For decades, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has managed to keep its members aligned despite competing national interests. But Iraq’s growing dissatisfaction with its production quota is exposing fresh cracks within the world’s most influential oil cartel.
Baghdad has recently intensified its demand for a significantly higher oil production quota, arguing that its current allocation no longer reflects either its production capacity or its economic realities. While Iraqi officials have downplayed reports of an imminent exit from OPEC, they have also made it clear that every option remains on the table if the group’s quota system does not evolve.
Why Iraq wants more oil
Unlike many OPEC members, Iraq depends overwhelmingly on crude exports to fund its economy. Oil accounts for the vast majority of government revenues, making production limits far more consequential for Baghdad than for countries with more diversified economies.
The economic strain has become even more acute following disruptions to exports through the Strait of Hormuz, which sharply curtailed Iraq’s oil shipments and squeezed government finances. Iraqi officials argue that increasing production once exports normalize is critical to rebuilding the economy and financing long-term development.
Baghdad has also outlined an ambitious plan to increase oil production to 7 million barrels per day over the coming years, a target that would require greater flexibility within OPEC’s quota framework.
More than just barrels
The dispute is about more than production volumes. It reflects a broader debate over influence inside OPEC.
Iraq is the cartel’s second-largest producer after Saudi Arabia and one of its five founding members. Yet officials believe the country’s growing production capacity, large reserves and population deserve greater weight when quotas are determined.
At the same time, OPEC+ is reviewing members’ production capacities to determine new output baselines for 2027. The outcome of that review could reshape future quotas, making Iraq’s lobbying particularly significant.
A delicate balancing act for OPEC
For OPEC, accommodating Iraq is easier said than done.
The cartel’s production quota system is designed to balance competing objectives—maintaining price stability, preventing oversupply and ensuring member compliance. Granting Iraq a substantially higher quota could prompt similar demands from other producers, complicating OPEC’s efforts to manage global oil supplies.
Conversely, ignoring Baghdad’s concerns risks creating deeper divisions within an organization that has already witnessed membership changes and growing differences over production strategy.
What it means for global markets
Although Iraq has reaffirmed that it intends to remain within OPEC, its increasingly assertive stance underscores how geopolitical disruptions and shifting production capacities are reshaping the global energy landscape.
For investors and energy markets, the debate extends beyond Iraq’s immediate demands. The real question is whether OPEC’s decades-old quota system can continue balancing the ambitions of its largest producers while preserving the cohesion that has long underpinned the cartel’s influence over global oil prices.
The answer could determine not only Iraq’s place within OPEC but also the future direction of the world’s most powerful oil alliance.