Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/1973_world_oil_market_chronology> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 69 of
69
with 100 triples per page.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology abstract "January 11: U.S. Phase III price controls begin. Allows for voluntary instead of mandatory price control on all U.S. prices. This does not prevent a sharp rise in heating oil prices caused by a severe winter and shortage of product.January 17: President Richard Nixon suspends mandatory oil import quota on No. 2 heating oil through April 30.January 23: Shah of Iran announces that the 1954 operating agreement between a consortium of oil companies and Iran will not be renewed when it expires in 1979. The consortium was formed in 1954 as a means to settle a dispute between a new ministry in Iran and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC). The consortium included Standard Oil of New Jersey, Standard Oil of California, SOCONY-Vacuum, the Texas Company, Gulf, Royal Dutch-Shell, the Compagnie Francaise de Petroles, and the AIOC.February 28: Iraq and IPC reach an agreement on compensation for nationalization.March:Special Rule No. 1 reimposes mandatory (Phase II) price controls on the 23 largest oil companies. Smaller companies, representing 5 percent of the market, enjoy uncontrolled prices.March 16: Shah of Iran and Consortium members agree to nationalize all assets immediately in return for an assured 20-year supply of Iranian oil.March 16: OPEC discusses raising prices to offset decline of U.S. dollar value.April 1: OPEC increases posted prices by 5.7 percent.April 18: U.S. Government ends Mandatory Oil Import Program. Program, established in 1959 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, had limited imports of crude and product east of the Rocky Mountains to a percentage of domestic crude production.June 1: Eight OPEC countries raise posted prices by 11.9 percent.June 11: Libya nationalizes Bunker Hunt concession; Nigeria acquires 35 percent participation in Shell-BP concession.June 14: Nixon administration imposes 60-day economy-wide price freeze, superseding Special Rule No. 1 for oil companies.Aug :Libya nationalizes 51 percent of Occidental Petroleum concession and of the Oasis consortium.August 17: President Nixon's Cost of Living Council imposes two-tier price ceiling on crude petroleum sales: production of \"old\" oil (that produced at or below 1972 levels from existing wells) to be sold at March 1973 prices plus 35 cents; production of \"new\" oil (that produced above 1972 levels from existing wells and oil produced from new wells) to be sold at uncontrolled prices.September 1: Libya nationalizes 51 percent of nine other companies' concessions: Esso, Libya/Sirte, Mobil, Shell, Gelensberg, Texaco, SoCal, Libyan-American (ARCO), and Grace.September 5: Conference of less developed countries approves forming \"producers' associations,\" calls for withdrawal of Israeli forces from occupied Arab lands.September 15: OPEC supports price hikes and designates six Persian Gulf countries to negotiate collectively with companies over prices. Other members to negotiate individually.September:Kuwait rejects gradual participation increase plan, insists on immediate 60 percent participation.October 6: Beginning of fourth Arab-Israeli War.October 7: Iraq nationalizes Exxon and Mobil shares in Basrah Petroleum Company representing 23.75 percent equity in the company.October 8: OPEC meets with oil companies to discuss revision of 1971 Tehran agreement and oil prices. Negotiations fail.October 16: The Gulf Six (Iran, Iraq, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar) unilaterally raise the posted price of Saudi Light marker crude 17 percent from $3.12 to $3.65 per barrel and announce production cuts.October 17: OPEC oil ministers agree to use oil weapon in Arab-Israeli War, mandate cut in exports, and recommend embargo against unfriendly states.October 19: President Nixon requests Congress to appropriate $2.2billion in emergency aid for Israel. Libya, Saudi Arabia and other Arab states proclaim an embargo on oil exports to the United States.October 23: Arab oil embargo extended to the Netherlands.November 5: Arab producers announce 25 percent cut in production below September levels. Further cuts of five percent are threatened.November 18: Arab oil ministers cancel the scheduled 5 percent cut in production for EEC.November 23: Arab summit conference adopts open and secret resolutions on the use of the oil weapon. Embargo extended to Portugal, Rhodesia, and South Africa.November 27: President Nixon signs the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act (EPAA). Authorizes petroleum price, production, allocation and marketing controls.December 9: Arab oil ministers announce a further production cut of 5 percent for January for non-friendly countries.December 22: OPEC Gulf Six decides to raise the posted price of marker crude from $5.12 to $11.65 per barrel effective January 1, 1974.December 25: Arab oil ministers cancel January 5 percent production cut. Saudi Arabian oil minister promises 10 percent OPEC production rise.".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageID "4238006".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageLength "6364".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageOutDegree "73".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageRevisionID "698315271".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink 1972_world_oil_market_chronology.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink 1973_oil_crisis.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink 1974_world_oil_market_chronology.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink ARCO.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Abu_Dhabi.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Persian_Oil_Company.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Arab–Israeli_conflict.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink BP.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Basrah_Petroleum_Company.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Category:1973_in_economics.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Category:1973_in_international_relations.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Category:Oil_market_timelines.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Chevron_Corporation.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Chronology_of_world_oil_market_events.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Dwight_D._Eisenhower.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Emergency_Petroleum_Allocation_Act.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Esso.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Exxon.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink ExxonMobil.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Gelensberg.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Gulf_Oil.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Iran.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Iraq.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Iraq_Petroleum_Company.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Israel_Defense_Forces.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Kuwait.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Libya.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Mandatory_Oil_Import_Quota_Program.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Mobil.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Netherlands.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Nigeria.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink OPEC.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Occidental_Petroleum.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Portugal.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Qatar.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Rhodesia.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Nixon.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Rocky_Mountains.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Dutch_Shell.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Saudi_Arabia.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Shah.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink South_Africa.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Southern_California.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Texaco.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink Total_S.A..
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLinkText "1973 world oil market chronology".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLinkText "1973".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageWikiLinkText "Arab oil embargo between October 19, 1973 and March 17, 1974".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:S-end.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:S-start.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:See.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Spoken_Wikipedia.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology subject Category:1973_in_economics.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology subject Category:1973_in_international_relations.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology subject Category:Oil_market_timelines.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology type Market.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology comment "January 11: U.S. Phase III price controls begin. Allows for voluntary instead of mandatory price control on all U.S. prices. This does not prevent a sharp rise in heating oil prices caused by a severe winter and shortage of product.January 17: President Richard Nixon suspends mandatory oil import quota on No.".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology label "1973 world oil market chronology".
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology sameAs Q4575850.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology sameAs Q4575850.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology wasDerivedFrom 1973_world_oil_market_chronology?oldid=698315271.
- 1973_world_oil_market_chronology isPrimaryTopicOf 1973_world_oil_market_chronology.