OPEC: Difference between revisions
OPEC RULES |
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|leader_title1 = [[List of Secretaries General of OPEC|Secretary General]] |
|leader_title1 = [[List of Secretaries General of OPEC|Secretary General]] |
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|leader_name1 = [[Abdallah Salem el-Badri]]<br/><small>(since January 1, 2007)</small> |
|leader_name1 = [[Abdallah Salem el-Badri]]<br/><small>(since January 1, 2007)</small> |
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|leader_title2 = [[List of Secretaries General of OPEC|Secretary General-elect]] |
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|leader_name2 = [[Masoud Mir Kazemi]]<br/><small>(January 1, 2011)</small> |
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|established_event1 = Statute |
|established_event1 = Statute |
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|established_date1 = September 10–14, 1960<br/>in effect January 1961 |
|established_date1 = September 10–14, 1960<br/>in effect January 1961 |
Revision as of 13:22, 22 October 2010
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC RULES | |
---|---|
Headquarters | Vienna, Austria |
Official languages | English[1] |
Type | Trade bloc |
Member states | |
Leaders | |
Abdallah Salem el-Badri (since January 1, 2007) | |
Masoud Mir Kazemi (January 1, 2011) | |
Establishment | |
• Statute | September 10–14, 1960 in effect January 1961 |
Area | |
• Total | 11,854,977 km2 (4,577,232 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Estimate | 372,368,429 |
• Density | 31.16/km2 (80.7/sq mi) |
Currency | Indexed as USD-per-barrel |
Website http://www.opec.org/ |
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC, Template:Pron-en OH-pek) is a cartel of twelve countries made up of Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela. OPEC has maintained its headquarters in Vienna since 1965,[2] and hosts regular meetings among the oil ministers of its Member Countries. Indonesia withdrew in 2008 after it became a net importer of oil, but stated it would likely return if it became a net exporter in the world again.[3]
According to its statutes, one of the principal goals is the determination of the best means for safeguarding the cartel's interests, individually and collectively. It also pursues ways and means of ensuring the stabilization of prices in international oil markets with a view to eliminating harmful and unnecessary fluctuations; giving due regard at all times to the interests of the producing nations and to the necessity of securing a steady income to the producing countries; an efficient and regular supply of petroleum to consuming nations, and a fair return on their capital to those investing in the petroleum industry.[4]
OPEC's influence on the market has been widely criticized, since it became effective in determining production and prices. Arab members of OPEC alarmed the developed world when they used the “oil weapon” during the Yom Kippur War by implementing oil embargoes and initiating the 1973 oil crisis. Although largely political explanations for the timing and extent of the OPEC price increases are also valid, from OPEC’s point of view, these changes were triggered largely by previous unilateral changes in the world financial system and the ensuing period of high inflation in both the developed and developing world. This explanation encompasses OPEC actions both before and after the outbreak of hostilities in October 1973, and concludes that “OPEC countries were only “staying even” by dramatically raising the dollar price of oil.”[5]
OPEC's ability to control the price of oil has diminished somewhat since then, due to the subsequent discovery and development of large oil reserves in Alaska, the North Sea, Canada, the Gulf of Mexico, the opening up of Russia, and market modernization. OPEC nations still account for two-thirds of the world's oil reserves, and, as of April 2009, 33.3% of the world's oil production, affording them considerable control over the global market. The next largest group of producers, members of the OECD and the Post-Soviet states produced only 23.8% and 14.8%, respectively, of the world's total oil production.[6] As early as 2003, concerns that OPEC members had little excess pumping capacity sparked speculation that their influence on crude oil prices would begin to slip.[7][8]
History
Venezuela and Iran were the first countries to move towards the establishment of OPEC in the 1960s by approaching Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia in 1949, suggesting that they exchange views and explore avenues for regular and closer communication among petroleum-producing nations. [citation needed] The founder members are Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. Later members include Algeria, Ecuador, Gabon, Indonesia, Libya, Qatar, Nigeria, and the United Arab Emirates.
