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8 J. World Energy L. & Bus. 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/jlowdeylw8 and id is 1 raw text is: 

Journal of World Energy Law and Business, 2015, Vol. 8, No. 1


         The changing competitive landscape of the global

         upstream petroleum industry

         Seyed   Kamran Bagheri* and Alberto Di Minin**





 From   the 1920s to the 1960s, seven major  International Oil Companies  (I(Os)  were
 almost  the only market players in the global pctroleum industry. Their share of oil and
 gas reserves, however, fell dramatically from about 85 per cent in 1970 to lcss than 10
 per cent today. Changes   in the competitive dynamics  of the upstream petroleum   in-
 dustry are, howeVCr,  less studied areas in the literature. In this article, we conduct a
 rcvicw of prcvious studies to answcr the question: Is the traditional busincss model of
 IOCs  still valid? We propose a theoretical framework and give a historical account of
 LOCs  erosion and Global  National Oil Companies  ((NO(   s) ascent to the top. Finally,
 we  explore an  array of possible future scenarios. We argue  that IOCs  are not in a
 position to regain the lost ground if they remain wedded  to their traditional business
 model.




 1. Introduction
 From the  1920s to the  1960s, seven major  International Oil Companies   (IOCs)  were
 almost the only market  players of the global petroleum  industry. The  IOCs' share  of
 oil and gas reserves, however, fell from about 85 per cent in 1970 to less than 10 per cent
today.' Now   there are legitimate concerns  over the business  model  of IOCs   and its
sustainability.2 Therefore, it is important to ask: Is the traditional business model of
IOCs  still valid? To address this question, one needs to know the fundamental premises
on which  this business model is built. Then it would be possible to see if these sources of
power  are still present and work in favour of IOCs and their business model.
  The  IOCs'  significant loss of access to the world's oil and gas resource base indicates
that the global upstream  petroleum   industry has undergone   a continuous,  yet silent,
change  in its competitive landscape. This change  has  grave consequences  in terms  of
countries' energy  security and  strategic influence. Surprisingly, there are a  limited
number   of studies on the competitive dynamics  of this industry, none of which  give a
definite answer to the above question.


   PhD candidate of Management at Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy. E-mail: s.bagheri@sssup.it; kambagheri@yahoo.com
** Assistant Professor of Management at Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy.
   A Inkpen and MH Moffett, The Global Oil & Gas Industry: Management, Strategy and Finance (PennWell Corporation 2011).
2  PR Dutto, R Guzmin and S Suresh, New Business Models for the International Oil Company (2010) Arthur D Little report,
   50-63. I Bozon, S Hall and S Oygard, 'What's Next for Big Oil?' (2005) 2 The McKinsey Quarterly, 95-105.


© The Authors 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the AIPN. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1093/jwelb/jwu036 Advance Access publication 12 January 2015


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