against Iran. The situation worsened after the UAE withdrew from OPEC+ after being a member of the organization for almost 60 years, Investing.com writes.
In reality, the group’s production has collapsed due to a reduction in exports by member countries from the Persian Gulf, the publication notes. In April, it averaged 33.19 million barrels per day against 42.77 million in February, according to OPEC data.
On Sunday. June 7, the 7 major exporters decided to increase targets by 188,000 bpd from July, OPEC said in a statement.
“The OPEC+ production increase means very little as long as the Strait of Hormuz remains closed,” said Jorge Leon, an analyst at Rystad and former OPEC official. – When the Strait of Hormuz reopens, the market could move very quickly from fear of a shortage to fear of a glut.”
The seven countries are ramping up production as part of a gradual rollback of a 1.65 million bpd production cut that the group, which at the time included the UAE, agreed to in 2023.
Since July, they have to return about 567,000 bpd to the market. That would mean the rest of the cut would be rolled back by the end of September if OPEC+ sticks to monthly increases of about 188,000 bpd in August and September.






















