Jim_Krane]_Energy_Kingdoms__Oil_and_Political_Sur

(John Hannent) #1
1804. FROM ENERGY POVERTY TO ENERGY EXTREMISM


  1. Marc Valeri, Oman: Politics and Society in the Qaboos State (London: Hurst, 2009).

  2. Figures from Oman’s National Center for Statistics and Information and other sources
    cited on Times of Oman graphic published November 18, 2015. See https: //twitter .com
    / C I L _ O m a n / s t a t u s / 6 6 7 2 2 8 4 0 2 6 8 0 7 9 1 0 4 0.

  3. Even the Quran— and orthodox Islam— had not penetrated some of Oman’s iso-
    lated mountain reaches, where some villagers did not speak Arabic or know how to
    pray in Islamic fashion. By one account I have heard, religious practices in remote
    Dhofari communities included animist and other non- Islamic aspects into the
    1970s.

  4. That equates to two doctors and fewer than one hospital per 100,000 people. In 2015,
    Oman counted 67 hospitals and 217 doctors per 100,000 people; life expectancy
    reached 77 years.

  5. Omanis used a tenth of a metric ton/person in 1971 and 7 metric tons/person in 2013.
    IEA World Energy Balances, 2015 ed.

  6. Further discoveries came in 1963 and 1964, but since oilfields were so far from the
    coast, a 175- mile pipeline had to be built before any could be exported. The first export
    came in 1967. Omani oil production grew from 57,000 b/d in 1967 to reach 332,000
    b/d by 1970, roughly a third of current Omani oil- production levels. Oman Ministry
    of Oil and Gas, “Brief History of the Oil and Gas Sector in Sultanate of Oman,” n.d.,
    h t t p : / / w w w. m o g. g o v. o m / P o r t a l s / 1 / p d f / o i l / h i s t o r y - O i l - G a s - e n. p d f. P r o d u c t i o n d a t a
    from BP, Statistical Review of World Energy 2015 (London: BP, 2015).

  7. Fred Halliday, Arabia Without Sultans (London: Saqi, 1974), 275.

  8. Va ler i, Oman.

  9. Halliday, Arabia Without Sultans, 373– 75.

  10. Kutschera, “Oman.”

  11. Jim Krane, City of Gold: Dubai and the Dream of Capitalism (New York: St. Martin’s,
    2009), 58– 59.

  12. Major cities in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar began receiving municipal
    power in the 1950s.

  13. Christopher M. Davidson, The United Arab Emirates: A Study in Survival (Boulder,
    CO: Lynne Rienner, 2005).

  14. Saudi Arabia also cancelled once- crucial fees on religious pilgrims and rescinded sev-
    eral other taxes. Kiren Aziz Chaudhry, The Price of Wealth: Economies and Institu-
    tions in the Middle East (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1997), 143– 44.

  15. OECD and IEA, cited in United Nations Environment Program, “Reforming Energy
    Subsidies: Opportunities to Contribute to the Climate Change Agenda,” white paper
    (Geneva: UNEP, 2008), 11.

  16. Some hold that Saudi Arabia is a special case: that its low domestic energy prices do
    not constitute subsidies because spare production capacity allows it to set or influ-
    ence global market prices. I acknowledge these arguments but, in the interest of sim-
    plicity, accept the IEA’s characterization of Saudi underpricing as a subsidy. For a
    more nuanced argument, see Yousef Alyousef and Paul Stevens, “The Cost of Domes-
    tic Energy Prices to Saudi Arabia,” Energy Policy 39 (2011): 6900– 5.

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