中东地区的石油工业化

Katayoun Shafiee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在中东建立全球石油工业为现代世界最大的技术和经济发展政治项目之一提供了契机。长期以来,学术界一直将石油等丰富的自然资源与中东的独裁联系在一起,而忽视了石油运营的社会技术方式,以及对国家形态和国际石油公司的政治影响。第一次世界大战之前,石油开发的早期以石油丰富为标志,随着内燃机的发明,对石油的需求开始迅速增加。最便宜的生产来源在中东。从这一时期出现的最大的跨国石油公司的角度来看,能源系统的建设需要以一种需求和过剩得到管理的方式进行。石油工业化使这种新的丰富能源的生产和大规模消费成为可能,但也与罢工的石油工人以及控制或阻止煤炭和化学工业等竞争部门的工业化进程有关。在20世纪的前30年,通过建立国际石油经济,以生产配额和财团协议的形式限制中东地区的新石油发现,这一进程成为可能。第二次世界大战后,由于石油美元大量流入伊朗和沙特阿拉伯等欧佩克国家,石油工业化项目得以加强。石油收入的增加和通过石油国有化实现的主权控制引发了工业和基础设施扩张的五年发展计划的执行。上世纪六七十年代,环保行动主义的诞生恰逢石油资源丰富的时代结束,人们担心地球会遭到破坏,这促使立法机构通过了对碳氢化合物经济的限制,而在这种经济中,石油工业化的机器蓬勃发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Oil Industrialization in the Middle East
The building of the global oil industry in the Middle East served as the occasion for one of the largest political projects of technical and economic development in the modern world. Scholarship has long associated an abundance of natural resources such as oil with autocracy in the Middle East while overlooking the sociotechnical ways in which oil operations were built with political consequences for the shape of the state and the international oil corporations. The early period of oil development was marked by oil abundance up to World War I, when demand for oil started to increase rapidly with the invention of the internal combustion engine. The cheapest source of production was in the Middle East. From the perspective of the largest transnational oil corporations to emerge in this period, the energy system needed to be built in a way that demand and overabundance were managed. Oil industrialization enabled the production and large-scale consumption of this new and abundant source of energy but was also connected with striking oil workers and controlling or blocking processes of industrialization in rival sectors such as the coal and the chemicals industries. In the first three decades of the 20th century, the process was made possible through the building of an international oil economy that took the form of production quotas and consortium agreements to restrict new oil discoveries in the Middle East. Oil industrialization projects intensified after World War II due to a flood of petrodollars into OPEC countries such as Iran and Saudi Arabia. Rising oil revenues and sovereign control achieved through oil nationalization triggered the execution of five-year development plans of industrial and infrastructural expansion. The birth of environmental activism in the 1960s–1970s coincided with the end of oil abundance and the fear of the planet’s destruction, spurring the passage of legislation to place limits on the hydrocarbon economy in which the machinery of oil industrialization had thrived.
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