The global energy market has been rocked by the steepest decline in OPEC output since the 1980s. Crude oil production by the organization plummeted by 27.5% in March 2026, falling to just 20.79 million barrels per day (bpd).
According to a Bloomberg report citing OPEC’s secretariat, this massive supply disruption—totaling a loss of 7.88 million bpd—has surpassed even the historic cuts seen during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns. The data highlights a global energy landscape struggling to maintain stability in the face of unprecedented geopolitical conflict.
The current supply shock is significantly more severe than past crises. For comparison:
March 2026 Drop: 7.88 million bpd decline.
May 2020 (Pandemic) Drop: 6.28 million bpd decline.
This contraction comes at a time when OPEC+ had originally intended to restore production levels. While a modest increase of 206,000 bpd has been approved for May 2026, it represents only a fraction of what has been lost to recent conflict-driven outages.
Although a ceasefire has been established between Iran and U.S.-Israeli forces, the damage to Middle Eastern energy infrastructure remains profound. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to bottleneck exports, while physical attacks have crippled output:
Qatar: Iranian strikes on energy infrastructure have wiped out $20 billion in annual revenue and knocked out 17% of its LNG export capacity. Repairs could take up to five years.
Iraq: Production has crashed by 70%, falling from 4.3 million bpd to a mere 1.3 million bpd.
Saudi Arabia: A drone strike on a major refinery in the Eastern Province forced a halt to operations at a facility processing 500,000 barrels per day.
Broader Impact: Similar disruptions have been reported across the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman, creating a region-wide supply vacuum.
In a stark contrast to the regional trend in the Middle East, Nigeria emerged as a bright spot in March 2026. The country saw its crude oil production rise to 1.84 million bpd, a significant recovery from the 1.31 million bpd recorded in February.
However, this recovery is framed by a difficult start to the year. Between January and February, Nigeria still recorded a shortfall of 16.6 million barrels of crude and condensate. While the current 1.84 million bpd output shows strong momentum, the overall global shortage means that Nigeria’s role as a reliable supplier is more critical than ever to the global market.
OPEC, which controls roughly 40% of global crude production, is now at a crossroads. With 15% of the world’s supply effectively sidelined, the focus has shifted from managing prices to ensuring basic energy security. The next OPEC+ meeting scheduled for May 3, 2026, will be pivotal in determining whether the group can—or will—take more aggressive steps to bridge the widening global supply gap.