Export quotas might mean less cash for Canada, best to let them manipulate the price and then over-produce to reap the benefits.
In 2008 near the top of the commodity bubble, Saudi Arabia increased production while OPEC was all about keeping the same quota.
Oil then crashed from ~$120 all the way down to $35.
Saudi Arabia reaped the benefits by producing oil when the was trading at $110/barrel against OPEC's quota wishes.
The same thing happened this year as well.
Oil went to $105-110, OPEC foolishly voted 6-5 against raising quotas last month(or was it earlier this month?).
Saudi Arabia and it's allies have since then voluntarily increased production above their quota limit. Oil is now $91/barrel, expect it to drop more as the economy hobbles along and with the news report today of Obama opening the strategic petroleum reserve.
The prudent thing to do for any country with oil would be to NOT be a part of OPEC.
Think of it as "privatize the profits, socialize the loses."
Another way to think of it is this:
Honda and Toyota workers earn more in benefits and compensation than their unionized counter parts at the UAW in Ford, GM, and Chrysler and they've been doing so for a while now(for at least 6-7 years if not longer).
And the employees also don't have to pay a certain percent of their salary to a union boss either. The employees at the Honda and Toyota plants have also rejected unionization.