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OPEC+ Freezes Early 2026 Output To Keep Control Of Oil Market Turbulence
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) OPEC+ has chosen to halt its planned production hikes and keep output targets unchanged for the first quarter of 2026, signalling that the oil alliance would rather move cautiously than gamble on optimistic forecasts.
After months of extra barrels from Saudi Arabia, Russia, the UAE and others, the group faces a simple risk: if it keeps opening the taps while demand softens, prices could sink to levels that blow holes in producer budgets and fuel instability.
Since April 2025, core members have added close to three million barrels per day back into the market, even as wider cuts of just over three million barrels per day remain in force.
A formal reduction of two million barrels per day still runs until the end of 2026, giving the alliance room to adjust volumes without looking panicked.
The pause now is less about drama and more about discipline: OPEC+ is trying to prevent a damaging price war just as non-OPEC producers, led by the United States and Brazil, ramp up supply.
Analysts expect global demand growth to cool in 2026, while new projects in North America and offshore Latin America keep pumping. Some forecasts warn of a potential surplus of several million barrels per day if consumption disappoints.
In that scenario, governments that treat oil revenue as a blank cheque would be forced into spending cuts, higher taxes or new borrowing, with costs at home.
OPEC+ acts to keep oil stable
Inside OPEC+, the decision also buys time for a renegotiation of future power balances. Between January and September 2026, members will reassess their maximum production capacities, numbers that will set 2027 quotas and decide who captures future market share.
Countries that invested heavily in new fields want higher baselines; others are struggling simply to defend existing output. For consumers, the short-term message is straightforward.
This is not a bid to engineer a price spike, but a move to keep a floor under crude and avoid another cycle of boom, bust and emergency bailouts.
In a world already wrestling with inflation, debt and geopolitical shocks, the group is betting that predictable, market-oriented signals are safer than promises of cheap energy that no one can keep.
After months of extra barrels from Saudi Arabia, Russia, the UAE and others, the group faces a simple risk: if it keeps opening the taps while demand softens, prices could sink to levels that blow holes in producer budgets and fuel instability.
Since April 2025, core members have added close to three million barrels per day back into the market, even as wider cuts of just over three million barrels per day remain in force.
A formal reduction of two million barrels per day still runs until the end of 2026, giving the alliance room to adjust volumes without looking panicked.
The pause now is less about drama and more about discipline: OPEC+ is trying to prevent a damaging price war just as non-OPEC producers, led by the United States and Brazil, ramp up supply.
Analysts expect global demand growth to cool in 2026, while new projects in North America and offshore Latin America keep pumping. Some forecasts warn of a potential surplus of several million barrels per day if consumption disappoints.
In that scenario, governments that treat oil revenue as a blank cheque would be forced into spending cuts, higher taxes or new borrowing, with costs at home.
OPEC+ acts to keep oil stable
Inside OPEC+, the decision also buys time for a renegotiation of future power balances. Between January and September 2026, members will reassess their maximum production capacities, numbers that will set 2027 quotas and decide who captures future market share.
Countries that invested heavily in new fields want higher baselines; others are struggling simply to defend existing output. For consumers, the short-term message is straightforward.
This is not a bid to engineer a price spike, but a move to keep a floor under crude and avoid another cycle of boom, bust and emergency bailouts.
In a world already wrestling with inflation, debt and geopolitical shocks, the group is betting that predictable, market-oriented signals are safer than promises of cheap energy that no one can keep.
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