Will India Move Fast on a UAE Energy Pact Post OPEC fallout?

The UAE’s decision to step away from OPEC and OPEC+ frameworks has triggered quiet but urgent conversations within India’s Ministry of External Affairs, with officials sensing a rare strategic opening. Freed from collective production constraints, Abu Dhabi could pursue more flexible, bilateral energy arrangements an opportunity New Delhi may find hard to ignore.

India, the world’s third-largest oil importer, has long sought to diversify supply lines while insulating itself from cartel-driven price volatility. A direct, long-term energy pact with the UAE could offer preferential pricing, supply stability, and potentially greater investment collaboration in upstream assets.

Sources suggest early internal assessments are already underway, examining whether India can leverage its deepening strategic partnership with the UAE into a structured energy corridor. This comes amid broader shifts in West Asian geopolitics and India’s push for energy security through plurilateral and bilateral frameworks.

However, challenges remain. Any fast-tracked deal would require careful calibration to avoid friction with other Gulf suppliers and manage pricing expectations.

The question now is whether India will move quickly enough to convert this geopolitical shift into a tangible energy advantage.

 

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