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oil
When the first oil well was drilled in 1859 in
Titusville, Pennsylvania, oil, which is also called
petroleum, was used primarily for illumination.
The single most significant incentive to develop
the oil industry was the arrival of the motorcar,
run on gasoline, at the turn of the 20th cen-
tury. Today, oil is used in producing a variety
of products besides gasoline, including asphalt,
explosives, fertilizers, jet fuel, medicines, paints,
plastics, rubbers, waxes, and others. Because it is
a resource that is in high demand throughout the
world, oil plays a significant role in international
economics and politics.
The United states is the largest consumer of
oil, accounting for 25 percent of world oil con-
sumption in 2007. china is a distant second, at
about 8 percent, and Japan third, at 6.5 percent. As
of 2004, 57 percent of total proven oil reserves are
located in countries bordering the Persian Gulf,
with about one-fourth of the world’s proven oil
reserves in saUdi arabia alone. iraq, iran, Kuwait,
and the United Arab Emirates are the countries
with the second, third, fifth, and sixth largest
proven oil reserves, respectively. Other countries
with high proven oil reserves include libya and
Nigeria, which are the ninth and 10th largest.
At first, the oil resources of countries with
Muslim majority populations were under direct
or indirect outside control; for example, Iraq
and Kuwait were under British colonial control,
and Iran was under British and Russian influ-
ence. Saudi Arabia, while an independent king-
dom, conceded development and control of its
oil resources to American petroleum companies.
Therefore, oil resources in such countries were
directly controlled by a number of foreign com-
panies. In exchange for these concessions over
control of their oil production, the host countries
received a percentage of the revenue generated.
Initial attempts to seize control by the host coun-
tries were met with failure—in 1951 Muhammad
Musaddiq (d. 1967), the prime minister of Iran,
nationalized the British-owned oil company in
charge of Iran’s oil, but in 1953 a coup instigated
by the United States ousted Musaddiq and put a
pro-U.S. leader, mUhammad reza pahlavi, back
into power. He quickly offered oil concessions
to the West. However, with the formation of the
organization oF petroleUm eXporting coUntries
(OPEC) in 1960 and the widespread nationaliza-
tion of domestic oil resources in the 1970s, oil-
producing countries gained control over their oil
production and price setting.
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