THE SLIPPERY BUSINESS OF OIL A little while before I set up this Gopher hole, my documentary addiction swung to the topic of oil. From searching for it, extracting and refining it, to the politics surrounding it. On the technology side I was well rewarded by the wealth of films produced by Shell and other producers in the mid 20th century, which highlight the extremes of technical innovation that have gone into the world's oil quest. Less well covered by those archival films than the technical aspects is a full story of the history and politics of oil. Recently I discovered an eight-part documentary series broadcast by PBS in 1992 called "The Prize: Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power", based on a book of the same name. https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Prize:_Epic_Quest_for_Oil%2C_Money_and_Power Official YouTube playlist https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLYkO4hiKyrSRjZLQunIjgCsz4GrpDGPfN Beginning with the first commercial oil well in America in the mid 1800s, established by an eccentric self-titled colonel who it notes in passing actually died poor, the series continues to the oil monopoly of John D. Rockefeller. Then the Texas oil boom where there's very good footage of oil wells crammed in on top of each other in the 20s before regulators and cartels eventually engineered a system designed to prevent the over-production and corresponding rapid price collapses that previously hit the American oil industry with each new discovery. The industry, led from the USA both in terms of production and consumption, is a curious look at free-market economics gradually being strangled in the land of the free market, after having run amok through the first decades of the oil-fueled 20th century. The government breaking up Rockefeller's brutal monopoly (the Standard Oil Company), and then the cartels established around the borders of the US' anti-trust laws to prevent over-supply. Later episodes cover oil in the middle-east, discovered by the British in then Persia, now Iran. A surprise is that Winston Churchill effectively made the then Anglo-Persian oil company, now BP, into a major player in the industry. Just prior to the first world war he was working on transitioning the Royal Navy from coal to oil and fears were that the part-Dutch ownership of Shell exposed the navy's oil supply to the influence of... foreigners. Churchill described this reliable access to oil as the "prize". Majority government ownership of Anglo-Persian cemented it as a trusted source of oil from the middle east, even though Shell ended up supplying most of Britain's oil during the war in the end anyway. Following from this, the importance of oil in the events of both world wars is specifically highlighted by the documentary. Its importance in the strategies of the oil-poor axis powers is described in an episode dedicated to WWII. The Russian front, made familliar to me by The Unknown War, is examined for Hitler's aim of controlling the Soviet oil fields. Successful defence of the region by the Red Army contributed to the sustained tightening of German fuel supplies that eventually crippled its millitary. Germany's alternative solution of producing synthetic oil from coal is also covered, eventually victim of aerial bombing by the allies. The Japanese need for oil imports during the war is described as the prime motivation for the Perl Harbour attack, to secure the shipping lanes for oil from Indonesian oil wells. Yet at the same time they inexplicably missed the opportunity to destroy the oil reserves for the American Pacific fleet, enabling it to immediately regroup. Following the war, the oil story turns into one of two-and-fro politics between the west and the middle-eastern countries where ever larger oil reserves were being discovered. Power shifts gradually, from the old but weakening power of the British, eventually losing their Iranian oil reserves to nationalisation, to the Americans whose wealth was increasing at speed with their multiplying oil consumption, then to the Arab states who realised the west's demand for oil allowed them to take over the reigns of price setting and political influence from the big oil companies, via the famous OPEC cartel. Eventually it heads into the modern theme of war in the middle-east, driven by competition between the newly wealthy independent oil nations. In this region previously overseen by the British half a century earlier, the Americans now take on the role of securing their oil interests against local threats by force in the Gulf War, and of course with this documentary made in 1992 there was plenty more to come from that story. Yet also described is a deliberate movement by the major oil companies to break their dependency on the whims of rich Arabs following the oil crisis in the 1970s. Although that event inspired an early spurt of effort to find alternative energy sources, it also simply pushed companys who had become lazy with the prospects of exploring oil in new parts of the world to probe for reserves in areas that were phyically difficult to access, but politically much more friendly. BP built an oil pipeline to new fields through the frozen peaks of Alaska, and in Britain offshore oil in the North Sea was exploited. The last episode also pokes its nose into Siberia, following an intrepid oil company called White Nights who were testing the gravely unstable economics and politics of newly post-communist Russia to set up oil wells there, giving away snowmobiles to try and win over the locals. It looks like, from the sporadic early-90s news articles that pop up in Web searches, that White Nights didn't last all that long, and it's well known that the Russian oil industry ended up dominated by Russian oligarchs (whose power was then to be shortly curtailed by Putin). Overall this documentary doesn't shine much light on Russian oil in the communist era. Its early pre-revolution development through western investment is described, but by the time we rejoin those old oil fields in the last episode, they're a wasteland of failed infrastructure and ecological tragedy, with no real light shone on the in-between. In spite of being made at the start of the prime years for documentaries peeking behind the iron curtain, the producers didn't go there and left the story very western-focused. In part it might be because they seem to have gone to pains to only interview English-speakers, perhaps unwilling to subject their audience to subtitles. Also left out entirely were the French, present of course in Algeria and with a historical influence similar to the British in other large parts of Africa. The Algerian oil industry was developing just at the same time as the Algerian War, and the French managed to secure a deal to continue supply from their oil fields even after Algerian independence. But it proved to be a shaky deal, and the Algerians nevertheless pursued independent oil exports to other countries. So the french oil industry, dominated by the partly state-owned Elf company, looked to oil