Book contents
- Local Content and Sustainable Development in Global Energy Markets
- Reviews
- Treaty Implementation for Sustainable Development
- Local Content and Sustainable Development in Global Energy Markets
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Editor
- Contributors
- Part I Introductory Context and Principles
- Part II Case Studies
- 6 Expressing Local Content through Black Economic Empowerment in the South African Petroleum Industry
- 7 Local Content Frameworks for Petroleum Industry Operations in the CEMAC Region: An Evaluation of Their Functionality, Sustainability and Normative Underpinnings
- 8 Local Content, Angolanização, and Sustainable Development in Angola
- 9 Local Content and the Sustainable Development of Oil and Gas Resources in Nigeria
- 10 Local Content Requirements and Treaty Implementation in Kenya’s Petroleum Sector
- 11 Sustainability and Local Content Requirements in Australian Oil and Gas Development: Has the Ship of Opportunity Sailed?
- 12 Local Content for Sustainable Development in Middle East and North Africa: Current Legal Approaches and Future Directions
- 13 Local Content and Sustainable Development in Norway
- 14 Local Content and Sustainable Development in Argentina
- 15 The Latin American Experience in Designing Local Content Policies in the Oil and Gas Sectors: Strengths, Limitations, and Future Perspectives
- 16 Local Content and Sustainable Development in Brazil
- 17 Industrial Policy and Local Content Rules in US Energy Policy
- 18 Oil and Gas Sector Local Content Decision Processes: Canadian Indigenous Participation
- Part III Lessons Learned and Future Directions
- Index
8 - Local Content, Angolanização, and Sustainable Development in Angola
from Part II - Case Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2021
- Local Content and Sustainable Development in Global Energy Markets
- Reviews
- Treaty Implementation for Sustainable Development
- Local Content and Sustainable Development in Global Energy Markets
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Editor
- Contributors
- Part I Introductory Context and Principles
- Part II Case Studies
- 6 Expressing Local Content through Black Economic Empowerment in the South African Petroleum Industry
- 7 Local Content Frameworks for Petroleum Industry Operations in the CEMAC Region: An Evaluation of Their Functionality, Sustainability and Normative Underpinnings
- 8 Local Content, Angolanização, and Sustainable Development in Angola
- 9 Local Content and the Sustainable Development of Oil and Gas Resources in Nigeria
- 10 Local Content Requirements and Treaty Implementation in Kenya’s Petroleum Sector
- 11 Sustainability and Local Content Requirements in Australian Oil and Gas Development: Has the Ship of Opportunity Sailed?
- 12 Local Content for Sustainable Development in Middle East and North Africa: Current Legal Approaches and Future Directions
- 13 Local Content and Sustainable Development in Norway
- 14 Local Content and Sustainable Development in Argentina
- 15 The Latin American Experience in Designing Local Content Policies in the Oil and Gas Sectors: Strengths, Limitations, and Future Perspectives
- 16 Local Content and Sustainable Development in Brazil
- 17 Industrial Policy and Local Content Rules in US Energy Policy
- 18 Oil and Gas Sector Local Content Decision Processes: Canadian Indigenous Participation
- Part III Lessons Learned and Future Directions
- Index
Summary
Angola has become one of the key cases for building both academic and popular understandings of the ‘resource curse’ hypothesis regarding what natural resources may mean for a developing country in Africa. After decades of underdevelopment and conflict in the face of massive resource wealth, local content policies represented a new approach to achieving petro-development. Although local content has been in place for decades, it has largely failed to increase the benefits accruing to the nation from its resource wealth, replace foreign-owned companies with indigenous ones, or replace expatriate staff with nationals. In the late 2000s and until the oil price shock of 2014, Angolanização was being pursued with new emphasis on existing policies within Sonangol and the Ministry of Petroleum and new cooperation between these bodies, the Angola Chamber of Commerce, and the international oil companies. Although government officials and industry insiders regularly forecasted a new law, stricter regulations and enforcement, and possibly even changes to the Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs), the country spurned the emerging trend in Africa by sticking to more informal mechanisms for local content development. In the end, the new local content push had some important successes, but has been unable to achieve significant employment or economic diversification.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021