I was in Azerbaijan at 1997. What a weird place it was. Oil oozing out of the ground, guys scooping it up and putting it DIRECTLY into their Lada 2 stroke cars. A half collapsing airport, huge holes in the runway, ak47 guards. An old lady with cataracts with a massive trash bag full of money begging. Men in an empty plateau near an old Soviet Chorine factory selling the scraps and piles of salvaged chlorine. electric toy ride on trucks and cars in the squares and parks…
Yes Az in the 90s was still in it's very early days of development. The economy of the country has been literally doubling in size every few years. YoY GDP growth has been in double digits for decades now. There's still LOTS to overcome but regionally it is far ahead than any of it's neighbors.
@@elmafias6141 Wtf was it? Closest I seen was a Trabant but they were from Eastern Germany. Maybe they were pouring it directly into the engine. My memory is foggy, it was a long time ago 😂
@@youtubeisproCCP I mean, 2 Stroke petrol cars still run on refined petrol, so you can’t just put crude oil and run them. If it was 2 stroke diesel engines there may be a possibility to use crude oil, but these engines are only used in industrial applications. All cars from Soviet countries used petrol, not diesel to run. From a Trabant to a Volga. Maybe with a light oil like Azerbaijani oil and a sturdy diesel automotive engine you could somehow run on crude oil. Perhaps they made a homemade distillation of the crude oil that they can extract low quality petrol or diesel. Is not necessary to have a huge refinery to produce petrol, and Ladas were tuned to run on very low quality gas. Another crazy possibility is that they put 2 stroke diesel engines from tractors in the car. Or maybe is just that Ladas work fine with Azerbaijani oil. ¿Who knows? Saludos!
Just saw someone criticizing, that the videos lack animations and such kind of things. Actually I pretty much like the simplicity how the videos are made. It just ppredisposes you for the essence of the video. Cheap animations don't make the content better. But before all it's amazing how much work and research is behind these essays. I very rarely write any comments, but felt obliged to say that I appreciate how everithing is done. Keep it up withe the good work. Nikola from Sofia BG
I almost exclusively listen to this channel, so I'm not too interested in the visuals. Having said that, when I do watch this channel I do enjoy the visual style. Don't change a thing!
The entire evacuation of soviet industry to the east is a fascinating topic that really should be covered more by the relevant youtube channels, they managed to pack entire factories and their workers onto trains, transport them over thousands of kilometers and got them back into operation within just a few months... if this hadn't succeeded it's entirely possible that world war 2 would have ended very differently.
this channel never fails to be infinitely interesting... this topic is of a kind which other channels will pass without hesitation as "dry" and "uninteresting". But, not Asianometry.
Mr. Asianometry, perhaps this might be an interesting subject for you to do a video on: China had a chronic problem with iodine deficiency to the point that 25% of Chinese people had a goitre, and 80% of the population suffering from some form of illness due to deficiency. In the Eighties, Australia sent experts across and lobbied the CCP to add iodine to their salt, thereby saving the lives of millions. This was part of a broader programme by the Australian government to 're-orient' itself towards Asia and engage with China. The same Prime Minister who lead the campaign was also the PM when the Tiananmen Square massacre happened. His name was Bob Hawke (he also held the world record for drinking a yard glass of beer the fastest - 11 seconds I believe) and he granted all Chinese students in Australia citizenship as he believed they would be at risk if they were to return to China, as they knew too much.
@@janeblogs324 Their population decline means one child policy would have been scrapped. A China with less population would have been prosperous with more resources for less people and would have industrialised faster than irl China.
Easily one of the best channels on TH-cam. Great work man. I work in the semiconductor industry and I still learn a lot from those videos you do. Stuff like this is really impressive though because shows your breadth. Keep at it
regarding liftwaffe strategic attacks on oil fields - there were couple of extensive Volga mining campaigns air-dropped mines are a thing, many were non-contact ones and had delay in number of ship to make trawlers pass and kill tankers extensive spotter network was created to track mine drops
Seriously flexing your research again John! This has to be an episode that you must be extremely proud of. From my understanding of history it was always the oil, not Moscow that was the reason for the absurd Barbarossa. It has been a while so I can't cite the historian that is best for that detail. This episode could have been made three times longer, such was the whirlwind. _Furiously Googles Scissors Crisis_
"flexing your research again"? Where is Witold Zglenicki part in this video? You know, the Polish guy that invented and build first oil platform in the world and he did it in... Baku. And his nickname is Polish Noble as he sponsored a foundation for the development of Polish culture and science. There is also another Polish name Ignacy Łukasiewicz the guy that started the whole modern oil industry but he was from part of Poland occupied by Austro-Hungarian Empire but he was also not the gready part and was sharing his know-how all over the world(Rockefeller most likely got his know-how from him). He build first in the world modern oil rafinery and one of his first oil wells is operational and pumping oil to this day...
