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1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN OBJECTIVE INTO A QUESTION) 3. Warm-up (ANSWER) 1. Give an example of a commercial that could not be shown in a traditional Islamic society. 2. Give an example of how you used oil indirectly today (you can not say anything related to transportation).

1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

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Page 1: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

1. Objective (READ)

SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries

2. Question of the Day. (TURN OBJECTIVE INTO A QUESTION)

3. Warm-up (ANSWER)

1. Give an example of a commercial that could not be shown in a traditional Islamic society.

2. Give an example of how you used oil indirectly today (you can not say anything related to transportation).

Page 2: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN
Page 3: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Clip Questions:

1. Why is oil so valuable?

2. Is the US economy dependant on oil? Explain why or why not.

Page 4: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

As we learn about Oil in Southwest Asia, students will complete a concept

web.

Oil in Southwest Asia

Why is oil/petroleum a strategic commodity?

Directions:

1. Copy this web.

2. Get a laptop and a group.

3. Go to S:) Student Read Only – Orso Folder – SW Asia Folder - Open the file called “Oil – 11”.

Page 5: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

What is a strategic commodity?• Open your textbook

to page 529 for the definition to strategic commodity.

• Turn to page 517 and read Control of Oil Fields

1. Find an example to match the definition of strategic commodity.

2. Add the definition and example to your concept map. Fighting in the Persian Gulf War – Kuwait,

notice the burning oil fields in the background.

Page 6: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Add both written and visual information to your concept map.

Oil in Southwest AsiaWhy is oil economicallyimportant?

Why is oil/petroleum astrategic commodity?

A resource so important,people will go to war

to get a steady supply of it.Ex. – Persian Gulf War,

Kuwait

Page 7: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Top Oil Producing Countries – Oil Reserves (2007)

Country Reserves Production Reserve life

(Billion barrels) (Million barrels/ day)

(years)

Saudi Arabia 260 8.8 81

Canada 179 2.7 182

Iran 136 3.7 101

Iraq 115 2.2 143

Kuwait 99 2.5 108

United Arab Emirates

97 2.5 107

Page 9: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Charts Analysis• Answer the questions below based on the two

charts from the previous slide. • Put them on your web or on the back of that

page.

1. Who produces the most oil? 2. Who consumes the most oil? 3. What is the economic relationship between oil

consuming countries and oil producing countries?

4. How will this impact both groups positively and negatively?

Page 10: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Government Document AnalysisDirections: • Click on the link in the headline, use it to answer the

questions. • Put them on your Oil Clip question page. • Title it Government Document Analysis

Part 1 (p. 14-16): • 1) Explain how the US and Saudi Arabia are linked

economically? • 2) Describe specifically how each side helps the other one.

Part 2 (p. 18-19)• 3) What is the political impact of linking the US and Saudi

Arabia economically? • 4) Explain how the two nations cooperate politically as a result

of their economic situation.

Page 11: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Why is oil important economically in Southwest Asia?

• On page 505 read Oil Dominates the Economy and page 530 Using Oil Wealth to Diversify to answer the question in the headline.

• Think about who needs oil and who has the oil.

• Add your answer to your web.

Page 12: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Add both written and visual information to your concept map.

Oil in Southwest AsiaWhy is oil economicallyimportant?

Global demand foroil by consumers

Oil-producing nations use money

to develop infrastructure, agriculture, and education.

Why is oil/petroleum astrategic commodity?

A resource so important,people will go to war

to get a steady supply of it.Ex. – Persian Gulf War,

Kuwait

Page 13: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Add both written and visual information to your concept map.

Oil in Southwest AsiaWhy is oil economicallyimportant?

Global demand foroil by consumers

Why is oil/petroleum astrategic commodity?

A resource so important,people will go to war

to get a steady supply of it.Ex. – Persian Gulf War,

Kuwait

Who is OPEC andwhat do they do?

Oil-producing nations use money

to develop infrastructure, agriculture, and education.

