San Remo Oil Agreement Explained

The San Remo Oil Agreement was an agreement between Britain and France signed at the San Remo conference on 24 April 1920.[1] As a result of the agreement, the French Compagnie Française de Petroles (CFP)acquired a 25% share in the Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC). The other shareholders were the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (APOC) with 47.5%, the Anglo Saxon Petroleum Co 22.5% and the remaining 5% Calouste Gulbenkian.[2]

Background

On 19 March 1914, the British and German governments had signed an agreement whereby the interest of National Bank of Turkey in TPC was transferred to APOC. The newly reconstituted TPC then applied for a concession for Mesopotamian oil which was granted subject to various conditions at which point World War I intervened. In December 1918, the British expropriated the 25% share of Deutsche Bank in TPC.[3]

It was this latter share that was ultimately to be given to the French under the San Remo oil agreement. There were prior abortive attempts at an agreement, preliminary and then final version of the Long-Bérenger Agreement,[4] then the Greenwood-Bérenger Agreement before the final San Remo version. All versions can be seen at.[4] The agreement delimited the oil interests in Russia and Romania, British (British Mandate of Mesopotamia) and French colonies. The initial agreement takes the names of the British petroleum minister, Sir Walter Long, and the French petroleum minister, Henri Bérenger, who negotiated the agreement.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1920 League of Nations Treaty Series . WorldLII .
  2. Book: Zedalis, Rex J.. The Legal Dimensions of Oil and Gas in Iraq: Current Reality and Future Prospects. limited. 2009. Cambridge University Press. 264. 9780521766616 .
  3. Earle, Edward Meade 1924 The Turkish Petroleum Company:A Study in Oleaginous Diplomacy Political Science Quarterly, vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 265-279
  4. Marian Kent 1976 Oil & Empire:British Policy and Mesopotamian Oil 1900-1920 Macmillan Press
  5. G. Gareth Jones (1977). The British Government and the Oil Companies 1912–1924: the Search for an Oil Policy. The Historical Journal, 20, pp 647-672doi:10.1017/S0018246X00011286