← Back to News
energy

UAE's OPEC Exit Driven by 'Autumn of Hydrocarbon Age' Strategy, While WWII Wrecks Discovered Underwater

By MGN EditorialMay 22, 2026 at 06:00 PM

A senior UAE presidential adviser reveals the strategic thinking behind the country's OPEC departure, as the Lost 52 Project announces the historic discovery of three WWII vessels and their crews.

## Maritime Industry Briefing ### UAE Exits OPEC to Maximise Oil Revenues Before Energy Transition The United Arab Emirates' decision to leave OPEC was a calculated, three-year strategic process rooted in the belief that the world is approaching the 'autumn of the hydrocarbon age,' according to a senior adviser to the UAE president, as reported by gCaptain. The adviser's remarks underscore a growing urgency among major oil-producing nations to extract maximum value from hydrocarbon reserves before the global energy transition fundamentally reshapes demand. By departing from OPEC's production quota framework, the UAE positions itself to pump at higher volumes and capture a larger share of remaining oil revenues during what it views as a narrowing window of opportunity. For the maritime industry, the implications are significant. Tanker demand, crude shipping routes, and bunkering economics are all closely tied to Gulf production levels. An unconstrained UAE pumping strategy could support elevated tanker utilisation on key Middle East Gulf export corridors, at least in the near to medium term, even as the broader energy transition continues to reshape long-term shipping demand fundamentals. The UAE's move also signals a broader philosophical shift among some OPEC members, who increasingly view coordinated production restraint as a strategy that may cost them revenue they can never recover if oil demand peaks sooner than anticipated. --- ### Lost 52 Project Discovers Three WWII Vessels in Historic Underwater Find In a discovery timed to coincide with Memorial Day, the Lost 52 Project, working alongside nonprofit Ocean Outreach, has announced the identification of three previously lost U.S. Navy vessels from World War II, along with the remains of their entombed crews, according to a PR Newswire release dated 22 May 2026. The Lost 52 Project has built a reputation for locating sunken American submarines and warships using advanced underwater survey technology, and this latest announcement represents one of its most significant findings to date. The discovery of three vessels simultaneously marks a milestone in maritime archaeology and naval history preservation. The finds carry deep significance beyond historical interest. For the families of crew members lost aboard these vessels, the discoveries provide long-awaited closure and formal recognition of their sacrifice. The project's work also highlights the growing capability of modern underwater search technology to resolve decades-old maritime mysteries. Full details of the vessels' identities and locations are expected to be released in coordination with U.S. naval authorities and the families of the fallen. --- *Sources: gCaptain, PR Newswire*
#OPEC#UAE oil production#tanker demand#energy transition#maritime archaeology#WWII wrecks#Lost 52 Project#crude oil shipping

Related Articles

Brent Crude Enters Contango for First Time Since Iran War Outbreak as Gulf Supply Surges

Brent crude oil has shifted into contango for the first time since the Iran war began in late February, signaling a notable increase in near-term supply from the Gulf region.

Jun 25, 2026

Strait of Hormuz Crisis Eases: Minehunters Deploy, Tankers Move, But Freight Rates Spike to 897% of Benchmark

A multinational mine countermeasures mission is taking shape in the Strait of Hormuz as stranded tankers begin moving and diplomatic progress draws cautious praise from marine insurers — but a near-nine-times benchmark freight rate signals the market remains far from normal.

Jun 24, 2026

LONGi Energy Storage Debuts Integrated Solar Solution at Intersolar Europe 2026

LONGi Energy Storage has officially launched its LONGi ONE integrated solar-plus-storage system in Europe, targeting the growing demand for turnkey renewable energy solutions with full lifecycle local support.

Jun 24, 2026

Arbitration Tribunal Formed Over Revoked LNG Terminal and Gas-to-Power Permits

Singapore-based Sinolam International has confirmed the establishment of an independent arbitration tribunal following the cancellation of permits for a gas-to-power and LNG terminal development, signalling a significant legal dispute with implications for emerging market energy investment.

Jun 24, 2026

Envision Showcases Integrated Energy Systems at Intersolar Europe 2026

Chinese energy technology firm Envision has debuted its integrated energy systems portfolio at Intersolar Europe 2026 in Munich, targeting controllable clean energy supply for AI, industry, and power grids.

Jun 24, 2026