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Energy diplomacy in the age of Artificial intelligence: Will algorithms replace OPEC?

May 16, 2026 at 12:50 pm

Opec logo [Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images]

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The end of traditional energy politics

For decades, energy diplomacy in the Middle East revolved around a familiar triangle: Oil, geopolitics and security. Oil-producing states shaped global markets through production capacity, strategic waterways and political alliances, while organisations such as OPEC stood at the centre of energy governance. Recent global developments suggest that the international energy order is entering a fundamentally different era — one in which data, algorithms and artificial intelligence are becoming as strategically important as oil wells themselves.

The recent conflicts in the Middle East, disruptions in maritime routes, cyberattacks on critical infrastructure and the growing volatility of energy markets have demonstrated that oil politics is no longer managed solely through pipelines and tankers. Increasingly, it is shaped inside data centres, predictive systems and AI-driven analytical platforms.

How artificial intelligence is reshaping energy governance

Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming the architecture of global energy governance. Major energy companies, financial institutions and governments now rely on advanced algorithms to forecast oil prices, monitor geopolitical risks, analyse consumption patterns and even anticipate military escalation. AI systems are capable of processing millions of variables simultaneously — from satellite imagery of oil tankers and shipping traffic to weather patterns, financial indicators and social media sentiment.

In this emerging order, power no longer belongs exclusively to those who control energy resources. It increasingly belongs to those who control data and possess the technological capacity to interpret it faster than their competitors.

This transformation raises profound questions for the future of traditional energy diplomacy. Throughout the twentieth century, oil-exporting states influenced markets primarily through production decisions. In the twenty-first century, however, strategic advantage may depend less on the size of reserves and more on the sophistication of predictive technologies.

Can OPEC survive the algorithmic age?

Even OPEC itself faces a rapidly changing environment. The organisation remains one of the most influential actors in the global energy market, yet its traditional mechanisms of coordination are under pressure from increasingly dynamic and unpredictable markets.

Decisions that once took weeks of negotiation now require real-time responses to rapidly evolving geopolitical and financial developments.

It is therefore conceivable that AI-driven systems could soon become an integral part of energy policymaking. Some analysts already argue that future production adjustments and crisis management strategies may rely heavily on algorithmic modelling and predictive analytics rather than solely on political bargaining.

This does not necessarily mean that algorithms will “replace” OPEC in a literal sense. Rather, it suggests that energy governance itself is becoming increasingly algorithmic. Political authority is gradually being supplemented — and in some areas challenged — by technological authority.

The new geopolitical race: Data instead of oil?

At the same time, great-power competition is also being redefined. In previous decades, rivalry centred on oil fields and transport corridors. Today, competition increasingly revolves around data infrastructure, digital connectivity and dominance in artificial intelligence technologies.

The United States, China and the European Union have all invested heavily in AI applications linked to energy security and market forecasting. China, in particular, is attempting to combine technological influence with its Belt and Road Initiative to expand its role in the future global energy order. Meanwhile, American technology firms and financial institutions continue to dominate large segments of energy-related data analysis.

For many Middle Eastern countries, however, a coherent strategy regarding AI governance and energy-related data sovereignty remains absent. This may create a new form of dependency in the coming decades — not dependency on extraction technology, but dependency on foreign digital infrastructure and algorithmic systems.

The Middle East’s next energy challenge

The future of energy diplomacy in the Middle East will therefore depend not only on oil and gas reserves, but also on technological adaptation.

Countries that successfully integrate artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and digital governance into their energy strategies are likely to possess greater geopolitical influence in the years ahead.

The age of AI is reshaping global energy politics in ways that were unimaginable only a decade ago. Oil will undoubtedly remain strategically important, but the real power of the future may lie in the ability to transform information into geopolitical leverage.

Whether algorithms will eventually rival the influence of institutions such as OPEC remains uncertain. What is certain, however, is that energy diplomacy can no longer be understood without artificial intelligence, data governance and technological power.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.