Abu Dhabi hosts oil summit as OPEC+ halts production hikes planned for
first quarter of 2026
[November 03, 2025] By
JON GAMBRELL
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Abu Dhabi opened a major oil
summit Monday with officials offering bullish optimism that power
demands for artificial intelligence and global aviation will boost
energy prices, just hours after OPEC+ paused production increases
planned for next year.
The comments at the annual Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition
and Conference in the Emirati capital highlighted the contradictions in
the market and in the United Arab Emirates, a major oil producer that
hosted the United Nations COP28 climate talks in 2023.
Sultan al-Jaber, the head of the state-run Abu Dhabi National Oil Co.
who led COP28, described the energy market as needing “reinforcement,
not replacement.” U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum applauded al-Jaber's
remarks and criticized what he described as “a set of policies that have
been driven by an ideology around climate extremism.”
“The demand for power is going to go up and up and up," Burgum said.
"Today’s the day to announce that there is no energy transition. There
is only energy addition.”
OPEC+ halts first-quarter production hikes
On Sunday, OPEC+ met and decided to increase its production by an
additional 137,000 barrels of oil beginning in December. However, it
said other adjustments planned in January, February and March of next
year would be paused “due to seasonality.”
OPEC+ includes the core members of the cartel, as well as nations
outside of the group led by Russia.
Benchmark Brent crude sold Monday around $65 a barrel, down from a post-COVID
high of some $115 a barrel after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine
in 2022. It had fallen to $60 a barrel in recent days over concerns that
the market had too much production.

“Yes, OPEC+ is blinking, but it’s a calculated move,” said Jorge León,
the head of geopolitical analysis at Rystad Energy. “Sanctions on
Russian producers have injected a new layer of uncertainty into supply
forecasts, and the group knows that overproducing now could backfire
later. By pausing, OPEC+ is protecting prices, projecting unity and
buying time to see how sanctions play out on Russian barrels.”
Suhail al-Mazerouei, the Emirates' energy and infrastructure minister,
however, dismissed any idea long-term of too much oil being in the
market.
“I’m not going to talk about a an oversupply scenario," he said. "I
can’t see that. I can’t justify that. And I think all of what we are
seeing is more demand.”
Burgum backs production, knocks Russia
Burgum, a former Republican governor of North Dakota and the chair of
U.S. President Donald Trump’s National Energy Dominance Council, was on
hand for the Abu Dhabi oil summit on Monday. He praised the partnership
oil-producing Gulf Arab states have with America, saying: "We share a
belief about energy policy.”
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UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and Managing
Director of state-run Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC) Sultan al-Jaber
speaks during the inaugural session of annual Abu Dhabi
International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (ADIPEC), in Abu
Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. (AP Photo/Altaf
Qadri)
 “People have described the climate
as an existential threat. Again, to help people understand U.S.
energy policy, we are focused on two substantial threats. One is
Iran could not have a nuclear weapon," Burgum said. “But the second
thing is that the free world cannot lose the AI arms race. ... You
need chips, you need software models and you need more electricity.”
The average price for a gallon of gasoline in the
U.S., a key economic and political indicator in the country, stood
at $3.03 on Monday. Trump also has criticized both OPEC+ and Saudi
Arabia at times over the price per barrel, particularly in his first
term.
Meanwhile, both the United States and the United Kingdom implemented
new oil sanctions targeting Russia over its war on Ukraine. Those
sanctions targets included Rosneft and the Russian oil company
Lukoil, whose red-and-white logo hung over the annual oil
conference. The UAE has maintained close ties to Russia despite the
war, but has served as a key interlocutor between Kyiv and Moscow to
negotiate prisoner exchanges.
“The Russian and Ukraine war is being funded by energy sales,”
Burgum said on a stage that had flashed the Lukoil logo before his
remarks.
Climate change worries take a backseat
The oil conference comes after the UAE hosted COP28. Those talks
ended with a call by nearly 200 countries to move away from
planet-warming fossil fuels — the first time the conference made
that crucial pledge. Scientists have called for drastically slashing
the world’s emissions by nearly half in the coming years to limit
global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit)
compared with pre-industrial times.
But the UAE as a whole still plans to increase its production
capacity of oil to 5 million barrels a day in the coming years as it
pursues more clean energy at home.
Qatari Energy Minister Saad Sherida al-Kaabi repeated a warning to
the European Union that his nation could halt their liquefied
natural gas shipments — something crucial due to Russian LNG being
banned — over its Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive.
That seeks to have companies pursue net-zero emission goals.
“I think, you know, a small part of this conference, unfortunately,
changes with politics depending on when it was President Biden and
President Trump and so on," al-Kaabi said. "I think that they're not
looking at facts and realities and I think we shouldn't be following
politics when we look at the lives of people for the future and how
much energy we need in the future.”
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