The Oil Companies and the Arab World

The Oil Companies and the Arab World
Author: Giacomo Luciani
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 163
Release: 2016-03-02
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1317236270

For many years, vertical integration characterized the international oil industry, with the same company controlling the entire process from crude exploration and production to the retailing. This structure was radically transformed in the 1970s and this book, originally published in 1984, examines whether the dis-integration which resulted was a long-term trend or a temporary phase. It examines the attitude of the major international oil companies, discusses the policies adopted by oil producing and oil importing countries, and the limits of ‘government to government’ deals underlined. The political and strategic implications of re-integration are explored, and relations between oil exporters and importers, and between the USA, Europe and the Arab world discussed.

Middle East Oil

Middle East Oil
Author: Benjamin Shwadran
Publisher: Transaction Publishers
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1977-01-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781412849142

Shaped by the emotional climate of the ongoing Arab-Israeli conflict, the controversies between the oil-producing and oil-consuming nations are of major international concern. Shwadran outlines the progressive rise in the power of the oil-producing countries and the decline in the control exercised by the concessionary foreign countries that has culminated in the almost total nationalization of the foreign oil companies. Because of the highly charged atmosphere surrounding the issues and their grave importance on world politics, the problems are, at once, highly difficult to encompass and enormously important to understand. Through a myriad of facts and figures the author sees the underlying patterns with precision. Often narrowly viewed as having only two sides —that of oil producers and consumers—the situation is reflected in this book in all its facets. Seen in this totality of conflicting needs, desires, abilities, and objectives, the Middle East oil crisis takes on the contradictory and explosive nature which has affected us all. Middle East Oil, born of the author's years of scholarship and exposure in the field, describes the problems of the past but, more important, it gives insight into how the problem will manifest itself in the future, and provides a direction for efforts toward a final resolution. Contents: Introduction / From the Six Day War to the End of 1970 / From the Teheran 1971 Agreement to the October 1973 War / The Producers Develop the Oil Industry / The Transporters / Nationalization and Participation / The Arab Oil Embargo / The Efforts of the Consuming Countries / Surpluses and Recycling / Solutions / Bibliography

Second Arab Oil Monograph

Second Arab Oil Monograph
Author: Maktab ad-Dirāsāt al-Lubnānīya wa-ʾl-ʿArabīya (Beirut)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 630
Release: 1969
Genre: Petroleum
ISBN:

Monograph on the activities of the petroleum industry and the gas industry in Arab country - covers production trends, marketing and trade agreements, consumption patterns, means of transportation and storage of oil products, investment, costs and profits, etc. Maps and statistical tables.

Arab Oil Policies in the 1970s (RLE Economy of Middle East)

Arab Oil Policies in the 1970s (RLE Economy of Middle East)
Author: Yusuf A. Sayigh
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2015-05-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1317593871

Until 1973 few people, either in the advanced, industrial countries or in the developing countries of the Third World, thought seriously on the issues and complexities involved in the production and marketing of the oil on which they relied. It was only with the sudden steep increases in oil prices that the oil industry became a matter of general discussion, and the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) became a front page topic for analysis and comment. However, real understanding of the organisation and its policies did not accompany this rush of interest and much confusion has followed. In particular, the Arab exporters have received the weight of the criticism although they have only a share in the market and not a monopoly. This book attempts to instil a greater mutual understanding between oil exporters and importers, although it is not a wholesale endorsement of Arab policies, by outlining the major policy areas in this field. It looks at new policy options and their implications in exploration, marketing and pricing and at downstream operations such as the petrochemical and gas industries. In conclusion, this study identifies the wide-ranging opportunities that the new oil policies have opened up for the Arab countries, in the national, regional and international context, and assesses and clarifies the responsibilities which accompany this success. First published in 1983.