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UAE Exits OPEC: Nigeria’s Oil Revenue Under Fresh Pressure

Amina Garba
· · 2 min read
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The United Arab Emirates has quit OPEC, and Nigeria is now working out what it means.

Abu Dhabi made the announcement on Tuesday, saying it would formally exit OPEC and the broader OPEC+ alliance on May 1. The UAE cited the need to prioritise national interests amid rising geopolitical tensions — including the ongoing US-Iran situation and the Strait of Hormuz. The country has long pushed for higher production quotas, sitting capped at around 3.2 million barrels per day despite having capacity north of 4 million, with plans to hit 5 million by 2027.

What It Means for Nigeria

For Nigeria, the timing is uncomfortable. The country’s crude output rose to 1.38 million barrels per day in March 2026 per OPEC’s own report, while NNPC says total output including condensates reached 1.71 million barrels — a five-year high. But that’s still well below the 2 million bpd target the government has been chasing.

Energy analyst Ben Owoleke told Daily Trust that the UAE’s move could encourage other dissatisfied producers — Kazakhstan in particular — to consider leaving the cartel. More UAE oil on the market means downward pressure on prices, and that means less revenue for countries like Nigeria where crude exports fund a significant chunk of the budget.

Muda Yussuf, former Director-General of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce, warned that OPEC’s ability to coordinate production could be weakened if others follow the UAE’s lead. Hashim Bokori added that unrestricted UAE exports could force Nigeria to lower prices to stay competitive — a squeeze the country can ill afford right now.

University of Lagos professor Dayo Ayoade framed it as a potential opportunity: “If Nigeria can export up to four million barrels per day, it would be unreasonable to accept a 1.5 million barrel quota. National interest should take precedence.” Whether the country can actually ramp up production fast enough is the real question.

Sources: Daily Trust, Punch, The Nation, Bloomberg, CNBC

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Amina Garba

Financial reporter covering CBN policy, oil and gas, government budgets, and macroeconomic trends. Business Writer at NaijaTrend.

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