Russia May Be Excluded From OPEC Deal, 4 Experts Discuss Impacts


  • Russia could be excluded from the OPEC production-quota agreement after missing targets, per WSJ. 
  • OPEC members discussed the idea as Western sanctions and an EU ban limit Russia’s oil production. 
  • Here’s what analysts anticipate could happen to global oil supply if Russia is cut from OPEC. 

Some members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) are considering removing Russia from an oil-production agreement group, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

Experts say the move could have major implications for the price of oil and the global energy market.

Russia’s economy and oil production have suffered since its late-February invasion of Ukraine, which led to Western sanctions and bans on imports of its energy. Its oil output was down by 7.5% as of mid-April, and the Kremlin said it could fall as much as 17% this year, per a report seen by Reuters

The OPEC members are looking at whether to boot Russia from the group’s deal to gradually increase oil production, after the country missed its target.

“It does not make sense to make them stick to a quota,” one OPEC delegate said, according to the WSJ.

Russia isn’t part of the 13-strong OPEC group of major oil producers, but leads the 10 countries allied with it in the wider OPEC+. The larger group is scheduled to meet Thursday to approve a plan to increase oil production to 432,000 barrels a day. Its goal is to stabilize the global oil supply and return it to pre-pandemic levels. 

If Russia is cut from the agreement group, the likes of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates could step in to pump more supplies. That could help lower oil prices, which have been rising and recently traded around two-month highs

Here’s what analysts say about OPEC+, the chance of a Russian exclusion, and what it could mean for the wider oil market: 

Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at OANDA: “Realistically, only Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and perhaps Iraq, can rapidly increase production, as the rest of the group can’t meet their present quotas, let alone larger redistributed ones. If Russia has agreed to this course of action, it would weigh on oil prices, rebalancing supply, and demand but not enough to send Brent crude back through $100 a barrel. If this outcome was imposed on Russia, which disagreed with it, that implies a major fracture in OPEC+ unity. That would be a much more bearish development for oil prices. My…



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