@@Bialy_1 There are only a few of us on John's channel. He always delivers brilliant, well researched stuff. Usually about semiconductors. I am always grateful for his work, even though I am not a Patreon person due to heating bills and such like. I do have time for clicking the like button and hopefully a positive comment that is more than just a data point of 'engagement' for the algorithm. Hopefully this prompts insightful comments such as yours! Who knew? I for one will be able to follow your cues and learn a little more, plus, I can now jokingly blame the Poles rather than the Americans for the ravishing the planet has received thanks to global warming!!! I like it how this world is interconnected and how it always has been. I like the unlikely alliances and the improbable happenstances that have made the story that much richer. Human ingenuity and creativity knows no ends. Anyways, I thought John did a fab job considering that 'big oil' is not his area of expertise. I commend him for an original take on contemporary events.
"In 1859, when Edwin Drake and Wiliam Smith took their first steps in the oil industry and made the first drilling in Pennsylvania in the United States, the Łukasiewicz mine in Bóbrka already employed over 100 workers and achieved a turnover of 20,000 Rhenish zlotys a year. In the field of petrochemistry, Łukasiewicz was a respected authority of international fame. Entrepreneurs from Germany, Romania and the United States traveled to his mine, where they learned the secrets of his knowledge. There is a legend related to one of the visits that Americans paid to Łukasiewicz. The Polish inventor showed the Americans all the secrets of his company, the entire process from extraction to distillation. The Americans allegedly wanted to pay him for it at the time, but Łukasiewicz refused. The American who visited Łukasiewicz's enterprise with his associates was supposed to be ... John Rockefeller himself. The American entrepreneur was to call the Pole a "madman" - does he have valuable knowledge and share it for next to nothing? In 1883, a year after the death of Ignacy Łukasiewicz, 51,000 tons of crude oil were produced in the Polish Lands annually. At that time, Poland was the third oil power in the world, after the United States and Russia."
@@БородаЧ-у6х that's weird. It looks like this is the only comment you have ever made in your 2 years on you tube. I wonder what your title translates as in English.
There are some more details of the early period. 1) Pipelines in Russia were not introduced by Nobel brothers. It's Mendeleev's research and calculations, following by his letters to the govenment. First decades of the Nobel brothers leadership in oil production were not genuinely due to the technology improvements, it was only a good amount of money spent on many wild and known oil fields. The way for oil mining and transportation by Nobels was just the same as it was in many decades - hand labour or animal traction, later they introduced carriages amd so on. Nobels didn't encounter transportation problems, it was just a matter of the cost of oil for people and industry - being a wealthy leader like Nobels in such a small business mainly based on primitive technology and few oil fields was quite easy. However, Mendeleev's calculations for profit and economy on the pipeline can be traced as a separate and very detailed chapter in the published full set of his works. He was in close touch with the govenment ministers and I am not sure, but it seems that somehow he had a proposal about taxes for oil extraction. 2) Despite many economical projects in Mendeleev's research, it was his famous quote as a chemist, that every Russian heard at school: "Oil is not a fuel, instead you can burn bank assignations in the stove" (meaning, that it is more logical to burn money, in terms of value). Of course, he was in tough relations with Nobel brothers and both sides had their patrons in the government. No doubt he wouldn't have been awarded the Nobel prize for his research in chemistry 🥲.
No need to point that the video is lacking information about a very important figure? a Polish geologist and oil industry pionier Witold Zglenicki? ->not only an explorer of rich oil pools in the Caucasus but also a pioneer of oil extracting from the bottom of the sea. He directed the early development of the oil industry of the port of Baku in Russian Azerbaijan. He also sponsored a foundation for the development of Polish culture and science which brought him the reputation as the "Polish Nobel".
