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OPEC+ approves a second symbolic output hike Hormuz makes un-deliverable

OPEC+ approves a second symbolic output hike Hormuz makes un-deliverable

Seven members add 188,000 bpd for July — but Saudi Arabia's quota sits far above what the closed Strait let it actually export

Leaders·Energy· active L'argent de qui·Comment les guerres finissent vraiment ·10 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

Seven OPEC+ members — Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman — met virtually on 7 June and agreed to add 188,000 bpd for July, matching June's increase set on 3 May. Saudi Arabia and Russia each take 62,000 bpd of it. The hikes continue the unwinding of the 2.2 mb/d voluntary cut from April 2023. But the increases were largely notional: with the Strait of Hormuz closed during the Iran war, the kingdom's quota rose toward ~10.29 mb/d while actual March output ran near 7.76 mb/d, because the barrels could not be exported. The compensation period was extended to end-December 2026; the group's next meeting is 5 July, by which point the ceasefire should have reopened the chokepoint. The UAE had exited the seven-member sub-group.

By the numbers

  • 188,000 bpd — July increase; a second straight month at that figure.
  • 62,000 bpd each — Saudi and Russian shares of the July hike.
  • ~10.29 vs ~7.76 mb/d — Saudi quota vs actual March output, the gap Hormuz forced.
  • 5 July 2026 — next OPEC+ meeting; end-Dec 2026 — extended compensation window.

Why it matters

The decisions reveal a paper market: quota rises that mean nothing while Mohammed Bin Salman's crude is stranded behind a closed strait. Their real significance is forward — once Hormuz reopens, the unwind becomes deliverable and adds to the post-ceasefire price slide already pressuring Saudi revenue.

What to watch

  • The 5 July decision once Hormuz traffic normalises.
  • Whether the unwind continues at pace and deepens the price slide.
  • Compliance and compensation as actual barrels return to market.