SEVENSISTERS2
SEVENSISTERS2
SEVENSISTERS2
Ivan Yates
1926-1975
Cha
Copyright© 1975 by Anthony Sampson
ISBN 034021323 X
66 THE SEVEN SISTERS
bitions, and his own, extended he became again rootless and un-
stable, changing houses, wives and political views until he ended
up living in Germany, a committed Nazi.
Shell was an amazing mixture of bureaucracy and high gambling.
Its managers were a solid respectable elite, a new breed of care-
fully selected para-diplomats; as early as 1910 Shell had helped to
set up the Cambridge University Appointments Board, to be sure
of recruiting the cream of graduates, competing with the Foreign
Office and civil service for brains. Yet at the top of this hierarchy
was a tycoon of explosive Unpredictability, gambling with oilfields,
paying himself a million dollars a year.
Deterding and Teagle fascinated each other. The acquaintance
began at a famous encounter in 1907 when Deterding had just
taken over the merged Royal Dutch Shell and came to see Standard
Oil in New York to try to persuade them to abandon their price-
• cutting wars. Deterding realised that price-cutting was not true
competition at all but 'throat-cutting', and he tried to persuade the
directors.of Standard including Archbold and young Teagle to
agree to stable prices. Deterding's precept inherited from his old
boss Kessler was the Dutch proverb Eendracht maakt macht-
co-operation gives power-and he was always searching for a
global agreement or cartel. Deterding put his case but without
success, for Archbold was determined on price-wars, to extend
Standard Oil's power. Teagle, however, was much more im-
pressed by Deterding's arguments, and Deterding thought Teagle
a 'brilliant young man'. 7 From then on, the two budding tycoons
eyed each other with mutual and wary respect.
Shell had always been forced to search out oil abroad, and
Deterding was prepared to take large gambles. In 1908 he bought
oilfields in Egypt, which for a short time produced handsomely.
He began exploring in Sarawak and in 1910 started new dealings
with Russia, which led to him buying the Russian Ural-Caspian
oilfields. In the next years he pulled off two of.his biggest coups,
in countries which Exxon had avoided. In Mexico he bought the
oilfields belonging to Lord Cowdray (see page 100), which soon
pushed up Shell's total production. In Venezuela he bought the
fields which still provide a sixth of Shell's supplies. At the same
time he was starting to challenge the Americans on their home
ground, by buying oilfields in California. Soon the Shell gasoline
signs-the 'yellow peril' it was then called- were beginning to
shoot up across America to the growing alarm ofTeagie and Exxon.
92 THE SEVEN SISTERS
East Texan oilfield. Dad Joiner himself suffered the usual pioneer's
fate: eventually he retired in penury to a small house in Dallas, in
Mockingbird Lane. The man who bought his land, H. L. Hunt,
grew to be a billionaire, the richest of all the Texans.
The East Texas boom, coming at a time of both depression and
overproduction, produced a new glut of oil, when it was least of all
welcome to the big companies, and it looked like a return to the
wild old days of individualism before the Big Hand of Rockefeller
reached out. Drillers rushed to get up the oil before their neigh-
bours, thus quickly reducing the pressure and potential of the oil-
fields. The problem of control was made harder by the American
'rule of capture' by which oil was regarded in legal terms like a
wild animal-who ever caught it first, could keep it. Prices fell
down to 10 cents a barrel, and gas-stations competed with free
chickens to lure customers.IS
Eventually the chaos and anarchy called for intervention-not
this time by a company, but by the State: in the end the Governors
of Texas and Oklahoma called in the national guard to close down
oilfields, and enforced a system of rationing, by which the demand
in anyone month was shared among oil producers by a state body
called the Texas Railroad Commission. It was difficult to enforce
and many producers secretly sent oil out of the state, where it
could be sold freely, until a 'Hot Oil Act' was passed in 1935. But
remarkably, Texas did succeed in controlling output, with the
reluctant support of the producers; for they now realised that it
was the only way to keep up prices. With the state's help, they
achieved what the Pennsylvania producers never did. The imple-
mentation of 'pro-rationing', as it was awkwardly called, was a
milestone in the industry, and its importance was not unnoticed in
the following' years by the shrewder men in producing countries
abroad: the Venezuelans actually took the precaution of hiring a
man from the Texas Railroad Commission to advise them. The
.restricting of oil from Texas, the frontier of free enterprise, was a
necessary concomitant of any global agreement to maintain prices.
Thirty years later, OPEC was to look back to Texas as their
model for controlling Middle East production.
'As Is' was never completely achieved; it was impossible to
bring into line all smaller cempanies, and Russian oil was always
bubbling up in odd places. But the Big Three, with local allies,
could often make deals in individual countries. One of the most
effective was Britain, where Shell and BP collaborated with Exxon
THE CARVE-UP 93
to fix prices, and also formed a joint British marketing company
called Shell-Mex BP (which remained together until the mid-
seventies, when it was dissolved after long and painful negotiations).
Another was in Sweden, where the market was carved up between
Exxon, Shell, BP and Texaco and two other companies. They
met each week in the Shell offices in Stockholm to ensure that no
company undercut another-which was not fully revealed until
investigated by a Swedish parliamentary committee in 1947.16
The big companies held successive meetings in the early
'thirties to try to enforce the cartel, and in I932 six of the seven
sisters met to adopt more flexible quotas. The last and most
important meeting was in April 1934, when Exxon, Shell and BP
met secretly in London to reformulate the Achnacarry Agree-
ment. Together they produced a Draft Memorandum of Principles,
to operate throughout the world except where the law forbade it,
in the United States. The Memorandum laid down rules for re-
stricting competition and sharing profits from outsiders, including
a system of penalties to be enforced by a special 'London Com-
mittee' (London, then as later, was the natural venue for cartel
discussions). This agreement was ended, according to Exxon's
later evidence, in early 1938; but in Sweden at least, from the
evidence uncovered it continued through the war.
Most of the world's oil resources were in the hands of the big
companies, and the agreements. succeeded in their main object
of maintaining stable prices at the American levels, and of limiting
competition inside each country. The monopoly of Rockefeller had
evolved, with apparent inevitability, into a global cartel.
But it is also argued that Texaco is the most honest and the
least self-deceiving of the companies, that its parsimony simply
shows responsibility to its shareholders. It has never pretended to
be anything more than it is: a concern for making money, as
quickly as possible, not a benevolent institution for world peace.
If the politicians want that, is that not the government's responsi-
bility? The case of Texaco raises in its extreme form, the question
which runs through this book; what do we really expect oil com-
panies to be?
SHELL