"that every Russian heard at school: "Oil is not a fuel, instead you can burn bank assignations in the stove" (meaning, that it is more logical to burn money, in terms of value)."->Yes, he was no Ignacy Łukasiewicz -> guy that singlehandly invented the modern oil industry ->discovery of how to distill kerosene from seep oil, the invention of the modern kerosene lamp (1853), the introduction of the first modern street lamp in Europe (1853), construction of the world's first modern oil well (1854), 1856 the world's first modern oil refinery...
@@Bialy_1wow😳😳 Wow wow wow...these are important information...hey men,thank you very much...indeed poland very interesting country...are you polish? Which part of poland? l ❤ poland...
@@aakhthuu Dissolution of the USSR is not imaginable without it, being headless since late '50s, with different kinds of scum occupying more and more chairs. You confused stars, reflected in the surface of a pond with sky.
I can’t describe how refreshing it is to watch a video on oil without being preached to about global warming. Literally everyone else just talks about “they’re so evil because [insert your pet peeve here]” but you simply present what happened and let us come up with out own conclusions about what’s good and what’s bad. That presentation style is why I keep coming back here again and again. Keep up the great work!!
All the technology we take for granted was only possible because of the oil industry. Without it we would be living in huts and still having 4/5 of our children dying.
I want more! What about the energy crisis on the 1970s and the later downfall of the Soviet Union? What about the post-Soviet Russian industry? Great Video!
John Astell is writing an amazing monograph on Soviet energy during the Great Patriotic War (WWII), including oil. I've been lucky to read a draft and I'm looking forward to see it published.
The author of the channel reads a lot and this makes his view of things impartial and clear. This was the generation before the Internet era. I read comments full of ignorance and uncontrolled emotions. Only a few people will be able to appreciate your channel.
John remaining the powerhouse he is, needing less then 15 seconds to ask people to sub and like and filling the rest of the vid with a hyperdense and illustrated narration of the history of some technological development like always. Keep at it! So much infos, so little bullshit.
Man, just when I thought you’ve covered it all, you come up with another amazing topic like this!!! Our minds love to learn about all the same kinds of things 🤩🤩🤩 Sometimes it feels like this channel was made just for me 🥰
One of my Ancestors was in Baku in the oil business at that time, when the revolution was spreading there, he got some sort of emergency diplomatic order to leave the country, that was that
Another very interesting fact is that Stalin himself actually got his start in the Oil Industry. He gave speeches and radicalized people during the height of the tsarist/company-run age of Baku.
Would be very interested to learn more about European and American industrial supervision in early Soviet Industrialisation. I'm certain it would make a great video with a few very interesting characters, politics and scandal. Love you and your work!
In the 1930s the great majority of intercity steam locomotives ran on coal, though some began shifting to diesel. This was true for UK, US, Germany, USSR, France, Japan, etc. Intracity trains, especially passenger ones, usually ran on electricity from thermal power plants (often coal-fueled) and hydroelectric, to reduce smoke emission in cities and subways. Conversion to diesel-electric is a post-WWII phenomenon. Though some navies began converting to oil in the early 1900s, the merchant fleet lagged behind. Even Titanic, the world's premier ocean liner, was coal-fired. This was true too for the US; its largest merchant line Sea-Land Service was using coal in the 1970s. One of the earliest fuel-fired merchant ships was a Russian one that sailed the Caspian Sea in the 1880s - oil was more plentiful there than coal. Since the 1960s, heavy fuel oil has been the king of marine fuels. Prior to that it was coal. Oil overtook coal to become the world's largest energy source in 1964. (I think some people make the mistake of thinking because oil today is so prevalent and vital it's been so since the early 1900s. This is not the case.) Re USSR oil production, it was the world's second largest producer in the mid 1930s. The completion of the first five-year plan and the start of the second one saw its domestic need for oil increase greatly. However, the world's number oil exporter during this era was Venezuela and not the #1 producer USA. American demand for oil was so great it was importing oil from Mexico in the '20s and Venezuela in the '30s until costly tariffs were applied. Venezuela used only about 7% of its domestic crude production, its crude was cheap to refine, and the gov't lightly taxed it, which made its oil the amongst the world's cheapest. BTW, of Germany's reserves on the eve of Barbarossa, about 20 million barrels had been captured in the low countries and France. I don't know why you claim Romania being one of Germany's largest suppliers of oil was 'unexpected'. Romania was one of Europe's largest producers and important supplier to France until the pipeline from Iraq to Tripoli, Lebanon was completed. Other European crude suppliers to Germany were Austria, Hungary, and Poland. Pre-War Germany was constrained by its lack of foreign exchange, so it endeavoured to conduct barter trade, such as with Mexico, by exchanging German industrial manufactures for oil. It also introduced a special trade currency called the Aski mark its used to pay for imports and that could only be used to purchase German-made goods by its trade partners. Such trade formed the bulk of Germany's imports and exports as it shifted trade to Central and Eastern Europe in the lead up to the War.