Page 14: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Who is OPEC?

Task

1. Use the following slides to answer the questions below add them to your web.

A. What is OPEC?

B. What does OPEC do?

C. Who is in OPEC?

Page 15: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

OPEC Info - 1• OPEC after 1975. The interests of OPEC (the Organization of

Petroleum Exporting Countries) and the consumer countries (those who buy a lot of oil) were the same: both wished to see large amounts of oil flow through to consumers at high prices. In these circumstances, OPEC members received large amounts of money in royalties and taxes, and the majors were assured supplies of crude oil with which to supply their global market.

• The interests diverged in that the consumer countriees did not care where the oil came from as long as it was reliable. They willingly took oil from non-OPEC members like the United States, Britain, and Norway (and rushed to sign contracts with former Communist nations too). The consumer countries were only under the influence of OPEC only as long as OPEC nations held the crude oil that they needed. OPEC nations once again came to depend on the Seven Sisters as soon as OPEC oil became optional rather than necessary for the major oil companies.

Page 16: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Oil Producing Countries

OPEC = Blue Countries

Page 17: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

OPEC Info - 2• OPEC Today. There are 13 important members of OPEC. The five largest

producers and exporters in the group are in the Middle East: Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates, and the other members are Libya, Venezuela, Algeria, Nigeria, Gabon, Indonesia, Ecuador, and Qatar.

• The major oil producing nations not included in OPEC are the US, Russia, Britain, and Norway, but the US is a net importer, and the others do not contribute much to the open world market.

• OPEC tries to keep oil prices high by keeping production within limits, assigning a production quota to each member. There is always a temptation for producing countries to cheat on the quotas assigned to them by the cartel, especially if they have urgent needs for cash. Cheating is particularly easy on the international oil market. Only the meters on the oilfield pumps and pipelines, and the tanker operators, can keep track of volumes of crude oil, and once on the high seas or into the network of international pipelines, oil quickly loses all traces of its country of origin. With the cooperation of distributors and marketers, any country can pump more than its quota, more or less with impunity.

Page 18: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Add both written and visual information to your concept map.

Oil in Southwest Asia

Why is oil/petroleum a strategic commodity?

A resource so important, peoplewill go to war to get a

steady supply.

Why is oil economicallyimportant?

Global demand foroil by consumers

Who is OPEC andwhat do they do?

Why are chokepointsimportant in this region?

Suez Canal …Strait of Hormuz …

Organization …

Oil-producing nations use money

to develop infrastructure, agriculture, and education.

Page 19: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Chokepoints – Narrow passages on land or water that are important economically and

politically.

http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch5en/conc5en/ch5c1en.html

Page 20: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Which chokepoint has more oil being transported for global trade?

Page 21: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

2. What would happen to oil producingcountries if these chokepoints wereclosed? (Think about Saudi Arabia/Kuwait)

1. What would happen to oil consumingcountries if these chokepoints were closed? (Think about the USA)

ADD the answer to these questions to your web.

Page 22: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Add both written and visual information to your concept map.

Oil in Southwest Asia

Why is oil/petroleum a strategic commodity?

A resource so important, peoplewill go to war to get a

steady supply.

Why is oil economicallyimportant?

Global demand foroil by consumers

Who is OPEC andwhat do they do?

Why are chokepointsimportant in this region?

Suez Canal …Strait of Hormuz …

Organization …

Demand for oil can lead to?

Oil-producing nations use money

to develop infrastructure, agriculture, and education.

Page 23: 1. Objective (READ) SWBAT describe how oil affects relationships between oil-producing countries and oil-consuming countries 2. Question of the Day. (TURN

Demand for oil can lead to ?

• Positive – Economic growth for oil producing countries.

• Negative – Imported oil can cause inflation in consumer countries (prices of everything goes up).

If prices continue to go up, consumer countries develop alternative fuels/energy.

ADD THIS INFO TO YOUR WEB.