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Oil isn't just petrol for your car.
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It's an ingredient in a lot of what we use, from the plastic glove that keeps your hand clean
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to the tires that keep you on the road.
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Which means the cost of these products can be affected by the fluctuating price of oil.
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That price is largely decided by supply and demand
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and the collective actions of an organization that provides 40% of the world's oil - OPEC.
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OPEC stands for the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
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It was formed in 1960 by founding members Iraq, Kuwait, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
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The group was created to monitor the stability and prices of the petroleum market,
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which was previously determined by U.S. dominated multinational oil companies.
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Currently OPEC member countries also include Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea,
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Gabon, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
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Today these oil producing member countries supply over 40% of the world's crude oil production.
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And together they control more than 80% of the world's proven crude oil reserves.
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OPEC's oil and energy ministers meet twice a year in Vienna, Austria where they collectively
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decide whether to raise or lower oil output in order to maintain a stable market.
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Critics argue that it's a way for them to maintain the price they want.
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But does OPEC actually control world oil?
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The biggest consumers of oil are the U.S. and China.
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It was China's rapid development in the early 2000s coupled with a lack of growth
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in the production of oil which sent the price of oil shooting up.
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In turn, those high prices made it profitable for non-OPEC countries like the U.S. and Canada
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to go after and discover harder to extract oil.
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Because they weren't bound by the cartel's decisions, these countries have grown their
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levels of supply, which meant OPEC's market influence began to decline.
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A rise in supply and a reduced demand for oil in Europe and Asia led to the price of oil crashing.
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This caused political problems in some OPEC countries like Venezuela,
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where oil is the chief driver of the economy.
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It has the largest proven oil reserves in the world but also the highest inflation rate on the planet.
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But for most consumers, the drop in oil price meant cheaper fuel and lower energy costs.
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Since 2016 however, oil prices have been steadily rising.
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Later that year the Saudi-led OPEC members agreed to the first production cut since 2008,
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a reduction of around one million barrels a day.
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Crucially, Russia and 10 other non-members also agreed to pump less oil.
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OPEC and its allies agreed to extend the cuts through to the end of 2018.
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But in the U.S. there's a shale oil boom.
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Production levels recently hit a record high and are predicted to surpass both Saudi Arabia and Russia.
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But even with higher output levels, the U.S. still imports roughly 300 million barrels of oil a month.
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For the renewable energy industry, however, keeping oil supply high and steady makes it
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an attractive alternative and might be one of the most powerful tools to grow the sector.
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But the price of oil remains volatile.
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Geopolitical factors such as the Iran nuclear deal and President Trump threatening OPEC
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could see the prices go up or down, but in the end the forces of supply and demand
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will ultimately determine the price.
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With more than 80% of the world's proven oil reserves, OPEC in the 21st century continues
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to be relevant and their decisions can still affect the price of oil, if just temporarily.
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But as new sources of energy gradually replace hydrocarbons, the oil industry faces a race against time.
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In the words of an ex-Saudi oil minister: “The Stone Age did not end for lack of stone,
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and the Oil Age will end long before the world runs out of oil.”