1st Edition

The Oil Companies and the Arab World

By Giacomo Luciani Copyright 1984
    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    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.

    1. The Disintegration of the International Oil Industry 2. The Evolution of the Crude Supply Position of Ten International Companies 3. The Companies Without Vertical Integration? 4. The Policy of Producing Countries on Relations with the International Oil Companies 5. The Policies of the Oil Importing Countries 6. The Global Strategies of the International Oil Companies and their Attitude towwards the Arab Countries 7. Evolutionary Trands in the Structure of the International Oil Market 8. The Political Impact of the Reintegration Process

    Biography

    Luciani, Giacomo