Governments have been involved in the exploration, development,
production, and abandonment of offshore oil and gas since the early
years of the century. With the 1965 discovery of oil and natural
gas in the North Sea, both Great Britain and Norway faced the
immense challenge of extracting an energy bonanza out of one
hundred meters of water and two thousand meters of rock. In this
book Brent Nelsen explains the factors behind state involvement in
offshore petroleum activities. From his analysis of government
workings in Great Britain and Norway he concludes that state
intervention is determined by complex interactions among government
officials, economic interests, and environmental pressures.
Nelsen shows how Britain and Norway have intervened in the
offshore oil business: minimal intervention--whereby the state
simply distributes offshore territory to private enterprise, and
protects workers and the environment; regulatory intervention--in
which the state oversees every aspect of petroleum development; and
participatory intervention--in which the state actually enters the
business as an entrepreneur. Both states used all three types of
intervention at different times, and Nelsen explains how their
actions varied, and why. He bases his conclusions on evidence
gathered from interviews with politicians, ministry officials,
corporate executives, and interest group leaders. This book will be
of considerable interest to students of European politics,
political economy, public policy, and energy politics.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!