Robert Mabro Explained

Robert Emile Mabro
Birth Date:26 December 1934
Death Date:[1] [2]
Death Place:Crete, Greece
Spouse:Judy
Children:Two daughters, Nevine & Nyla
Education:BSc Engineering, Alexandria University, 1956
MSc Economics, University of London, 1966
Main Interests:Oil and energy policy
Workplaces:St Antony's College, Oxford
Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
Awards:CBE, 1995[3]
Order of the Aztec Eagle, 1997
Order of Francisco de Miranda, 2000
Officier des Palmes Académiques, 2001

Robert Emile Mabro (26 December 1934 – 2 August 2016) was an academic who specialised in oil and energy issues. He founded the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, and in the late 1990s brokered a historic production cut between OPEC and its rivals in the wake of a slump in the price of oil.

Early life and education

Mabro was born in Alexandria, Egypt, in December 1934, the son of Greek Orthodox parents who had migrated from Tripoli, Lebanon in the 1860s.[4] He graduated with a BSc in Engineering from Alexandria University in 1956, after which he worked as a civil engineer in Egypt for a number of years.[5] In 1960 he joined a Jesuit seminary near Paris and spent the next four years studying philosophy; he then went to London to study economics as a post-graduate student at the School of Oriental & African Studies. He took his MSc in 1966, and then became a researcher in economics at SOAS, where he met Judy, whom he married in 1967.

Career

In 1971, Mabro was made a Fellow of St Antony's College, Oxford. Throughout the 1970s, Mabro's interest in oil- and energy-related matters grew, and he wrote his first monograph on the subject - "Oil Producers and Consumers: Conflict or Cooperation" - in 1974. He founded the Oxford Energy Policy Club in 1976; the club continues to meet biannually and gives oil industry executives and senior government officials from around the world the opportunity to hold informal, off-the-record talks. He set up the Oxford Energy Seminar, which has been held annually since 1979 and is widely recognised as an important international forum on energy. In 1982, Mabro founded the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, an educational charity devoted to researching the economics, politics and impact on international relations of oil, gas and other energies. He served as the institute's Director until 2003, and was made its Honorary President in 2006.In the 1995 New Year Honours Mabro was appointed a CBE.[6] He was elected a Fellow of St Catherine's College, Oxford in 2006. He is widely held in libraries worldwide.[7] He died on Crete, Greece, on 2 August 2016.

1997 oil production cut

In the wake of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, oil prices plunged sharply to below $10 a barrel, which had significant negative effects on the economies of crude oil producers around the world. However, a history of distrust and a desire to protect their own market share was preventing any cooperation to counter the price fall amongst the nations affected. In early 1998, following a meeting in Oxford with Adrian Lajous, the head of Mexico's state-owned oil company Pemex, Mabro held a series of meetings and phone calls in which he acted as an intermediary between officials from Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, and their Mexican rivals.[8] This initiative led to joint production cuts in late 1998 and early 1999, the effect of which was that by mid-2000 the price of crude oil had recovered to more than $30 a barrel. Lajous later recalled, "Robert Mabro played a key, if unaccredited, role in the secret negotiations that brought together these three countries." Mabro himself later suggested that OPEC should change its logo to a tea-bag “because it only works in hot water.”

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Javier Blas. Grant Smith. Robert Mabro, Oil Guru Who Brokered OPEC Peace Deal, Dies at 81. Bloomberg. 25 August 2016.
  2. Web site: Robert Mabro, 1934-2016. St Catherine's College Oxford. 25 August 2016. 14 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181014205036/https://www.stcatz.ox.ac.uk/robertmabro1934-2016. dead.
  3. Web site: OPEC saddened at news of Robert Mabro’s passing away. Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. 25 August 2016.
  4. Web site: Saad. Reem. On the life of the late Robert Mabro (1934-2016). Mada Masr. 25 August 2016.
  5. Book: Who's Who in the Arab World 2007-2008. 2007. Publitec Publications. Beirut. 978-3-598-07735-7. 507.
  6. News: THE NEW YEAR HONOURS: The Prime Minister's List. 25 August 2016. The Independent. 30 December 1995.
  7. Web site: Mabro, Robert . worldcat.org . August 26, 2016.
  8. News: Raval. Anjli. Robert Mabro, energy expert, 1934-2016. 25 August 2016. Financial Times. 7 August 2016.