The Age of Oil: The Mythology, History, and Future of the World's Most Controversial Resource
Autor Leonardo Maugerien Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 mai 2006 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780275990084
ISBN-10: 0275990087
Pagini: 360
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0275990087
Pagini: 360
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 34 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
Leonardo Maugeri is Group Senior Vice President, Strategies and Development, for the Italian energy company Eni, the sixth-largest publicly listed oil company in the world. His articles have appeared in Newsweek, Foreign Affairs, Science, and the Wall Street Journal, among other publications.
Cuprins
A History of an Unreliable Market (and the Bad Policies It Prompted)John D. Rockefeller's Cursed LegacyThe Age of Gasoline and Oil ImperialismThe Carve-up of Arabia's OilThe Oil Glut of the 1930sCold War Fears and the U.S.-Arabian LinkThe Iran Tragedy and the Seven Sisters' CartelThe Golden Age of Oil and Its LimitsOil and the Explosion of Arab NationalismThe First Oil ShockThe CountershockA Desert in the Storm: The First Gulf CrisisThe Soviet Implosion and the Caspian's Troubled EldoradoThe Collapse of Oil Prices and Industry MegamergersThe First Oil Crisis of the 21st CenturyMisperceptions and Problems AheadAre We Running Out of Oil?The Inner Secrets of OilThe Puzzle of Oil Reserves, Production and the Quest for Their ControlThe Problems With Oil Quality, Price, and Consumption TrendsFlawed Forecasts, Foggy Alternatives to OilArabs, Islam, and the Myth of Oil SecurityAppendixesProven Reserves, Production, and Reserves Life Index of the First 20 Oil Countries in the World and the World (2004)Consumption Trends of the First 20 Countries in the World, 1980-2004Main Features of Some Qualities of Crude OilOil Production of the "Seven Sisters" and Global Oil Production, 1950-1966The Largest National Oil CompaniesThe Largest International Oil CompaniesBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
Maugeri's authoritative, well-written assessment of the global oil situation relates so well to the current energy predicament that it belongs in most academic and public library collections. With knowledge and experience in developmental strategy for a major international oil company, Maugeri provides a lively, insightful perspective to the history and condition of the world petroleum industry. A specific argument is carried through the book: the world is not running out of oil--there is more than enough oil in the ground. Sequences of oil scarcity and overproduction are shown to be more related to economics and politics than to geology and technology. The 21 specific chapters are encompassed in two principal parts: A History of an Unreliable Market (and the Bad Policies It Prompted) and Misconceptions and Problems Ahead. Appendixes deal with oil consumption and with the production and reserves of specific countries and major oil companies. As a library holding for students of political science, economics, science, and technology, this book should be shared with its antithesis, Kenneth S. Deffeyes's Beyond Oil: The View from Hubbert's Peak. Well footnoted; extensive bibliography; thorough index. Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
Maugeri leverages his insider's knowledge to cast doubt on those who argue that oil reserves are dwindling or that geopolitical concerns have rendered the future of oil production too unreliable to be viable..[r]ecommended for academic libraries..[o]f interest to public libraries.
In marked contrast to the panic-crisis books of late, this work strikes an optimistic chord on the state of world-oil supplies..Unlike the resource pessimists, Maugeri asserts that due to the uncertainty about the level of world reserves, any attempt to quantify supply is futile. Not only does he argue soundly, but he solidifies his position by insights gleaned from long experiencce in the industry. While some of his conclusions may be rejected, his research is not to be disputed.
This informative book is really two in one: a concise treatment of the checkered but fascinating history of the oil industry, from Edwin Drake's first successful well and John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Trust to post-Saddam Iraq, and an extended nontechnical essay on the myths and misconceptions that have come to surround this important commodity. As senior vice president of Eni, the Italian oil firm, the author is an industry insider, but he draws on a wide range of scholarship and writes persuasively and well.
Are we running low on oil? After a slew of books by pessimists, here is a convincing counterargument by an oil company analyst. Maugeri explains that the industry has been scarred by recurrent periods of over-production. The major players' resulting cautiousness probably makes current estimates of reserves very conservative., if prices continue at today's levels we can expect aggressive investments in exploration and technology to yield enormous extra supply.
Believing calls for economic independence from oil to be an insupportable overdramatization and sterile overreaction to oil's cyclical behavior, Maugery seeks to counter the trap of catastrophism that he sees as infiltrating the public discussion as deeply as the George W. Bush administration. He sets out to debunk these fears by describing this cyclical behavior through the history of the oil industry and similarly recurrent fears about oil shortages, fears that would produce a damaging American interventionist policy in the Middle East, as he suggests.
Maugeri minimizes the threat of blackmail by oil-producing nations, and he dismisses fears that the world is running out of oil. Environmentalists and those who demand reliance on alternative renewable-energy sources will dispute many of his assertions. Still, this is a valuable effort to explain the issues.
Maugeri leverages his insider's knowledge to cast doubt on those who argue that oil reserves are dwindling or that geopolitical concerns have rendered the future of oil production too unreliable to be viable..[r]ecommended for academic libraries..[o]f interest to public libraries.
In marked contrast to the panic-crisis books of late, this work strikes an optimistic chord on the state of world-oil supplies..Unlike the resource pessimists, Maugeri asserts that due to the uncertainty about the level of world reserves, any attempt to quantify supply is futile. Not only does he argue soundly, but he solidifies his position by insights gleaned from long experiencce in the industry. While some of his conclusions may be rejected, his research is not to be disputed.
This informative book is really two in one: a concise treatment of the checkered but fascinating history of the oil industry, from Edwin Drake's first successful well and John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Trust to post-Saddam Iraq, and an extended nontechnical essay on the myths and misconceptions that have come to surround this important commodity. As senior vice president of Eni, the Italian oil firm, the author is an industry insider, but he draws on a wide range of scholarship and writes persuasively and well.
Are we running low on oil? After a slew of books by pessimists, here is a convincing counterargument by an oil company analyst. Maugeri explains that the industry has been scarred by recurrent periods of over-production. The major players' resulting cautiousness probably makes current estimates of reserves very conservative., if prices continue at today's levels we can expect aggressive investments in exploration and technology to yield enormous extra supply.
Believing calls for economic independence from oil to be an insupportable overdramatization and sterile overreaction to oil's cyclical behavior, Maugery seeks to counter the trap of catastrophism that he sees as infiltrating the public discussion as deeply as the George W. Bush administration. He sets out to debunk these fears by describing this cyclical behavior through the history of the oil industry and similarly recurrent fears about oil shortages, fears that would produce a damaging American interventionist policy in the Middle East, as he suggests.
Maugeri minimizes the threat of blackmail by oil-producing nations, and he dismisses fears that the world is running out of oil. Environmentalists and those who demand reliance on alternative renewable-energy sources will dispute many of his assertions. Still, this is a valuable effort to explain the issues.