Yeah, we shouldn't underestimate how much forcibly shipping millions of people hither and yon to barely survivable conditions reduced their carbon footprint.
If the West produces energy it produces pollution. If you buy it from someone else the amount you pollute goes way down. Your WEF buddies stop teasing your at Davos
@@westrim They got two massive nuclear accidents and if you watch the map where they made nuclear tests you will be surprised how much of its own territory they were ready to polute with this crap...
Another possible cool video would be the Soviet plan to divert some of their Major arctic rivers the Ob and Irtysh to the Aral sea. Would create some crazy economic growth and canals. Even a possible canal from the Aral to the Caspian. Was a big debate in the Mid-80s world wide on the Potential and Consequences of diversion. There is also a potential plan in more modern times for the same thing but from the Far East Lena river to China.
@@JPJ432 Russian history...🤣 They are so butthurt about Poland that we are the only country that conquered them that they are whitewashing "Russian history" from Polish influence. The guy that build first in the world oil platform did it in Baku and he is called Polish Noble for using his wealth earned in Baku for promotion of science and somehow the single most important name conected to the Baku oil industry is not mentioned in this video... From english wikipedia: "Witold Zglenicki was not only an explorer of rich oil pools in the Caucasus but also a pioneer of oil extracting from the bottom of the sea. He directed the early development of the oil industry of the port of Baku in Russian Azerbaijan."
@@Bialy_1 Oh good god a Polish tribal ultranationalist spouting Polished(ha) history full of Polish propaganda that didn't actually happen. Please go back to your echo chamber.
This is pretty much the doctrine of the United States basically. As per George Kennan's declassified State Department foreign policy strategy documentation (Policy Planning Study 23 written in 1948) - "We have about 50% of the world's wealth but only 6.3% of its population....In this situation, we cannot fail to be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us this position of disparity....To do so, we will have to dispense with all sentimentality and daydreaming: and our attention will have to be concentrated everywhere on our immediate national objectives....We should cease to talk about vague and unreal objectives such as human rights, the raising of the living standards, and democratizations. teh day is not far off when we are going to have to deal in straight power concepts. The less we are then hampered by idealistic slogans the better." I copied the text verbatim. And that's exactly what we've done. If you look at America's track record in the 20th century it is horrific. We killed one third of Korean population because La May was an insane devotee to the Kennan doctrine of containment. But you know what, even George Kennan spoke out against Nato expansion eastward. He came out of retirement even to do it. The irony would be hilarious if the situation wasn't so dire. I should also add that the Russians were devastated on the eastern front. Suffering some 30 million casualties at the hands of the Nazis. The mighty German 4th, 9th, 13th armies weren't defeated by the Allies. They were defeated by the Russians. It was the Russians that won the war basically. By the time the Allies landed at Normandy they were fighting Hitler's youth. Hardly the cream of the Nazi crop. Moreover, if you recall the Battle of the Bocage even these second tier Nazi divisions proved superior tacticians for the allies. And look at how we've treated them for their efforts after the war. Germany was treated better FFS. Your comment is staggeringly ignorant mate. Stupidity supreme. It isn't Russia that has 1000 military bases around the world.
@@Screaming-Trees lmaoo losing a lot of men = doing the lion share of the work. Bro the US provided a lot of armor, supplies and food to the Russians that helped them make that comeback and they still almost collapsed if it was not for the winter and hitler shooting himself in the foot.
