'73-74 Was a Dark, Fateful Winter

The Embargo — 30 Years Ago

Thirty winters ago, the world was jolted to find how important oil is in their lives.

It was 153 days of turmoil and uncertainty in the dark winter of 1973-74 that changed the world.

It was the time of "The Embargo."

Here's the scene:

In 1973 oil prices had risen to a whopping $3 a barrel, up from an average of $2.48 the year before. From 1961-70, the average price was $1.80 per barrel.

The United States was importing about 35 percent of its energy needs, and U.S. petroleum reserves were depleting due to years of nonchalance toward a taken-for-granted industry providing petroleum at bubble gum prices.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), a cartel formed in the 1960s to present a common front to negotiate its interests with the giant oil companies, was little known outside the oil industry. As oil demand increased in the industrial world faster than production over the decade, OPEC was growing stronger, working more closely together and became more determined to increase its share of the profits.

In 1973 the post-Vietnam War Western world was in the midst of an inflationary spiral economy. Consumer prices were rising at an over-8 percent clip in the United States and double-digits in some other countries.

In an attempt to manage the economy, U.S. President Richard Nixon extended price controls to oil in March 1973 due to "rising oil costs."

Nixon had his own troubles, too, with the investigation of the Watergate break-in gathering steam.

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Thirty winters ago, the world was jolted to find how important oil is in their lives.

It was 153 days of turmoil and uncertainty in the dark winter of 1973-74 that changed the world.

It was the time of "The Embargo."

Here's the scene:

In 1973 oil prices had risen to a whopping $3 a barrel, up from an average of $2.48 the year before. From 1961-70, the average price was $1.80 per barrel.

The United States was importing about 35 percent of its energy needs, and U.S. petroleum reserves were depleting due to years of nonchalance toward a taken-for-granted industry providing petroleum at bubble gum prices.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), a cartel formed in the 1960s to present a common front to negotiate its interests with the giant oil companies, was little known outside the oil industry. As oil demand increased in the industrial world faster than production over the decade, OPEC was growing stronger, working more closely together and became more determined to increase its share of the profits.

In 1973 the post-Vietnam War Western world was in the midst of an inflationary spiral economy. Consumer prices were rising at an over-8 percent clip in the United States and double-digits in some other countries.

In an attempt to manage the economy, U.S. President Richard Nixon extended price controls to oil in March 1973 due to "rising oil costs."

Nixon had his own troubles, too, with the investigation of the Watergate break-in gathering steam.

It was chaotic.

Then all hell broke loose.

The 'Oil' Weapon

On October 6, 1973, the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur, Egyptian forces attacked Israel in a surprise offensive from across the Suez Canal, while Syrian troops attacked the Golan Heights.

A counterattack with help in the form of supplies from the United States and the Netherlands quickly reversed the Arab gains. That enraged some of the members of OPEC.

But more was to come.

On October 17 winter was embracing the Northern Hemisphere. That day, the "oil weapon" card was played.

OPEC imposed an oil embargo on the United States and the Netherlands while increasing prices by 70 percent to America's western Europe allies.

The embargo news broke three days later — the same day as the "Saturday Night Massacre," where in a matter of hours two successive U.S. attorneys general resigned before the third successor, Robert Bork, dismissed Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox on Nixon's demand.

The political and economic shock waves were immediate. The price of oil doubled overnight — and rose to $11.65 a barrel in January 1974.

Unfair Black Eye

The public was not happy.

Americans, along with their European brethren, switched to full-bitch mode as petrol prices began to rise almost immediately from as low as 30 cents per gallon to $1.20 or more at the height of the crisis. The hikes exacerbated the already difficult inflation problem.

Areas with little storage and transportation infrastructure were especially hard-hit, and conspiracy theories abounded. One of the favorites was that major oil importers were supposedly secretly raking in the profits, and that tankers loaded with oil were waiting at sea for the prices to rise before docking.

All of these theories were proved untrue. But it was still another unfair black eye for the industry.

A Yankelovich poll found that the public was "fearful that the country had run out of energy," and that the oil companies were using the gasoline shortage as an excuse for unfairly raising prices. After all, in the acrimonious atmosphere, who is going to believe a rational — usually statistical — explanation from the oil industry?

A line of motorists waiting to top off their tanks was the most vivid picture of the time. None were smiling.

In November, Nixon made a major address to a fearful nation. He proposed, among other things, an extension of daylight-saving time, a ban on the sale of petrol on Sundays, 55 mile-per-hour speed limits, carpooling and turning down thermostats.

As a gesture, the lights of the White House Christmas tree were dark that season. Petrol rationing stamps were printed — just in case.

Nixon also said, "Let us set as our national goal in the spirit of Apollo, with the determination of the Manhattan Project, that by the end of this decade we will have developed the potential to meet our own energy need without depending on any foreign energy source."

Well, we know how that one turned out.

Impact

Amid the rising frustration, animosity and near panic, the biggest legislative initiative came on Nov. 13, when Congress approved the proposed Trans-Alaskan oil pipeline, designed to supply two million barrels a day from Prudhoe Bay, discovered in 1968 but frozen idle due to environmental concerns.

The much-higher prices for crude stimulated development activity in every country that had any production potential. Also, petroleum geologists became very much in demand and universities ramped up their programs and a new generation of explorers entered the business.

It took years, but ultimately old fields were expanded and new ones discovered and brought online. The global supply of crude was dramatically increased.

As spring approached in the Northern Hemisphere, OPEC, with point proved, officially ended the embargo on March 18, 1974.

The embargo was a harrowing 153 days of an economic sea change of thinking that affected everyone.

At the end of 1974, the Dow was at 577, down from 962 in November 1973 — a 40 percent drop.

And in 1974 some of the other happenings in the changing zeitgeist included:

  • Nixon resigned — and was shortly thereafter pardoned.
  • Patty Hearst was kidnapped.
  • Streaking — running naked for a few moments in a public place — became a fad.
  • Muhammad Ali knocked out George Foreman to regain his heavyweight boxing title.
  • "The Towering Inferno" and "Blazing Saddles" were the top grossing movies.
  • The number one song of 1974 was Barbara Streisand's "The Way We Were."

Well, after The Embargo, we weren't going to be the way we were again.

And everyone knew it.

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