OPEC+ is an alliance of OPEC members and non-OPEC oil-producing countries that coordinate crude oil production to influence global oil supply and prices.
It is not a separate treaty-based organisation like OPEC. It is a broader production-coordination arrangement created to give oil producers greater control over a changing global oil market.
Background
OPEC+ emerged in 2016, when OPEC began cooperating with major non-OPEC oil producers, especially Russia, after a period of oil-price volatility.
The logic was simple: OPEC alone could not fully stabilise the oil market because major non-OPEC producers also had large output. By coordinating with Russia and others, OPEC gained a wider supply-management platform.
Members
OPEC+ includes OPEC countries along with non-OPEC producers such as:
- Russia
- Kazakhstan
- Azerbaijan
- Mexico
- Oman
- Bahrain
- Brunei
- Malaysia
- Sudan
- South Sudan
The exact operational role of members can vary because some countries participate more actively in production decisions than others.
OPEC currently lists 12 member countries on its official member page, while OPEC+ expands the coordination framework beyond these OPEC members.
Main Purpose
OPEC+ mainly aims to:
- stabilise global crude oil prices
- manage oil supply through production targets
- avoid sharp price crashes
- protect producer-country revenues
- respond to demand shocks
- influence market expectations
- coordinate output cuts or increases among major producers
Its decisions matter because crude oil prices affect inflation, trade balances, energy security and global growth.
How OPEC+ Works
OPEC+ members meet periodically and decide production targets or output cuts.
When oil prices fall sharply, OPEC+ may reduce production to support prices.
When prices rise too high or demand increases, it may raise output targets.
However, actual production may differ from official quotas because some countries lack capacity, face sanctions, suffer conflict disruption, or deliberately under-comply/over-comply.
Latest 2026 Context
OPEC+ decisions in 2026 are taking place amid major disruption in the global oil market due to the Strait of Hormuz crisis and the Iran conflict.
In May 2026, OPEC+ agreed to raise June output quotas by around 188,000 barrels per day, but Reuters reported that the increase is largely symbolic because many members cannot meet targets due to Hormuz-related disruptions.
The same report noted that this was the group’s third consecutive monthly quota hike since the Hormuz closure, but actual supply remains constrained because Gulf exports have been disrupted.
The International Energy Agency’s May 2026 Oil Market Report said global oil demand is forecast to contract by 420,000 barrels per day year-on-year in 2026, to about 104 million barrels per day, due to higher prices, weaker economic conditions and demand-saving measures.
Importance for India
OPEC+ is extremely important for India because India imports a large share of its crude oil requirement.
OPEC+ decisions affect India through:
- crude oil import bill
- petrol and diesel prices
- inflation
- current account deficit
- rupee stability
- fertiliser and transport costs
- fiscal pressure from fuel-related taxes or subsidies
- energy security planning
If OPEC+ cuts production, oil prices may rise and India’s import bill can increase. If OPEC+ raises supply, prices may soften, but only if members can actually produce and export more oil.
OPEC+ and Current Account Deficit
For India, crude oil is one of the largest import items. Higher oil prices widen the merchandise trade deficit and can put pressure on the current account.
This is why OPEC+ decisions are watched not only by the Petroleum Ministry but also by RBI, Finance Ministry, importers, refiners and inflation forecasters.
OPEC+ and Inflation
Oil prices affect inflation directly through petrol, diesel, LPG and aviation turbine fuel.
They also affect inflation indirectly through:
- transport costs
- fertiliser prices
- food supply chains
- industrial input costs
- electricity and logistics costs
Therefore, OPEC+ production policy can influence India’s domestic inflation even though India is not a member of the grouping.
Difference Between OPEC and OPEC+
- OPEC is a formal organisation of petroleum-exporting countries founded in 1960.
- OPEC+ is a wider coordination group created in 2016 that includes OPEC and major non-OPEC producers like Russia.
- OPEC has a permanent institutional structure and headquarters in Vienna.
- OPEC+ works mainly through production agreements and coordination meetings.
- OPEC+ has greater market influence because it includes a larger share of global crude production.
Significance
OPEC+ is significant because it can influence global oil markets even without controlling all production.
Its importance lies in:
- coordinating major producers
- influencing crude oil prices
- shaping inflation trends in importing countries
- affecting global economic growth
- influencing energy security strategies
- giving oil producers bargaining power
- affecting financial markets and exchange rates
The Russia factor makes OPEC+ especially important because it links oil-market management with wider geopolitics.
Limitations
OPEC+ has several limitations.
- Members often have different national interests.
- Some countries need higher output for revenue.
- Others prefer production cuts to raise prices.
- Compliance with quotas is uneven.
- Sanctions and conflicts can reduce actual production.
- Non-OPEC producers outside the group, such as the United States, can dilute its influence.
- Long-term energy transition may reduce oil demand growth.
- Geopolitical tensions within or around member states can disrupt supply.
The 2026 Hormuz disruption shows that production quotas alone cannot stabilise markets if physical export routes are blocked.
India’s Policy Response
India cannot control OPEC+ decisions, so it must reduce vulnerability through:
- diversification of crude suppliers
- strategic petroleum reserves
- long-term energy contracts
- renewable energy expansion
- ethanol blending
- electric mobility
- green hydrogen
- domestic exploration
- energy efficiency
- stronger refinery and storage infrastructure
India also uses diplomatic engagement with Gulf producers, Russia and other suppliers to maintain energy security.
Conclusion
OPEC+ is a powerful oil-producer alliance formed by OPEC and major non-OPEC countries to coordinate crude oil production. Its decisions directly affect global oil prices, inflation, energy security and external balances.
For India, OPEC+ matters because crude oil imports influence inflation, CAD, rupee stability and fiscal management. The latest 2026 developments show that OPEC+ can announce output hikes, but geopolitical disruptions such as the Strait of Hormuz crisis can limit actual supply. India’s long-term response must be diversification, energy transition and stronger strategic reserves.



