Study
| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Global Petroleum Survey 2008
This report presents the results of the Fraser Institute's second annual survey on barriers to investment in the exploration and production of oil and gas. The rankings are based on the grading of jurisdictions by managers and executives in the petroleum industry.
A total of 396 respondents participated in this year's survey, generating enough data to rank 81 jurisdictions. This is a substantial increase from the 2007 survey, in which 54 jurisdictions were ranked.
In rating the jurisdictions, scores were assigned to each of 16 factors that affect investment decisions. The rankings were calculated based on the proportion of negative scores garnered by the jurisdictions for a specific factor. Thus, the greater the proportion of negative responses a jurisdiction drew, the worse its rating.
Six composite indices were developed to organize the results along common themes. An All-Inclusive Composite Index incorporates the rankings of all 16 factors and provides an overall assessment of each jurisdiction. Based on this index, Bolivia ranked as the jurisdiction with the worst barriers to investment. Ecuador ranked second worst, followed by Venezuela. All three countries also ranked as the three worst in 2007. Among the other jurisdictions judged to have the worst investment barriers were Chad, Iraq, Nigeria, Argentina, Sudan, and Russia.
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Gerry Angevine
Senior Fellow, Fraser InstituteGerry Angevine is Senior Fellow in the Fraser Institute's Centre for Energy and Natural Resource Studies. Mr. Angevine has beenPresident of AECL, an energy economics consulting firm, since 1999 and was a Managing Consultant with Navigant Consulting Ltd. from 2001 to 2004. He was President, CEO, and a Director of the Canadian Energy Research Institute from 1979 to 1999. Prior to that, he worked as an economist at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and the Bank of Canada. Mr. Angevine has undertaken domestic and international studies in the markets for natural gas (including trade, pipelines and storage), oil and oil products (including oil sands, refining and investment), and electricity (including deregulation, water rentals, and renewables). He has advised the Alberta Department of Energy and testified before the National Energy Board as an expert witness. He has A.M. and Ph.D. degrees in Economics from the University of Michigan, a M.A. Economics degree from Dalhousie University and a B.Comm. from Mount Allison University.… Read more Read Less… -
Graham Thomson
Graham Thomson served as a Policy Analyst with The Fraser Institute's Center for Energy Policy Studies until 2008. He has an MA in Economics from the University of Calgary.
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