Seven OPEC+ countries will raise oil output targets by 188,000 barrels per day in July, the fourth consecutive monthly increase, even as the U.S. war with Iran continues to cripple production from Gulf members and deepen the world's biggest supply crisis in decades.
"The group is increasing quotas to signal confidence in demand, but the reality is that most members cannot physically pump the additional barrels," said Omar Tariq, a commodities analyst covering oil markets. "The Strait of Hormuz closure has rendered these quota hikes largely symbolic for Gulf producers."
The seven core members — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Algeria, Kazakhstan and Oman — have boosted combined output targets by almost 600,000 bpd from April through June. Yet actual production tells a different story: the group averaged just 33.19 million bpd in April, down from 42.77 million in February, according to OPEC data. The collapse reflects export cuts by Gulf states that have been unable to ship crude through the Strait of Hormuz since late February, when the U.S.-Iran conflict severed the waterway that handles about a fifth of global oil consumption.
The July increase matches June's 188,000 bpd adjustment, which was itself reduced from 206,000 bpd in May and April to account for the United Arab Emirates' exit from OPEC after almost six decades. The UAE's departure removed one of the group's few members with spare production capacity, further constraining OPEC+'s ability to respond to the supply shortfall. Saudi Arabia, historically the group's swing producer, has been unable to supply customers in full since the end of February, three OPEC+ sources told Reuters.
Brent crude settled at $93.09 a barrel on Friday, down $1.94 or 2.04 percent, while WTI crude finished at $90.54, down $2.50 or 2.69 percent. Prices fell as traders grew more confident that renewed conflict between the U.S. and Iran was becoming less likely, though the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to commercial oil traffic.
The last time oil markets faced a supply disruption of this magnitude was during the 1990 Gulf War, when Iraq's invasion of Kuwait removed roughly 4.3 million bpd from global markets. The current crisis has already removed an estimated 9 million bpd of production capacity from OPEC+ members, based on the gap between February and April output figures — more than double the 1990 disruption.
OPEC+ also extended the deadline for members to submit compensation plans for overproduction to December 2026, according to a statement after Sunday's meeting, giving countries like Iraq and Kazakhstan additional flexibility to address past quota breaches. A full OPEC+ ministerial meeting was also held Sunday but was not expected to make any changes to group-wide output policy, the sources said.
The disconnect between rising quotas and collapsing actual output leaves the market in an unusual position. If the Strait of Hormuz reopens — through a ceasefire or diplomatic resolution — Gulf producers could theoretically restore millions of barrels of daily output within weeks, potentially crashing prices. If the closure persists, the world faces a prolonged supply deficit that no quota adjustment can fix.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.