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The African ‘oil rush’ and US national security
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2006
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International EconomicsAfrican OilTradeAfrican DiasporaResource SecurityAfrican GlobalizationSocial SciencesEnergy TradeAfrican American StudiesPetroleum ProductionResource ExtractionUs National SecurityAfrican DevelopmentPublic PolicyEconomicsUnconventional OilAfrican ConflictInternational RelationsAfrican Oil ReservesAfrican PoliticsGlobalizationGold RushNational SecurityBusiness
Abstract The world's major oil-consuming nations, led by the USA, China and the Western European countries, are keenly interested in the development of African oil reserves, making huge bids for whatever exploration blocks become available and investing large sums in drilling platforms, pipelines, loading facilities and other production infrastructure. Indeed, the pursuit of African oil has taken on the character of a gold rush, with major companies from all over the world competing fiercely with one another for access to promising reserves. This ‘oil rush’ has enormous implications both for African oil producers and for the major oil-importing countries. For the producing countries it promises both new-found wealth and a potential for severe internal discord over the allocation of oil revenues (or ‘rents’); for the consuming countries, it entails growing dependence on imports of a vital substance from a region of chronic instability, with obvious national security overtones. Both these trends are reflect...