In 10–14 September 1960, at the initiative of the Venezuelan Energy and Mines minister Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonzo and the Saudi Arabian Energy and Mines minister Abdullah al-Tariki, the governments of Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela met in Baghdad to discuss ways to increase the price of the crude oil produced by their respective countries.[citation needed] OPEC was founded in Baghdad, triggered by a 1960 law instituted by American President Dwight Eisenhower that forced quotas on Venezuelan and Persian Gulf oil imports in favor of the Canadian and Mexican oil industries.[citation needed] Eisenhower cited national security, land access to energy supplies, at times of war.[citation needed] When this led to falling prices for oil in these regions, Venezuela's president Romulo Betancourt reacted by seeking an alliance with oil producing Arab nations as a preemptive strategy to maintain the continued autonomy and profitability of Venezuela's oil resources. [citation needed] This is being tought by Jasper County Middle School students in monticello georgia
As a result, OPEC was founded to unify and coordinate members' petroleum policies. Original OPEC members include Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. Between 1960 and 1975, the organization expanded to include Qatar (1961), Indonesia (1962), Libya (1962), the United Arab Emirates (1967), Algeria (1969), and Nigeria (1971). Ecuador and Gabon were early members of OPEC, but Ecuador withdrew on December 31, 1992[9] because it was unwilling or unable to pay a $2 million membership fee and felt that it needed to produce more oil than it as allowed to under the OPEC quota,[10] although it rejoined in October 2007. Similar concerns prompted Gabon to suspend membership in January 1995.[11] Angola joined on the first day of 2007. Norway and Russia have attended OPEC meetings as observers. Indicating that OPEC is not averse to further expansion, Mohammed Barkindo, OPEC's Secretary General, recently asked Sudan to join.[12] Iraq remains a member of OPEC, but Iraqi production has not been a part of any OPEC quota agreements since March 1998.
In May 2008, Indonesia announced that it would leave OPEC when its membership expired at the end of that year, having become a net importer of oil and being unable to meet its production quota.[13] A statement released by OPEC on 10 September 2008 confirmed Indonesia's withdrawal, noting that it "regretfully accepted the wish of Indonesia to suspend its full Membership in the Organization and recorded its hope that the Country would be in a position to rejoin the Organization in the not too distant future." [14]
1973 oil embargo
The persistence of the Arab-Israeli conflict finally triggered a response that transformed OPEC into a formidable political force. After the Six Day War of 1967, the Arab members of OPEC formed a separate, overlapping group, the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries, for the purpose of centering policy and exerting pressure on the West over its support of Israel. Egypt and Syria, though not major oil-exporting countries, joined the latter grouping to help articulate its objectives. Later, the Yom Kippur War of 1973 galvanized Arab opinion. Furious at the emergency re-supply effort that had enabled Israel to withstand Egyptian and Syrian forces, the Arab world imposed the 1973 oil embargo against the United States and Western Europe, while non-Arab OPEC members did not.[citation needed]
The 1980s oil gluts
After 1980, oil prices began a six-year decline that culminated with a 46 percent price drop in 1986. This was due to reduced demand and over-production that produced a glut on the world market. Around this period, Iraq also increased its oil production to help pay for the Iran-Iraq War. Overall OPEC lost its unity and thus its net oil export revenues fell in the 1980s.[citation needed]
Responding to war and low prices
Leading up to the 1990-91 Gulf War, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein advocated that OPEC push world oil prices up, thereby helping Iraq, and other member states, service debts. But the division of OPEC countries occasioned by the Iraq-Iran War and the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait marked a low point in the cohesion of OPEC. Once supply disruption fears that accompanied these conflicts dissipated, oil prices began to slide dramatically.
After oil prices slumped at around $15 a barrel in the late 1990s, concerted diplomacy, sometimes attributed to Venezuela’s president Hugo Chávez, achieved a coordinated scaling back of oil production beginning in 1998. In 2000, Chávez hosted the first summit of heads of state of OPEC in 25 years. The next year, however, the September 11, 2001 attacks against the United States, the following invasion of Afghanistan, and 2003 invasion of Iraq and subsequent occupation prompted a surge in oil prices to levels far higher than those targeted by OPEC during the preceding period. Indonesia withdrew from OPEC to protect its oil supply interests.
