Ecuador’s president, Rafael Correa, has recently announced that he is prepared to introduce legislation that would change the status of private and foreign oil firms and turn them into service providers. The change would mean the takeover of these companies’ assets and greater revenue for the government. Correa’s move reflects broader pressures on his government and trends on the wider regional oil market – a subject that was covered in a recent publication by the LSE Ideas Centre
Global public policy in 2023 is dominated by two interrelated challenges: the climate crisis and the...
With increasing production and reserves of oil and natural gas to South America has become a major e...
This paper retraces the history of the relationships between indigenous people and the oil industry ...
Ecuador’s president, Rafael Correa, has recently announced that he is prepared to introduce legislat...
The following research sheds light on explanatory causes behind the policy decision of an oil rich s...
In the days immediately after his party\u27s overwhelming win in an election to name members of an a...
In 2010, Chinese oil companies spent more than $15 billion on upstream deals in Latin America, inclu...
China recently announced several loans worth billions of dollars to Ecuador and Venezuela—to be paid...
Oil and mineral export-dependency has been a long-standing issue for several countries, especially d...
In 1972, oil was first produced in the Ecuadorian Amazon region of el Oriente. This region, sparsely...
Ecuador's revenue from oil product exports rose 87 percent between January and September to $860 mi...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.China's international behaviou...
The World Oil Industry (WOI) developed through two types of economic organization, built up around v...
The government of the PRC has moved its concern to safeguard its oil security to its development pol...
El presente Estudio de Caso tiene como objetivo analizar en qué medida las dinámicas comerciales de ...
Global public policy in 2023 is dominated by two interrelated challenges: the climate crisis and the...
With increasing production and reserves of oil and natural gas to South America has become a major e...
This paper retraces the history of the relationships between indigenous people and the oil industry ...
Ecuador’s president, Rafael Correa, has recently announced that he is prepared to introduce legislat...
The following research sheds light on explanatory causes behind the policy decision of an oil rich s...
In the days immediately after his party\u27s overwhelming win in an election to name members of an a...
In 2010, Chinese oil companies spent more than $15 billion on upstream deals in Latin America, inclu...
China recently announced several loans worth billions of dollars to Ecuador and Venezuela—to be paid...
Oil and mineral export-dependency has been a long-standing issue for several countries, especially d...
In 1972, oil was first produced in the Ecuadorian Amazon region of el Oriente. This region, sparsely...
Ecuador's revenue from oil product exports rose 87 percent between January and September to $860 mi...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.China's international behaviou...
The World Oil Industry (WOI) developed through two types of economic organization, built up around v...
The government of the PRC has moved its concern to safeguard its oil security to its development pol...
El presente Estudio de Caso tiene como objetivo analizar en qué medida las dinámicas comerciales de ...
Global public policy in 2023 is dominated by two interrelated challenges: the climate crisis and the...
With increasing production and reserves of oil and natural gas to South America has become a major e...
This paper retraces the history of the relationships between indigenous people and the oil industry ...