@@philipmolina1114 Yeah 30 million casualties is "lmaoo" funny mate. The US did not provide a "lot of armour or supplies". That's utter nonsense. What school did you go to? There is a well established and respected consensus among historians about production of war materiel during this period. Avail yourself of these studies. You ever hear of a T34 tank? It was only considered one of the best tanks of the WW2 period. The Soviets weren't the recipients of any kind of aid. They had to do it on their own. And again, every historian agrees that it was the Soviet's ability to produce staggering amounts of war materiel that played a crucial role in their overcoming the Nazis. But if you fast forward to today we have idiots like yourself "lmaoo" at the thought of 30 million dead. If it weren't for the Soviets you'd be speaking deutsch right now. If the Soviets didn't defeat the 4th, 5th, 6th, 9th, 13th armies on the eastern front the allies would have been faced with those armies on the western front. That would have been a completely different prospect. A lot ignorant ingrates like yourself though can't bring yourself to recognize a contribution so massive and so crucial even in spite of all historians agreeing on this.
Germans did take some soviet oil fields while executing case blue by capturing Maikop, but the soviets destroyed the oil fields while retreating and the germans could never bring them back to their previous levels of production nor could transport enough from it to justify their offensive.
They couldn't make the good stuff. That high octane aviation fuel. US Lend-Lease sent aviation fuel equivalent to 57 percent of what the Soviet Union itself produced. Much of the American fuel was added to lower-grade Soviet fuel to produce the high-octane fuel needed by military aircraft.
Really hope there is a follow on video which extrapolates this conclusion section and looks at the late Soviet and Post Soviet Russian Federation Oil AND Gas Industry.... especially the role drop in oil prices played in the fall of the USSR
I enjoy your contents, very informative, I notice clear bias, pro-Taiwan, anti-China, anti-Korea, anti-Japan, but that's ok, the quality of your contents make it worthwhile, I still enjoy your channel
You should do a video on the natural gas of Russia and how The West refused to help Russia with the technology to store and transport LNG. The Russians eventually figured it out on their own.
Their technology its on them whom they share it with. Good on the Russians for figuring it out themselves, but most likely its industrial espionage that did the heavy lifting t'was the cold war after all.
"The Russians eventually figured it out on their own." ekhm, so generaly you want a whole video about Russian IP theft? The list of important technologies would be a very long one... UAZ 452 is a good example: produced to this day and hardly any Russian is aware that it is just rip off of Jeep FC Double. USA stoped producing it in 1965 and most likely Moscow purchased tools from Jeep closed production line and whole Jeep production line ended up in USSR as 1965 is the exact year when Russians started production of this obsolete car. Internet is full of comments made in recent year about Russian amazing tech and every time Ukrainians capturing any of it and opening the device it is full of western technology with only Russian made cover. Its also very easy to tell when there is western tech inside, they are always securing the case with anti tampering seals... And just recently: Motor Sich head Boguslayev charged with treason and working for Russia.->Ukrainian helicopter engines were ending up in Russian helicoters and thx to the fact that so many of them were shot down the treason was discovered...
@@Bialy_1 Im constantly amazed at how crafty and resourcefull the russians are whenever they see a chink in enemies armour they always exploit it the west can just just cry and be butthurt
So it's more or less IP rights that kept the Sovs (and now Russia?) dependent on Western oil tech? I imagine the Russians today would have plenty of brains of their own to come up with engineering solutions to whatever issue faced them. In the atmosphere of a deep sanctions war, IP rights might go out the window
This was a VERY dense video! I would need to look up sources for those many events You sometimes mention only shortly (e.g. Scissors crisis or the oil statistics) ... and it is not at all easy to find these sources; googling for "Russian oil production" will lead you to _modern_ statistics since 1991, not to Tsarist Imperial Russia.
The first Oil well in Baku(which was also the first of its kind in the world) was drilled in 1848 by Major Alekseev, whereas the first kerosene plant was built by Djavad Melikov in 1863 however the real boom was kickstarted after the 1870s when foreign and local capital started to flow into the city en masse by turning it into the rapidly industrialized area that attracted qualified engineers and capitalists across the world(Royal Dutch Shell, Rothschilds, Nobel brothers, Taghiyev, Mantashev and etc). For instance, Dmitry Mendeleev was one of the active proponents of linking Baku's oil production facilities to the global market through the pipeline that would connect it to the Batumi port on the Black Sea Shore(eventually it was built around the 1880s)
Reason that Russia invaded Crimea is because on late 2010th western gas production companies discovered a huge amount of natural gas in northern Crimea. Gas fields so big, that it would be enough to get rid of dependency to russian natural gas.
