The Global Petroleumscape of the Rotterdam–The Hague Area as a Model for Further Research
C.M. Hein (TU Delft - History, Form & Aesthetics)
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Abstract
The seemingly endless availability of energy of the twentieth century resulted in extensive sprawl, as people left cities for the suburbs and as companies expanded their production lines around the world. Since this time, shipping and other cheap forms of mobility have led to increasingly spread-out settlement and energy distribution patterns. The emergence of global petroleum networks between producers and consumers around the world has played a signicant role in the design and development of shipping, transportation, the urbanisation of the sea and in the construction of new land-side structures. Moreover, the use of petroleum as fuel for the military since the early twentieth century has helped drive the growth of maritime empires, such as Britain’s control of Iranian petroleum. For some years petroleum has oated on oil, allowing ports, cities and regions of the world to thrive on that very mixture.