On November 19, 2007, global oil prices reacted strongly as OPEC members spoke openly about potentially converting their cash reserves to the euro and away from the US dollar.[16]
Production disputes
The economic needs of the OPEC member states often affects the internal politics behind OPEC production quotas. Various members have pushed for reductions in production quotas to increase the price of oil and thus their own revenues.[17] These demands conflict with Saudi Arabia's stated long-term strategy of being a partner with the world's economic powers to ensure a steady flow of oil that would support economic expansion.[18] Part of the basis for this policy is the Saudi concern that expensive oil or oil of uncertain supply will drive developed nations to conserve and develop alternative fuels. To this point, former Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Yamani famously said in 1973: "The stone age didn't end because we ran out of stones."[19]
One such production dispute occurred on September 10, 2008, when the Saudis reportedly walked out of OPEC negotiating session where the cartel voted to reduce production. Although Saudi Arabian OPEC delegates officially endorsed the new quotas, they stated anonymously that they would not observe them. The New York Times quoted one such anonymous OPEC delegate as saying “Saudi Arabia will meet the market’s demand. We will see what the market requires and we will not leave a customer without oil. The policy has not changed.”[20]
Membership
Current members
OPEC has twelve member countries: six in the Middle East, four in Africa, and two in South America.
Country | Region | Joined OPEC[21] | Population (July 2008)[22] |
Area (km²)[23] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Algeria | Africa | 1969 | 33,779,668 | 2,381,740 |
Angola | Africa | 2007 | 12,531,357 | 1,246,700 |
Ecuador | South America | 2007[A 1] | 13,927,650 | 283,560 |
Iran | Middle East | 1960[A 2] | 75,875,224 | 1,648,000 |
Iraq | Middle East | 1960[A 2] | 28,221,180 | 437,072 |
Kuwait | Middle East | 1960[A 2] | 2,596,799 | 17,820 |
Libya | Africa | 1962 | 6,173,579 | 1,759,540 |
Nigeria | Africa | 1971 | 158,259,000 | 923,768 |
Qatar | Middle East | 1961 | 824,789 | 11,437 |
Saudi Arabia | Middle East | 1960[A 2] | 28,146,656 | 2,149,690 |
United Arab Emirates | Middle East | 1967 | 4,621,399 | 83,600 |
Venezuela | South America | 1960[A 2] | 26,414,816 | 912,050 |
Total | 369,368,429 | 11,854,977 km² |
Former members
Country | Region | Joined OPEC | Left OPEC |
---|---|---|---|
Gabon | Africa | 1975 | 1994 |
Indonesia | East Asia | 1962 | 2008 |
The United States was a de facto member during its formal occupation of Iraq via the Coalition Provisional Authority.[24][25]
Economics
OPEC is a swing producer[26] and its decisions have had considerable influence on international oil prices. For example, in the 1973 energy crisis OPEC refused to ship oil to western countries that had supported Israel in the Yom Kippur War or 6 Day War, which Israel had fought against Egypt and Syria. This refusal caused a fourfold increase in the price of oil, which lasted five months, starting on October 17, 1973, and ending on March 18, 1974. OPEC nations then agreed, on January 7, 1975, to raise crude oil prices by 10%. At that time, OPEC nations — including many who had recently nationalized their oil industries — joined the call for a new international economic order to be initiated by coalitions of primary producers. Concluding the First OPEC Summit in Algiers they called for stable and just commodity prices, an international food and agriculture program, technology transfer from North to South, and the democratization of the economic system. [citation needed] Overall, the evidence suggests that OPEC did act as a cartel, when it adopted output rationing in order to maintain price.[27]
Since currently worldwide oil sales are denominated in U.S. dollars, changes in the value of the dollar against other world currencies affect OPEC's decisions on how much oil to produce. For example, when the dollar falls relative to the other currencies, OPEC-member states receive smaller revenues in other currencies for their oil, causing substantial cuts in their purchasing power. After the introduction of the euro, pre-invasion Iraq decided it wanted to be paid for its oil in euros instead of US dollars causing OPEC to consider changing its oil exchange currency to euros, although after Iraq's invasion, the interim government reversed this policy, and the subsequent Iraq governments stuck to the US dollar.[28] Member states Iran[29] and Venezuela[30] have undergone similar shifts from the dollar to the Euro.
