Global Information Lookup Global Information

Red Line Agreement information


Regions concerned by the Red Line Agreement

The Red Line Agreement is an agreement signed by partners in the Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC) on July 31, 1928, in Ostend,[1] Belgium.[2] The agreement was signed between Anglo-Persian Company (later renamed British Petroleum), Royal Dutch/Shell, Compagnie Française des Pétroles (later renamed Total), Near East Development Corporation (later renamed ExxonMobil) and Calouste Gulbenkian (Mr. Five Percent), who retained a 5% share. The aim of the agreement was to formalize the corporate structure of TPC and bind all partners to a "self-denial clause" that prohibited any of its shareholders from independently seeking oil interests in the ex-Ottoman territory. It marked the creation of an oil monopoly, or cartel, of immense influence, spanning a vast territory.[3] The cartel preceded easily by three decades the birth of another cartel, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which was formed in 1960.[4]

The Red Line Agreement was signed following the discovery of an immense oil field Baba Gurgur in Iraq and TPC gained a concession for Iraq. Under the terms of the agreement, each of the four parties received a 23.75% share of all the crude oil produced by TPC. The remaining 5% share went to Gulbenkian, who was a partial stakeholder within the TPC. In 1929, TPC was renamed the Iraq Petroleum Company, or IPC.[5]

As Giacomo Luciani (2013) writes:

"Having formed IPC, [Calouste] Gulbenkian insisted that participants in the consortium sign what became known as the Red Line Agreement (Yergin 1991: 203–6). The red line was drawn on a map to define the territories formerly under the sovereignty of the Ottoman Empire, and the agreement stated that participants in the IPC consortium pledged to be involved in the exploitation of any oil to be discovered within the red line exclusively through consortia with the same composition as the IPC. Hence, if one of the IPC consortium members were to discover any oil or obtain a concession elsewhere within the red line, it would have to offer this asset to the remaining members in the same ‘geometry’ as in the IPC."[6]

It has been said that, at a meeting in 1928, Gulbenkian drew a red line on a map of the Middle East demarcating the boundaries of the area where the self-denial clause would be in effect.[7] Gulbenkian said this was the boundary of the Ottoman Empire he knew in 1914. He should know, he added, because he was born in it and lived in it. The other partners looked on it attentively and did not object. They had already anticipated such a boundary. (According to some accounts, the “red line” was not drawn by Gulbenkian but by a French representative.) Except for Gulbenkian, the partners were the supermajors of today. Within the “red line” lie the entire ex-Ottoman territory in the Middle East including the Arabian Peninsula (plus Turkey) but excluding Kuwait. Kuwait was excluded as it was meant to be a preserve for the British.

Years later, Walter C. Teagle of Standard Oil of New Jersey remarked that the agreement was “a damn bad move”.[8] However, it served to define the sphere of operations of TPC's successor, the Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC). The writer Stephen Hemsley Longrigg, a former IPC employee, noted that "the Red Line Agreement, variously assessed as a sad case of wrongful cartelization or as an enlightened example of international co‑operation and fair-sharing, was to hold the field for twenty years and in large measure determined the pattern and tempo of oil development over a large part of the Middle East".[9] Apart from Saudi Arabia and Bahrain where ARAMCO and BAPCO prevailed, IPC monopolized oil exploration inside the Red Line during this period.

American oil companies Standard Oil of New Jersey and Socony-Vacuum were partners in IPC and therefore bound by the Red Line Agreement. When they were offered a partnership with ARAMCO to develop the oil resources of Saudi Arabia, their partners in IPC refused to release them from the agreement. After the Americans claimed that World War II had ended the Red Line Agreement, protracted legal proceedings with Gulbenkian followed.[10] Eventually the case was settled out of court and the American partners were allowed to join ARAMCO.[11] The Red Line Agreement became a legacy document after this date, as IPC continued to operate existing concessions under its terms but the shareholder companies were allowed independently to seek new oil concessions across the Middle East.[12]

  1. ^ M. A. Oraizi, Amérique, pétrole, domination : Une stratégie globalisée, tome V : Chronologie du pétrole, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2012, p. 13.
  2. ^ Morton, Michael Quentin (6 April 2013). "Once Upon a Red Line: The Iraq Petroleum Company Story". GeoExpro. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  3. ^ M. A. Oraizi, Amérique, pétrole, domination : Une stratégie globalisée, tome II : Hégémonie anglo-saxonne et duels des empires pétroliers, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2012, p. 24.
  4. ^ United States Office of the Historian: The 1928 Red Line Agreement
  5. ^ M. A. Oraizi, Amérique, pétrole, domination : Une stratégie globalisée, tome I : Buffalo Bill à la conquête de l’or noir, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2012, pp. 43-44, 49-61, 92, 202.
  6. ^ Luciani, Giacomo (2013), "Corporations vs. States in the Shaping of Global Oil Regimes", Global Resources, Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 119–139, doi:10.1057/9781137349149_7, ISBN 9781349347827
  7. ^ "The Emergence of the Arabian Oil Industry" by Rasoul Sorkhabi, Ph.D., University of Utah's Energy & Geoscience Institute, GeoExpro, No. 6 of 2008.
  8. ^ Bennett H. Wall and George S. Gibb, Teagle of Jersey Standard, New Orleans, 1974, p. 209
  9. ^ Oil in the Middle East by S. H. Longrigg, 2nd Edition, published by the Oxford University Press, 1961, p.70
  10. ^ Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power, New York, 1991, pp. 413-9
  11. ^ "Oil: Share the Wealth”, Time, 23 December 1946
  12. ^ Morton, Michael Quentin (2014). The Third River: Aspects of Oil in the Middle East 1887-1979 (First ed.). United Arab Emirates: National Archives. p. 331. ISBN 978-9948-05-146-6. Retrieved 30 January 2015.

and 22 Related for: Red Line Agreement information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8877 seconds.)

