Showing posts with label US the biggest oil exporter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US the biggest oil exporter. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 June 2026

OPEC Dilemma: More Oil, Less Revenue

The debate over Iraq’s possible reconsideration of its OPEC membership highlights a deeper challenge facing the global oil market - whether individual producers can protect their economic interests by increasing production, or whether collective discipline remains the only way to preserve value.

According to reports, Iraq is considering all options if OPEC does not allow a significant increase in its production quota. The concern is understandable. Oil remains the backbone of Iraq’s economy, and fiscal pressures have intensified after export disruptions and economic challenges. However, increasing production during a period of declining oil prices may provide more barrels, but not necessarily more revenue.

The reported exit of the United Arab Emirates and growing dissatisfaction among some producers indicate rising internal pressures within OPEC. This development also has wider geopolitical implications.

The United States, having achieved the position of the world’s largest oil producer and a major exporter, has an interest in a more competitive global oil market. A weakened OPEC, with members pursuing independent production strategies, could reduce the organization’s ability to influence global supply management.

However, history suggests that oil producers often suffer when they prioritize volume over value. If every major producer attempts to maximize output, the inevitable outcome is downward pressure on prices, reducing revenues for all exporters.

Saudi Arabia’s approach offers an important lesson. Despite possessing enormous production capacity, Riyadh has frequently supported supply discipline to maintain market stability. The objective is not simply to sell more barrels, but to ensure that each barrel generates maximum economic benefit.

Iraq and other oil-dependent economies must recognize that higher production quotas are not a guaranteed solution. Sustainable revenue growth requires economic diversification, better fiscal management, and reducing excessive dependence on crude exports.

The global energy landscape is changing rapidly. Demand patterns, technological advancement, and alternative energy sources are creating long-term uncertainty for oil producers.

In a declining oil price scenario, increasing production is not a prudent solution. The real challenge for oil-exporting countries is not how many barrels they can produce, but how intelligently they manage the value of the barrels they already have.