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Oil and Natural Gas in Saudi Arabia. Amirah Farzan Bachelor degree in English Master in Educational Technology. My purpose .
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Oil and Natural Gas in Saudi Arabia Amirah Farzan Bachelor degree in English Master in Educational Technology
My purpose This presentation is about oil and natural gas in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. I choose my country to be my area of study because we have many things to share with the world. All the world know our business through our Oil. Saudi Arabia is one of the largest cities that produce oil. It involves in many organizations for oil and have the largest company of oil.
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia is located in the middle east with 870,000 sq. mile. The population is 16 million citizens, 9 million registered foreign, and 2 million illegal immigrants. The main language is Arabic and they use English as a second language. The country is ruled by a royal family Al-Saud. Saudi Arabia is Islamic and one of the gulf countries. The economic is based on oil and natural resources. It is one of the rich oil countries in the world.
History of Oil • The oil industry started in the late of 1970s and the beginning of 1980s. • King Abdul-Aziz and oil. • The natural oil development in the east of Saudi Arabia.
Official company for oil producer is Aramco. • One of the wealthy country. • Max Steinke and Saudi Oil.
MGS • The start of Master Gas System. • The system of MGS. • The establish of MGS. • The impact of the MGS to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. • Aramco and the MGS.
OPEC • It started in 1960. • The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries beginning. • Its members. • Controlled the oil price.
Aramco • The history of Aramco company in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. • Aramco and the United States and Saudi Arabia. • Its located and its employees in Saudi Arabia. • The mount of gas per day.
The gas cost according to Aramco. • The mount of gas per day. • Jim Crow system in Aramco.
Oil and Other Countries • Agreement with other countries. • Japan and Saudi Arabia agreements. • The United States and Saudi Arabia’s agreement of oil. • Saudi Arabia and its position with Iran and Kuwait for producing oil to other countries.
Oil Policy • Controlled by the royal family. • The need for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the other countries needs. • The price of oil depends on political and economic forces.
Schools • King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals. • King Abdullah Economic City. • International schools.
Society • Citizens will have many options for jobs. • Introduce them to different cultures.
Services in Aramco compounds. • The education curriculum in Aramco schools. • Hiring process. • Salaries for employees.
Saudi Arabia in the future • Modern education and health system. • Improve the economy from other fields rather than oil. • Established many international schools and university.
Give citizens scholarship to study inside and outside the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. • Scholarship for both male and female with different rules.
Aramco in the future • New projects for the next five years. • New investment in Indonesia and China. • The company expend its factory. • The Pipelines.
References • Albqami, R. M., & Mathis, F. (2012). Gas development in Saudi Arabia assessing the short-term, demand-side effects. OPEC Energy Review, 36(1), 55-86. doi:10.1111/j.1753-0237.2011.00202.x • Al-Blaries, W. (2012). Flaring under control. TCE: The Chemical Engineer, (852), 44-48. • Berkowitz, A. (2009). OIL CHANGE: NEW ENERGY SECURITY STRATEGY IN SAUDI ARABIA. Kennedy School Review, 954-55. • Mehrara, M. (2007). Energy-GDP relationship for oil-exporting countries: Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. OPEC Review: Energy Economics & Related Issues, 31(1), 1-16. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0076.2007.00173.x • Pierce, J. J. (2012). Oil and the House of Saud: Analysis of Saudi Arabian Oil Policy. DOMES: Digest Of Middle East Studies, 21(1), 89-107. doi:10.1111/j.1949-3606.2012.00128.x • Penn, M. (2011). The Vicissitudes of Japan-Saudi Relations. Comparative Islamic Studies, 7(1/2), 295-311. doi:10.1558/cis.v7i1-2.295
SaudiAramco. (2010). Middle East, (412), 49. • Shadow overAramco. (1974). Time, 103(9), 30. • Venn, F. (2008). Exceptionalism Abroad: ARAMCO in Comparative Perspective. Diplomatic History, 32(5), 1001-1004. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2008.00741.x • https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/sa.html • http://www.kingabdullahcity.com/about/kaec-opportunities • http://www.kfupm.edu.sa/SitePages/en/about_kfupm.aspx • http://www.aramcoservices.com/Home.aspx • http://jobsataramco.eu/ • http://www.saudiembassy.net/about/country-information/ • http://www.arabianbusiness.com/saudi-aramco-plans-200bn-investment-441105.html • http://www.thenational.ae/business/energy/saudi-aramco-plans-125-billion-spending-spree