Red Line Agreement

Last Update:

The Red Line Agreement is an agreement signed by partners in the Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC) on July 31, 1928, in Ostend, Belgium. The agreement was...

Word Count : 1071

Red Line

Last Update:

Look up red line in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Red Line may refer to: Red Line (1959 film), a Finnish film based on the 1909 novel Red Line (1996...

Word Count : 861

Iraq Petroleum Company

Last Update:

any competition with the parent companies. The agreement, known as Red Line Agreement after a red line was drawn around the former boundaries of the Ottoman...

Word Count : 5073

History of the oil industry in Saudi Arabia

Last Update:

interests of the American companies. The partners had signed up to the “Red Line Agreement”, which meant that Gulf Oil was precluded from taking up the Bahrain...

Word Count : 1678

TotalEnergies

Last Update:

French government's stake in TPC was transferred to CFP, and the Red Line agreement in 1928 rearranged the shareholding of CFP in TPC (later renamed the...

Word Count : 7738

United States foreign policy in the Middle East

Last Update:

Middle East are the Red Line Agreement signed in 1928 and the Anglo-American Petroleum Agreement signed in 1944. Both of these agreements were legally binding...

Word Count : 7538

Saudi Aramco

Last Update:

in the Iraq Petroleum Co. and had to get the restrictions of the Red Line Agreement lifted in order to be free to enter into this arrangement. In 1949...

Word Count : 8727

Calouste Gulbenkian

Last Update:

impetus to conclude negotiations and in July 1928 an agreement, called the "Red Line Agreement", was signed which determined which oil companies could...

Word Count : 3323

All Red Line

Last Update:

The All Red Line was a system of electrical telegraphs that linked much of the British Empire. It was inaugurated on 31 October 1902. The informal name...

Word Count : 867

History of petroleum industry in Iraq

Last Update:

and Standard Oil of New York were left). The agreement was called the Red Line Agreement for the "red line" drawn around the former boundaries of the Ottoman...

Word Count : 1734

Pan American Petroleum and Transport Company

Last Update:

States were each worried about being edged out by the other two. The Red Line Agreement gave the Near East Development Corporation, the Anglo-Persian Oil...

Word Count : 2243

Red Star Line

Last Update:

"Societe Anonyme de Navigation Belge-Americaine" (Red Star Line). The agreement established the Red Star Line as the exclusive carrier of mail service out...

Word Count : 1462

Jebel Akhdar War

Last Update:

India in order to extract oil in the Sultanate. On 31 July 1928, the Red Line Agreement was signed between Anglo-Persian Company (later renamed British Petroleum)...

Word Count : 6825

Durand Line

Last Update:

single-page Agreement, dated 12 November 1893, contains seven short articles, including a commitment not to exercise interference beyond the Durand Line. A joint...

Word Count : 6870

Petroleum industry in Iraq

Last Update:

The agreement was called the Red Line Agreement for the "red line" drawn around the former boundaries of the Ottoman Empire. The Red Line Agreement lasted...

Word Count : 3481

QatarEnergy

Last Update:

Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC). Because of its obligations under the Red Line Agreement, AIOC transferred the concession to an associate company of the Iraq...

Word Count : 5396

Lagos Rail Mass Transit

Last Update:

shortage of funds and change of government. The Blue Line opened on September 4, 2023 and the Red Line opened on February 29, 2024. 2008: A metro is proposed...

Word Count : 1501

Foreign relations of the Arab League

Last Update:

Arab World are the Red Line Agreement signed in 1928 and the Anglo-American Petroleum Agreement signed in 1944. Both of these agreements were legally binding...

Word Count : 2848

1949 Armistice Agreements

Last Update:

renegotiate the cease fire line in the southern Negev (giving access to the Red Sea) and the Wadi Ara area in a secret agreement reached on 23 March 1949...

Word Count : 5828

MAX Red Line

Last Update:

The MAX Red Line is a light rail line serving the Portland metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Oregon. Operated by TriMet as part of the MAX Light...

Word Count : 5901

Renville Agreement

Last Update:

Status Quo Line (Status Quo lijn) or so-called "Van Mook Line", an artificial line that connected the most advanced Dutch positions. The agreement is named...

Word Count : 1549

Partex

Last Update:

within the boundaries of the former Ottoman Empire - the Red Line Agreement. This agreement had a fundamental influence on the future development of the...

Word Count : 586

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net