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・ 1979 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team
・ 1979 Denver Broncos season
・ 1979 Detroit Lions season
・ 1979 Detroit Tigers season
・ 1979 Dino Ferrari Grand Prix
・ 1979 Dniprodzerzhynsk mid-air collision
・ 1979 Dutch Grand Prix
・ 1979 Dutch Open (tennis)
・ 1979 Easter flood
・ 1979 Eastern 8 Men's Basketball Tournament
・ 1979 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
・ 1979 economic reform
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・ 1979 Egypt Cup Final
・ 1979 Emperor's Cup
1979 energy crisis
・ 1979 England rugby union tour of Japan, Fiji and Tonga
・ 1979 English cricket season
・ 1979 Equatorial Guinea coup d'état
・ 1979 Estonian SSR Football Championship
・ 1979 EuroHockey Club Champions Cup
・ 1979 European Amateur Boxing Championships
・ 1979 European Athletics Indoor Championships
・ 1979 European Athletics Junior Championships
・ 1979 European Baseball Championship
・ 1979 European Championship
・ 1979 European Competition for Women's Football
・ 1979 European Cup (athletics)
・ 1979 European Cup Final
・ 1979 European Cup Winners' Cup Final


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1979 energy crisis : ウィキペディア英語版
1979 energy crisis

The 1979 (or second) oil crisis or oil shock occurred in the United States due to decreased oil output in the wake of the Iranian Revolution. Despite the fact that global oil supply decreased by only ~4%, widespread panic resulted, driving the price far higher than justified by supply. The price of crude oil rose to $39.50 per barrel over the next 12 months and long lines once again appeared at gas stations, as they had in the 1973 oil crisis.〔(1970s: Education )〕
As with the 1973 crisis, global politics and power balance were impacted. OPEC lost influence. In 1980, following the outbreak of the Iran–Iraq War, oil production in Iran nearly stopped, and Iraq's oil production was severely cut as well. After 1980, oil prices began a 20-year decline, eventually reaching a 60 percent fall-off during the 1990s. Oil exporters such as Mexico, Nigeria, and Venezuela expanded production; the USSR became the top world producer; and North Sea and Alaskan oil flooded the market.
A 1980s US recession was triggered. Oil prices did not return to pre-crisis levels until the mid-80s.
==Iran==

Amid massive protests, the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, fled his country in early 1979 and the Ayatollah Khomeini soon became the new leader of Iran. Protests severely disrupted the Iranian oil sector, with production being greatly curtailed and exports suspended. In November 1978, a strike by 37,000 workers at Iran's nationalized oil refineries initially reduced production from per day to about . Foreign workers (including skilled oil workers) fled the country. On January 16, 1979, Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and his wife left Iran at the behest of Prime Minister Shapour Bakhtiar (a longtime opposition leader himself), who sought to calm down the situation.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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