Publication Detail
UCD-ITS-RP-13-43 Journal Article Sustainable Transportation Energy Pathways (STEPS) Available online at: http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/10/16/the_end_of_opec_america_energy_oil |
Suggested Citation:
Jaffe, Amy Myers and Edward L. Morse (2013) The End of OPEC. Foreign Policy 10/16/2013
Forty years have passed since the Arab oil embargo went into effect on Oct. 16, 1973, triggering a period of incredible change and turmoil. After the United States provided support to Israel during the Yom Kippur War, a cartel of developing-world countries (via the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC) banned the sale of their oil to Israel's allies and thereby set in motion geopolitical circumstances that eventually allowed them to wrest control over global oil production and pricing from the giant international oil companies -- ushering in an era of significantly higher oil prices. The event was hailed at the time as the first major victory of "Third World" powers to bring the West to its knees. Designed in part to bring Arab populations their due after decades of colonialism, the embargo opened the floodgates for an unprecedented transfer of wealth out of America and Europe to the Middle East. Overnight, the largest segment of the global economy, the oil market, became politicized as never before in history.