The Changing Role of National Oil Companies in International Energy Markets
March 8, 2007
The so-called Seven Sisters—the major western oil firms that divided up world oil after WWII—now control only a small proportion of international reserves. Rather, state monopolies and emerging partially privatized firms now control the lion’s share of world oil. The Baker institute’s study is the first to look at how national oil companies affect the development of the global oil market.
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- Martha Brill Olcott,
- Amy Jaffe,
- Steve Lewis,
- Daniel Brumberg,
- Isabel Gorst,
- Sumit Ganguly