Quotas circa 2005
Country | Quota (7/1/05) | Production (1/07) | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
Algeria | 894 | 1,360 | 1,430 |
Angola | 1,900 | 1,700 | 1,700 |
Ecuador | 520 | 500 | 500 |
Iran | 4,110 | 3,700 | 3,750 |
Iraq | 1,481 | ||
Kuwait | 2,247 | 2,500 | 2,600 |
Libya | 1,500 | 1,650 | 1,700 |
Nigeria | 2,306 | 2,250 | 2,250 |
Qatar | 726 | 810 | 850 |
Saudi Arabia | 10,099 | 8,800 | 10,500 |
United Arab Emirates | 2,444 | 2,500 | 2,600 |
Venezuela | 3,225 | 2,340 | 2,450 |
Total | 29,971 | 29,591 | 30,330 |
Petroleum industry commentators and further reading
- Colin Campbell (geologist)
- Kenneth S. Deffeyes
- Daniel Yergin, author of The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power (1993)
References
- ^ Chapter I, Article 6 of The Statute of the organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (as amended)
- ^ A brief history of OPEC
- ^ "OPEC says Indonesia has suspended cartel membership". Forbes.com. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
- ^ Chapter I, Article 2 of The Statute of the organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (as amended)
- ^ Hammes, David and Wills, Douglas. “Black Gold: The End of Bretton Woods and the Oil-Price Shocks of the 1970s,” The Independent Review, v. IX, n. 4, Spring 2005. pp. 501-511.[1]
- ^ BP plc. "British Petroleum table of world oil production". Retrieved June 18, 2007.
- ^ Al Jazeera English - Archive - Is Opec Losing Control Over Oil Price?
- ^ BW Online | January 20, 2003 | Is OPEC About to Lose Control of the Spigot?
- ^ OPEC, by Benjamin Zycher: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics: Library of Economics and Liberty
- ^ "Ecuador Set to Leave OPEC". The New York Times. September 18, 1992. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
- ^ "Gabon Plans To Quit OPEC - NYTimes.com". New York Times. 1995-01-09. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
- ^ Angola, Sudan to ask for OPEC membership Houston Chronicle
- ^ Indonesia to withdraw from Opec
- ^ [2][dead link]
- ^ http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/OPEC_Revenues/OPEC.html
- ^ [3][dead link]
- ^ Nick A. Owen, Oliver R. Inderwildi, David A. King (2010). "The status of conventional world oil reserves—Hype or cause for concern?". Energy Policy. doi:10.1016/j.enpol.2010.02.026.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Speech by Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Ali Al-Naimi: Saudi oil policy: stability with strength
- ^ Washington diary: Oil addiction
- ^ Saudis Vow to Ignore OPEC Decision to Cut Production
- ^ "Who are OPEC Member Countries?". Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
{{cite web}}
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(help) [dead link] - ^ "Field Listing - Population". CIA World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
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(help) - ^ "Field Listing - Area". CIA World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
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(help) - ^ Noah, Timothy (2007-07-10). "Go NOPEC! Congress takes on the biggest, baddest cartel of all". Slate. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
- ^ Noah, Timothy (2003-09-18). "Is Bremer a Price Fixer? Letting Iraq's oil minister attend an OPEC meeting may violate the Sherman Antitrust Act". Slate.
- ^ Iraq emerges as new ‘swing producer’ in Opec
- ^ http://fmwww.bc.edu/EC-P/WP318.pdf
- ^ Iraq: Baghdad Moves To Euro
- ^ Iran's euro-denominated oil bourse to open in March: US Dollar Crisis on the Horizon
- ^ Bloomberg.com: Latin America
- ^ Quotas as reported by the United States Department of Energy
External links
- OPEC official site
- Concise Encyclopedia of Economics: OPEC
- OPEC Timeline by Nicolas Sarkis, from Le Monde diplomatique, May 2006
- The OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID) official site
Template:Link FA BY THE WAY OPEC RULES
- OPEC
- 1960 establishments
- Cartels
- Energy economics
- Foreign relations of Algeria
- Foreign relations of Angola
- Foreign relations of Ecuador
- Foreign relations of Iraq
- Foreign relations of Iran
- Foreign relations of Kuwait
- Foreign relations of Saudi Arabia
- Foreign relations of Libya
- Foreign relations of Nigeria
- Foreign relations of Qatar
- Foreign relations of Venezuela
- Foreign relations of the United Arab Emirates
- Foreign relations of Indonesia
- Foreign relations of Gabon
- History of the petroleum industry
- International energy organizations
- International trade
- Petroleum