Britain's Missed Oil Opportunity

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 4 бер 2023
  • Links:
    - The Asianometry Newsletter: asianometry.com
    - Patreon: / asianometry
    - Twitter: / asianometry

КОМЕНТАРІ • 555

  • @Olav3D
    @Olav3D Рік тому +284

    As a Norwegian I appreciate Asianometry covering this little known part of Asia. 😋

  • @donsergio2406
    @donsergio2406 Рік тому +562

    It should be added that Norway also built and manage an incredible sovereign investing fund from its oil revenues that will guarantee generations of Norwegians to have a peaceful and wealthy retirement. Only a few of OPEC countries can rival what they have achieved.

  • @aw34565
    @aw34565 Рік тому +197

    One point about the UK economy and North Sea Oil, in the 1980s the Pound behaved like a petrocurrency, leaving it overvalued in the early 1980s which in turn caused another round of deindustrialization as UK industry was unable to compete. In fact, much of the oil revenue was simply spent on paying benefits to unemployed workers who lost their jobs in the early Thatcher years.

  • @geneballay9590
    @geneballay9590 Рік тому +116

    Very interesting and well done presentation. Starting in early 1977 I worked the oil fields for 36 years in 15 countries around the world, and did not know these details. Thank you for sharing.

  • @paulkurilecz4209
    @paulkurilecz4209 Рік тому +26

    I worked for a company that entered into a letter agreement in 1965 with British Gas and Amerada Hess concerning investments in North Sea oil and gas development. It resulted in minority ownership stakes in 14 oil and gas fields in the British and Norwegian sectors, the largest of which was a 5% stake in the Ekofisk Field. These North Sea assets, along with other assets in Indonesia, Denmark, the Netherlands and Alaska sold in 1989 for $1.4 billion. As we joked at the time, that was a pretty good return for the cost of a 25 cent stamp.

  • @EmperorBun
    @EmperorBun Рік тому +20

    Great new entry to the "Britain's Missed XXXX Opportunity" series. Can't wait to see what's next lol

  • @sindreherstad8739
    @sindreherstad8739 Рік тому +74

    Drawing the seaborder with Norway anywhere other than the median would be a tough fight as Norway in this time perriode fought hard to get as much sea as possible, mainly for fishing. I think Norway and iceland are the main reason you can draw the border at the continental shelf, for example

  • @corneliushojl7994
    @corneliushojl7994 Рік тому +33

    Hello, just to comment that I have been a member of ASPO since 2007 and already at that time we were discussing this situation that we saw from all the oil producers who behaved as if it were never going to end.

  • @mogreen19
    @mogreen19 Рік тому +47

    Great content as usual. As you mentioned Groningen gas fields several times - I have been living in the Netherlands for 8 years and they have been in the news a lot, the Groningen gas fields had to be turned off because the collapsing of empty gas chambers caused and is still causing earthquakes that have damaged thousands of homes and made dozens of homes uninhabitable already. So there is going to be a high cost for the dutch for the Groningen gas fields, repairing all those homes and moving some people making the cheap gas from half a century ago really expensive now.

  • @johnstirling6597
    @johnstirling6597 Рік тому +80

    No mention of the sovereign wealth fund that Norway set up that is directly linked to North Sea oil production, the UK has no such similar fund.

  • @CompleteAnimation
    @CompleteAnimation Рік тому +16

    8:05

  • @dlewis8405
    @dlewis8405 Рік тому +5

    France was in a similar situation when oil prices spiked in the early 70s but they did not have a big oil field to tap so they went all in on nuclear. Now they get like 60 percent of their electricity from nuclear, a carbon free power source.

  • @Dave_Sisson
    @Dave_Sisson Рік тому +24

    That sounds a lot like the Bass Strait oil fields in south eastern Australia. Similar sea conditions that also began in the late 1960s and most oil and gas fields are now nearly exhausted.

  • @H0mework
    @H0mework Рік тому +57

    You mentioned the Netherlands finding the natural gas, but you didn't say anything about dutch disease. Could the reason they don't do more now be related? Norway did well with their pension system, so it can be done, in comparison to Venezuela.

  • @NaderNabilart
    @NaderNabilart Рік тому +12

    You mentioned socialism as a hindrance to British oil & gas industries, wasn't the Norwegian oil & gas also kinda socialist? state owned, very powerful workers union? some people call it state capitalism.

  • @nonnius2861
    @nonnius2861 Рік тому +68

    Your point around

  • @PropaneWP
    @PropaneWP Рік тому +15

    Regarding the borders drawn up in the video, why would drawing a border at a trench line be more "proper" than the current border? Is the word "proper" just another word for "advantageous" in this case? I'm no expert on drawing borders, but this seems like a biased conclusion that would have been hugely disadvantageous (not to mention unfair) for Norway.

  • @ppolo12
    @ppolo12 Рік тому +17

    All went to tory purses

  • @tonners.pettitt9938
    @tonners.pettitt9938 Рік тому +5

    East Midlands Province is a new one but thankyou for acknowledgement of our existence! The English North/South divide argument for some reason leaves an entire 1/3 of the country out!

  • @nekomakhea9440
    @nekomakhea9440 Рік тому +63

    "not the first time the UK failed to draw a proper border"