reserves in former French colonies of Africa. This story isn't even mentioned in passing by The Prize, but a more recent documentary series by Al-Jazeera in 2013 explores a similar sequence of events to what happened to the Americans in the middle-east. The French exploited their connections with greedy East-African leaders looking to secure wealth and power through foreign oil money and even some direct assistance by the French armed forces in repressing their political opposition. Then as the leaders grew extremely wealthy from kick-backs and misappropriation of state funds lended from overseas, they discovered like the Arabs that they now had power over the French to decide whether or not to sell them the oil that their oil industry (itself now deeply ingrained in corrupt French politics) depended on. So began what one former man of the French secret service describes as "reverse colonisation", where in particular the president of the oil-producing East African country of Gabon eventually aquired such power as to have a direct role in manipulating French politics, down to claims of him successfully getting government ministers he didn't like dismissed from their positions. The fall of the French state's Elf oil company itself in a national fraud and corruption scandal is also documented. Finally Elf was dissolved in 2000 to put an end to ongoing enquiries into its corrupt practices and deep political influence, with the assets sold to its smaller French competitor Total (I've long wondered where they appeared from). https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_French_African_Connection Interestingly the Algerian oil fields, from which oil currently seems to be sold without preference towards the French, haven't expanded into areas beyond where they originally developed in the late 1950s and early 60s. This article suggests that much of the country's oil and natural gas reserves remained unexploited in 2013, and it doesn't look like that's changed since: Algeria: the Arab World's often forgotten massive oil giant https://www.albawaba.com/business/algeria-oil-giant-528212 Looking also at how oil producers found alternate sources after the politics of the middle-east turned against them, and later improvement in extraction from oil sands as shown in the following documentary, I wonder how much the current price rises are a built in part on a manufactured sense of scarcity. Indeed the history shows how such manipulation of market forces has been ingrained in the industry since its reaction to the oil surplus of the 1920s, and OPEC production cuts are credited with helping to avoid a surplus due to the drop in demand during the COVID-19 pandemic. The world economy is largely driven by the oil price, yet the forces affecting that price seem more opaque than ever. https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=Ultimate_Oil_Sands_Mine As in The Prize, I've left it late to tackle what is today the elephant in the room when talking about oil. Only in the last episode are the environmental concerns of burning oil really examined at all. The future of oil is explored at both ends of the pipe. Drivers on the highways of Los Angeles talk to creatively-mounted cameras on their cars as they speed about, expressing the exact same contradictions of environmental concern and personal love of motor transport that are common today. Then we see the oil executives, one filmed in a truely palatial office, forecasting the decline of US oil production due to increased regulation, yet a continued oil demand for around 50 - 100 years. Another factor is growth of oil consumption in the third world, one interviewee noting something like "give every person in China today a motor scooter, and I'll give you an oil crisis tomorrow". In fact in a China where people can now afford scooters, electric vehicles have been more widely adopted than anywhere else, with laws even requiring some vehicle owners to go electric (I gather mainly to reduce smog in big cities). But oil consumption in China (which is also another oil producer that The Prize doesn't mention) has nevertheless increased greatly, not just for fuel but as a consequence of the country's transformation since the time of the documentary into the factory of the world. Petrochemicals for making plastics and textiles are now the leading force behind China's increasing post-pandemic oil thirst, in a global trend that's forecast to have peak carbon dioxide emissions from burning oil for fuel reached while overall oil consumption still increases. China's petrochemical surge is driving global oil demand growth https://www.iea.org/commentaries/china-s-petrochemical-surge-is-driving-global-oil-demand-growth As for where most of the world's oil comes from, twenty years after "The Prize" Al-Jazeera highlighted a change to that in their documentary "The Secret of the Seven Sisters", that being the name attributed to the protective cartel of western oil companies set up to fix oil prices after the oil surplus of the 1920s. Although I haven't watched it yet, like The Prize, it claims to plot the rise of these companies as they oversaw an ever-growing western oil market dominated by US production. Then it wants to make a point of how, like the early-90s oil executives predicted, US production dwindled to a minority, taking with it the power of the Seven Sisters. https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Secret_of_the_Seven_Sisters But now they're back! With the advent of fracking, and I suspect some preference by the US government to regain its oil exports at a cost to social/environmental concerns that limited it in the 90s, the US has swung around to again be an oil exporter, and even regained its title as the biggest producer in the world. United States produces more crude oil than any country, ever https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=61545 (Daniel Yergin, author of the original book published in 1990, published in 2011 "The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World" which based on the Wikipedia page covers most of these newer topics) Ignoring that fracking is even more environmentally damaging, this innovation has again reshaped the balance of oil power during its new era of ever-pending decline. The American oil industry is currently doing rather well out of the EU banning Russian oil shipments in objection to the war in Ukraine. As in the Cold War, the Russians have dropped their prices in response and thus less fussy countries like India reap the benefit of a cheaper Russian supply replacing US oil imports. U.S. crude oil exports reached a record in 2023 https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=61584 In spite of hopes for the obsolescence of oil, in the early 90s and much more so today, it looks very likely that power and prosperity will continue to follow the flow of this black gold for many years to come. Yet probably never again as simply and effectively as it did a lifetime ago in the black and white post-war wonder years of the American dream. - The Free Thinker