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Edition of 16:00 CETThursday, June 25, 2026
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Energy & ClimateThursday, June 25, 2026

Iraq ties OPEC future to quota increase as Hormuz closure drains revenues

Baghdad signals it will consider all options, including exit, unless its production ceiling is raised substantially to reflect restored capacity and a financial crisis triggered by the Iran war.

Oil prices briefly slid below $73 a barrel on Thursday after Reuters reported that Iraq would be “compelled to consider all available options” if OPEC does not significantly raise its output quota. The statement, from a senior oil ministry official, marks the first time Baghdad has publicly linked its continued membership of the producers’ group to a concrete demand for a higher ceiling, injecting a new fault line into an alliance already shaken by the UAE’s departure in May.

The financial pressure on Iraq is acute. Crude exports, which provide more than 90 percent of state revenue, collapsed after the Iran war effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz. In March 2026, shipments fell 83 percent compared with January, slashing monthly earnings to roughly $2 billion. Production, which stood at nearly 4.2 million barrels per day in February, had sunk to 1.48 million bpd by May. Although Baghdad has since begun ramping up output from southern fields—reaching about 2.1 million bpd, with the Rumaila giant contributing 1.1 million bpd—the modest 26,000 bpd quota increase granted by OPEC+ for July is seen in Baghdad as wholly inadequate to fund reconstruction and salary obligations.

Iraq’s official posture remains carefully calibrated. The oil ministry issued a statement denying that the government had threatened to leave OPEC, insisting that any quota demands are handled through “technical and consensual mechanisms.” It pointed to an ongoing OPEC+ review of members’ maximum sustainable production capacity, conducted with an independent consultant, which will set new baselines for 2027. The ministry also stressed that members understand Iraq’s “special circumstances”—four decades of war, sanctions, and recent sabotage attacks on infrastructure—and that the gradual restoration of voluntary cuts will lift the country’s ceiling in the coming months. Yet the senior official’s warning that “Saudi Arabia and other OPEC allies must treat this matter with the utmost seriousness” reveals a harder line behind the diplomatic language.

Viewed from Moscow, a source in the Russian oil industry said the Iraqi statements do not pose a major challenge to the OPEC+ framework and that a small quota adjustment could defuse tensions. In Washington, the core of the recent US-Iran memorandum is the reopening of Hormuz, which President Trump has warned must not be accompanied by Iranian tolls on shipping. For Baghdad, the immediate milestone is the restoration of full export capacity—officials aim to reach 7 million bpd within years—and the conclusion of the OPEC+ capacity review that will determine whether the founding member’s quota finally aligns with its potential, or whether the alliance faces a second high-profile exit in as many months.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 6 languages

0%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Russian & CIS pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Russian & CIS press/ State
PragmatismSkepticism

Iraqi sources floated the possibility of leaving OPEC if production quotas are not raised, citing a severe financial crisis linked to the Iran conflict. The oil ministry quickly denied any immediate exit plans, reaffirming commitment to the organization. The mixed signals are seen as a negotiating tactic to secure a larger quota.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Economic
AlarmSkepticism

Iraq threatened to quit OPEC unless granted a substantial production quota increase, a move that would deal another blow to the cartel after the UAE's departure. Hours later, the oil ministry walked back the threat, saying no exit was planned, but the episode underscores mounting internal frustration. The warning is seen as a pressure tactic amid Baghdad's deep financial troubles.

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Upd. 03:18 PM6 languages · 13 outlets
PreviousEnergy & ClimateNext
13 outlets|6 languages|3 min read
Thursday, June 25, 2026

Iraq ties OPEC future to quota increase as Hormuz closure drains revenues

Baghdad signals it will consider all options, including exit, unless its production ceiling is raised substantially to reflect restored capacity and a financial crisis triggered by the Iran war.

Oil prices briefly slid below $73 a barrel on Thursday after Reuters reported that Iraq would be “compelled to consider all available options” if OPEC does not significantly raise its output quota. The statement, from a senior oil ministry official, marks the first time Baghdad has publicly linked its continued membership of the producers’ group to a concrete demand for a higher ceiling, injecting a new fault line into an alliance already shaken by the UAE’s departure in May.

The financial pressure on Iraq is acute. Crude exports, which provide more than 90 percent of state revenue, collapsed after the Iran war effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz. In March 2026, shipments fell 83 percent compared with January, slashing monthly earnings to roughly $2 billion. Production, which stood at nearly 4.2 million barrels per day in February, had sunk to 1.48 million bpd by May. Although Baghdad has since begun ramping up output from southern fields—reaching about 2.1 million bpd, with the Rumaila giant contributing 1.1 million bpd—the modest 26,000 bpd quota increase granted by OPEC+ for July is seen in Baghdad as wholly inadequate to fund reconstruction and salary obligations.

Iraq’s official posture remains carefully calibrated. The oil ministry issued a statement denying that the government had threatened to leave OPEC, insisting that any quota demands are handled through “technical and consensual mechanisms.” It pointed to an ongoing OPEC+ review of members’ maximum sustainable production capacity, conducted with an independent consultant, which will set new baselines for 2027. The ministry also stressed that members understand Iraq’s “special circumstances”—four decades of war, sanctions, and recent sabotage attacks on infrastructure—and that the gradual restoration of voluntary cuts will lift the country’s ceiling in the coming months. Yet the senior official’s warning that “Saudi Arabia and other OPEC allies must treat this matter with the utmost seriousness” reveals a harder line behind the diplomatic language.

Viewed from Moscow, a source in the Russian oil industry said the Iraqi statements do not pose a major challenge to the OPEC+ framework and that a small quota adjustment could defuse tensions. In Washington, the core of the recent US-Iran memorandum is the reopening of Hormuz, which President Trump has warned must not be accompanied by Iranian tolls on shipping. For Baghdad, the immediate milestone is the restoration of full export capacity—officials aim to reach 7 million bpd within years—and the conclusion of the OPEC+ capacity review that will determine whether the founding member’s quota finally aligns with its potential, or whether the alliance faces a second high-profile exit in as many months.

Source divergence

Energy & Climate · 13 outlets · 6 languages

0%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Critical100%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 6 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Russian & CIS pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Russian & CIS press/ State
PragmatismSkepticism

Iraqi sources floated the possibility of leaving OPEC if production quotas are not raised, citing a severe financial crisis linked to the Iran conflict. The oil ministry quickly denied any immediate exit plans, reaffirming commitment to the organization. The mixed signals are seen as a negotiating tactic to secure a larger quota.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Economic
AlarmSkepticism

Iraq threatened to quit OPEC unless granted a substantial production quota increase, a move that would deal another blow to the cartel after the UAE's departure. Hours later, the oil ministry walked back the threat, saying no exit was planned, but the episode underscores mounting internal frustration. The warning is seen as a pressure tactic amid Baghdad's deep financial troubles.

This story appeared in

13 outlets · 6 languages

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