The Dictionary of Human Geography

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Suggested reading
ACIA (2004); IWCO (1998); Steinberg (2001);
UNEP (2006).

oil Petroleum, it is sometimes said, is the
economic bedrock of our hydrocarbon civiliza-
tion. The fuel ofmodernity, oil is an arche-
typal global commodity, the repository of
unimaginable wealth (‘black gold’) and part
of the largest business on Earth (seecapital-
ism). More than anything else, petroleum is a
sort of lie: it reveals the profound mystifica-
tion, the paradoxes and that contradictoriness
that surroundnatural resourcesin our mod-
ern world (Coronil, 1997).
If oil is a natural resource – arguably the
most global, the most strategic and among
the most valuable – what exactly is natural
about it? It is a flammable liquid that occurs
as a product of geophysical and biological pro-
cesses of great historical depth. A by-product
of pre-human geological history, oil is depos-
ited in subterranean formations and consists
principally of a mixture of hydrocarbons with
traces of nitrogenous and sulphurous com-
pounds. In practice, of course, the compos-
ition of what passes as petroleum varies quite
considerably, as one might anticipate in view
of the heterogeneous circumstances associated
with its 600 million year history of sedimenta-
tion and organic decomposition. Oil’s natural
properties, one might say, are unstable and
variegated (seenature).
Petroleum is customarily extracted through
drilled wells, pumped along pipelines and refi-
ned into different ‘fractions’ or components.
The science and practice by which oil is exp-
lored, located, pumped and fractionated has, in
the past 150 years, deepened and proliferated to
the point at which it is now part of a massive
engineering and technicalinfrastructure.The
oil industry is now dominated by the ‘majors’, a
cluster of transnational and highly diversified
energy companies (seetransnational corpor-
ations). It is sometimes said that oil drilling was
invented by E.L. Drake, when he sunk his now
infamous 69 foot well in Pennsylvania in 1859.
But several hundred years before the birth of
Christ, the Chinese were sinking 3500 ft wells
to exploit petroleum for a multiplicity of pur-
poses. Surface oil deposits had been used as
asphalt and as a sealant by Sumerians 3,000
years before the Chinese. In other words, oil’s
natural resource use spans a vast swathe of
human history.
Currently, oil and related gas exploitation
covers two-thirds of global energy needs:
according to the International Energy Agency,

by 2030 the figure will have fallen only mar-
ginally. Industrialized countries of the OECD
account for almost two thirds of world oil
demand. Global demand for oil is about 80
million barrels per day (compared to 47 mil-
lion in 1970). The USA consumes by far and
away the largest quantities of petroleum
(roughly 25 per cent) and is extremely depen-
dent on oil imports (largely from themiddle
east, Canada and Mexico, and increasingly
africa). The geology of oil and gas has a dis-
tinctive geography: two thirds of known oil
reserves reside in the Middle East (which is
overwhelmingly Muslim, a fact that has
assumed particular significance in the context
of 9/11 and the US occupation of Iraq). Saudi
Arabia, Iraq and Kuwait alone account for
almost 500 billion barrels of reserves. Over
three-quarters of all known reserves of petrol-
eum are found in eight oil-exporting countries.
The centrality of the USA in the global oil
acquisition strategy – a fact sealed by the spe-
cial relationship between the USA and Saudi
Arabia, made in 1945 – has meant that the
geopoliticsof oil have been a central plank
in US foreign policy over the past 80 years.
The US addiction to cheap oil – which is to say
to the automobile – turned, in the postwar
period, onimperialistrelations with three
key suppliers: Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and
Iran. By 2001, this policy had proven to be a
catastrophic failure – even if the US consumer
had benefited from oil prices at the gas station
that bore no relation to actual costs of produc-
tion (which necessarily would have to include
the massive expenditures on the military and
the costs of global climate change and other
‘externalities’).
The structure of the oil industry is charac-
terized by a recent (post-1970) reorganization
(Yeoman, 2004). The global oil and gas indus-
try is dominated by five transnational oil com-
panies (ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, BP and
TotalElfFina) with combined revenues over
$1 trillion, and a number of massive national
oil companies (owned by oil-producing
states). The assertive petro-nationalism of
the 1970s saw national oil companies account
for an increasingly large proportion of oil re-
serves, while transnational companies increas-
ingly moved downstream to control refining
and petrochemical sectors. Many of the
world’s most important oil producers are
petro-states, marked by an extreme depend-
ence (measured as a proportion of exports or
GDP) derived from oil and gas. Rentier econ-
omies of this sort are plagued by what has
been called the ‘resource curse’ (Auty, 2001):

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_O Final Proof page 510 30.3.2009 7:51pm

OIL
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