Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries

 
Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia: Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries

Organization formed to promote cooperation among Arab oil-producing states.

The Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC) is a regional organization, established in 1968 by Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Kuwait, and modeled after the older Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The other members are Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Qatar, Syria, and the United Arab Emirates. Egypt was suspended between 1979 and 1987. Tunisia withdrew in 1986. The goals of OAPEC are to promote the oil interests of member countries, to enhance cooperation among them in production, marketing, and associated industries. It aims also to carry out joint ventures to diversify their economies, to participate in stabilizing the oil market, and to provide suitable circumstances for capital and experience to be invested in the member countries. Although OAPEC was not intended as a political instrument, one of the critical decisions taken by member states in 1973, at its Kuwait headquarters, was the oil embargo following the Arab-Israel War. Since that time, OAPEC oil and gas world share has been steady at about 25 percent, with significant increases mainly by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to compensate for the two-thirds reduction of Iraq's share since 1990. OAPEC proven oil reserves have not increased. By 2010 OAPEC oil production may increase by 50 percent to 30 million barrels per day, to meet about one-third of world needs. OAPEC capacity utilization, already high at 85 percent, may increase to above 90 percent. As of 2003, OAPEC share of worldwide natural gas production stood at 35 percent; it may double by 2010.

Bibliography

"Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries." Available from http://www.oapecorg.org.

EMILE A. NAKHLEH
UPDATED BY KARIM HAMDY

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries
Top

The Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries or OAPEC is a multi-governmental organization headquartered in Kuwait which coordinates energy policies in Arab nations, and whose main stated purpose is developmental.

Contents

History

Map of OAPEC Members and their status

On 9 January 1968 three of the (then) most conservative Arab oil states Kuwait, Libya and Saudi Arabia agreed in Beirut to found OAPEC, aiming to separate oil production and sale from politics in the wake of the halfhearted 1967 oil embargo related to the Six Day War. Such use of the oil weapon in the struggle against Israel had been regularly proposed at Arab Petroleum Congresses, but it took this war for it to happen. However, Saudi Arabia's oil production was up 9% for that year, and the main embargo lasted only ten days and was completely ended by the Khartoum Conference.

OAPEC was originally intended to be a conservative Arab political organization which by its restriction in membership to countries whose main export was oil would exclude governments seen as radical, like Egypt and Algeria, and had the additional rule that the three founders' approval was necessary for new members to join. The original aim was to control the oil weapon and prevent its use from being swayed by popular emotion. Iraq initially declined to join, preferring to work under the umbrella of the Arab League, as it considered OAPEC too conservative.[1] Equally, the three founders considered Iraq too radical and did not want it as a member.[2] However, by early 1972, the criterion for admission changed to oil being an important, rather than principal source of revenue, Algeria, Iraq, Syria and Egypt had been admitted, and the organization became much more activist, contrary to the original intention.

1973 was a turning point for the organization. In October that year, the forces of Egypt and Syria attempted to overwhelm the state of Israel in what would be known as the Yom Kippur War. Ten days after the war started, on October 16, 1973, Kuwait hosted separate meetings of both OAPEC and the Persian Gulf members of OPEC (including Iran). OAPEC resolved to cut oil production 5% monthly "until the Israeli forces are completely evacuated from all the Arab territories occupied in the June 1967 war..." The embargo would last for some five months before it was lifted in March 1974 after negotiations at the Washington Oil Summit. Its aftereffects, though, would linger throughout the rest of the decade. For the oil exporting countries, the embargo was the first sign of their ability to leverage their production for political gains. A number of them would now use this sense of control to renegotiate the contracts they had made with the companies that had discovered and exploited their resources. Ironically, though, the vastly increased revenues would prove addictive, and a unified OAPEC oil embargo was never again possible.

In 1979, Egypt was expelled from OAPEC for signing the Camp David Accords, although it was readmitted a decade later.

OAPEC is currently regarded as a regional specialized international organization and focuses on organizing cooperation on oil development, collective projects and regional integration.

Members

See also

External links

Footnotes

References

  • J.B. Kelly (1980). Arabia, the Gulf and the West. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-00416-4. 

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries" Read more