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The Economics of Petroleum Supply: Papers by M. A. Adelman, 1962-1993
 
 
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The Economics of Petroleum Supply: Papers by M. A. Adelman, 1962-1993 (Hardcover)

~ M. A. Adelman (Author) "It is customary to group oil and gas production costs in three stages: exploration, development and extraction from the earth..." (more)
Key Phrases: undeveloped barrel, weighted average flow rate, industry incremental cost, Saudi Arabia, Persian Gulf, North Sea (more...)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Review



"No person has a greater influence on the thinking of experts who have become managers or government regulators of the world's oil and gas industries than Morry Adelman. His analysis and knowledge represent a unique asset that will never be replicated. This volume contains many of his seminal contributions to our understanding of the costs of exploration, economics of development, and structure of the world oil industry. "
Philip K Verleger, Jr., Institute for International Economics



"The significance of the contribution which these pieces represent is enormous. Few scholars leave such a distinctive mark on their chosen field of specialization as Adelman."
James L. Smith, Professor, Department of Economics, University of Houston


Product Description

"The significance of the contribution which these pieces represent is enormous. Few scholars leave such a distinctive mark on their chosen field of specialization as Adelman." -- James L. Smith, Professor, Department of Economics, University of Houston.

M. A. Adelman is one of the preeminent authorities on the economics of mineral resources. This book brings together his work, written over the past thirty years, on mineral depletion and the nature of monopoly in world oil. Organized into three groups, the twenty-seven papers cover theory and measurement of mineral scarcity and depletion, analysis of the OPEC cartel and control of the oil market, and public policy problems and options.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 576 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press; 1st Edition. edition (December 27, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262011387
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262011389
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,728,360 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Morris Albert Adelman
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It is customary to group oil and gas production costs in three stages: exploration, development and extraction from the earth. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
undeveloped barrel, weighted average flow rate, industry incremental cost, daily barrel, sovereign monopolists, optimal depletion rate, rig years, cartel nations, discovery fee, percent decline rate, mineral scarcity, drilling expenditures, incremental barrel, competitive floor, reserve barrel, freight advantage, sur les perspectives, ultimate ceiling, world petroleum market, proved reserves, drilling boom, world oil cartel, additional barrel, rig time, tanker rates
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Saudi Arabia, Persian Gulf, North Sea, Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, World Bank, State Department, Department of Energy, Soviet Union, Sheik Yamani, World War, American Petroleum Institute, Petroleum Press Service, North America, Petroleum Economist, American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Chase Manhattan Bank, United Kingdom, Energy Laboratory, Review of Economics, Saddam Hussein, British Petroleum, Bureau of the Census, Energy Information Administration, National Science Foundation, Jersey Central
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Customer Reviews

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply the best there is on oil econ, May 6, 2001
By W. D ONEIL "Will O'Neil" (Falls Church, VA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
If you know anything of significance about the economics of petroleum, the name M. A. Adelman will already be familiar. If you know nothing and want to learn, this book is the place to start; it will take you a very long way.

Even though some of the papers in this book are approaching their 40th birthdays, all remain fresh and relevant. Adelman virtually invented the serious study of petroleum economics and even his earliest insights are worthwhile.

This book is also essential reading for anyone interested in the economics of resources more broadly. While I don't think that Adelman has spoken quite the last word on the so-called Hotelling theory of the economics of "exhaustible resources", he makes far more sense on the subject than most of his colleagues.

It also has much that is of value to students of non-petroleum commodities. Petroleum is a very special kind of commodity, but there are many lessons from it that apply elsewhere. Anyone still tempted by the notion of the benificent price-stabilizing cartel -- the UNCTAD model -- should read and ponder what Adelman has to say about how OPEC actually has (mal)functioned.

Adelman's style can be a bit quirky and discursive, but never obscure or dry. It's a big book because there's so much in it, not because it's padded out with academic belaborings. There is a little repetition becuase it's a collection, but not too much.

Much may at first seem somewhat strange. That's simply because Adelman's facts and analysis don't support a lot of conventional wisdom about petroleum. Don't be put off by the contradictions. You'll find everything documented and referenced, so you can decide for yourself where Adelman's facts come from. (Moreover, he usually summarizes the positions he's attacking clearly and fairly.) Look at what he has to say and measure it against what you may have assumed or been led to believe. Even if you don't come to agree with him on every point, I think you'll find everything he says to be illuminating and stimulating.

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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars is this the last word?, January 4, 2005
By El Griton667 (South Texas) - See all my reviews
Economic students are taught that banks "create" money every time they make a loan, and that the economy is powered by money instead of energy. The juxtaposition of these two data (the first is true, the second is false) leads even Nobel Prize-winning economists to conclude they have discovered a perpetual-motion machine:
 
"Should we be taking steps to limit the use of these most precious stocks of society's capital so that they will still be available for our grandchildren? . Economists ask, Would future generations benefit more from larger stocks of natural capital such as oil, gas, and coal or from more produced capital such as additional scientists, better laboratories, and libraries linked together by information superhighways? ... in the long run, oil and gas are not essential." [ p. 328, ECONOMICS, Nobel Laureate Paul Samuelson and William Nordhaus; McGraw-Hill, 1998;(...)
 
No person has had a greater influence on the thinking of experts who have become government regulators of the world's oil and gas industries than economist Morris Adelman: "There are plenty of fossil fuels and no limit to potential electrical capacity. It is all a matter of money." [ p. 483, THE ECONOMICS OF PETROLEUM SUPPLY, by M. A. Adelman; MIT, 1993; (...)
 
But of course, economists like Samuelson, Nordhaus, and Adelman are wrong. The First and Second Laws of thermodynamics tells us there is a limit to potential electrical capacity -- it's not all a matter of "money", it's all a matter of "energy".
 
The sudden -- and surprising -- end of the fossil fuel age will stun everyone -- and kill billions. Once the truth is told about gas and oil (it's just a matter of time), your life will change forever
 
Envision a world where freezing, starving people burn everything combustible -- everything from forests (releasing CO2; destroying topsoil and species); to garbage dumps (releasing dioxins, PCBs, and heavy metals); to people (by waging nuclear, biological, chemical, and conventional war); and you have seen the future.
 
Envision a world utterly destroyed by a lethal education.
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