The UAE is about to turn the taps wide open. The International Energy Agency projects the country will pump 5.2 million barrels per day in 2027, a year-over-year increase of 730,000 bpd that could reshape global oil markets and put downward pressure on crude prices.

That kind of production surge doesn’t happen by accident. It’s the direct consequence of the UAE’s decision to leave OPEC in May 2026, a move that freed Abu Dhabi from the cartel’s production quotas and signaled that the country was done playing nice with output caps.

A decade of capacity building pays off

The UAE has been laying the groundwork for this moment for years. Crude capacity has grown from 3.1 million bpd in 2016 to nearly 4.4 million bpd by 2026, adding roughly 40% more production infrastructure in a decade.

Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) is the engine behind the expansion. The state oil giant has committed $55 billion to projects spanning 2026 through 2028, with a broader capital expenditure plan of $150 billion stretching through 2030.