OPEC, in full Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Multinational organization established in 1960 to coordinate the petroleum production and export policies of its members. Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela are the founding members. They were joined by Qatar (1961, withdrew 2019), Indonesia (1962, suspended membership 2009, rejoined 2016, suspended membership 2016), Libya (1962), Abu Dhabi (1967; membership transferred to the United Arab Emirates, 1974), Algeria (1967), Nigeria (1971), Angola (2007, announced withdrawal 2023), Ecuador (1973, suspended membership 1992, rejoined 2007, withdrew 2020), Gabon (1975, withdrew 1995, rejoined 2016), Equatorial Guinea (2017), and the Republic of the Congo (2018). Policy decisions are taken by consensus at its Vienna headquarters. In 1973 OPEC began a series of oil price increases in retaliation for Western support of Israel in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, and OPEC members’ income greatly increased as a result. Internal dissent, the development of alternative energy sources in the West, and Western exploitation of oil sources in non-OPEC countries subsequently combined to reduce the organization’s influence. OPEC countries supply about two-fifths of the world’s oil consumption and possess about two-thirds of the world’s proven oil reserves.
OPEC Article
OPEC summary
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