3:05 “a division between the owners and the bureaucrats managing the company” - could you expand on that? The Managerial Revolution as a form of “seizing the means of production” in capitalist economies is very significant and overlooked.
Didn't the Rothchilds have a large stake in the Caucasus oil fields? I have no source for that, I just vaguely remember it, but if I'm actually correct I'm surprised you didn't mention it
Barnsdall is located in Oklahoma and sits in the oilfields that were owned by the Osage Nation mineral rights. This would be the basis for the movie that will be out later this year.
According to youtuber History Legends, he said the Silicon Industry in Taiwan(province of ROC) led to Taiwan's development of high tech industries which produces one of the most important resources : "Semiconductors". High tech industries in Taiwan creates lucrative jobs opportunities for the young Taiwanese, so many Taiwanese prefer to spend time pursue their studies in the colleges just to earn a degree to work in the high tech industries. But it also discourage the young Taiwanese to enroll themselves in military and law enforcements sector, so the government of Republic of China had to reduce the conscription service duration from 2 years to 4 months, so the young people had more time to go to Universities, so they can get employed in the high tech industries. But this later resulted in lack of well trained reserve troops to defend itself against PLA's military threats. The "Semiconductors" as an important is a "gift" and a "curse" to Taiwan. So, the "Oil" as an important resources in Saudi Arabia and Soviet Union brought "wealth and prosperity" but it also a "curse" because Saudi Arabia and Soviet Union (later Russian Federation) became over reliant on "oil", and neglect other areas which would led to their downfall in the future.
Interesting video ! Especially worthfull to understand some historical backgrounds in regard to current Ukraine war, which is continuation of the competition on ownership of south east Europe and west Asia. And Oil and Gas is essential in political relations to caucasus, central asia and Iran up today.
14:11 The Luftwaffe neutralized the full use of the black sea fleet. "And then Hitler ordered attack on Stalingrad" - that was already a primary objective of the campaign, yeah it was the threat from the Stalingrad area that reversed the push for the rest of the oil fields.
Great video, keep them up. Just one point, at 3:45 you mention that Shell et all wanted to invade Baku, but weren't supported by the British government. In fact, the British government was heavily involved in the collapse of the Ottoman empire, and looking to profit from the Russian breakdown by expanding its control of Persia. As for Baku, it sent Dunsterforce to support the independence movements and prevent Ottoman incursion, but its retreat and the subsequent crushing of these independent states was followed by the Armenian genocide and the occupation of Baku by the Soviets. I'm not sure what Shell was doing at the time, but it was BP - at the time, Burmah Oil and the Anglo-Persian Oil Company - that led the colonial expansion in the middle east. BP (APOC) was 51% owned by the British government, as it supplied oil to the Royal Navy. Interestingly, the chairman of Burmah oil at the time of the Iranian revolution in 1979, which was quickly followed by the nationalisation of Burmah's oil interests in Iran, was Denis Thatcher, husband of the Prime Minister. Although since then Iran has paid compensation to BP, and BP accepted it as full payment for its assets, Britain still maintains an aggressive stance towards Iran, sailing its warships up and down the Persian Gulf, just waiting for an opportunity to start a war to recover its old position as colonial master.
@Asianometry 16:54 (Map not dated so:) Yugoslavia was not a "Soviet aligned nation". Neither was it NATO. It was a founding member of Non-aligned movement. It tried to avoid being a puppet to bullying scumbags on both sides.
And it was oil that Reagan used to finish the Soviets, with the Saudi's help. That was what was behind the sudden plunge in oil prices, which led to the bankruptcy of the USSR.
I was in Azerbaijan at 1997. What a weird place it was. Oil oozing out of the ground, guys scooping it up and putting it DIRECTLY into their Lada 2 stroke cars. A half collapsing airport, huge holes in the runway, ak47 guards. An old lady with cataracts with a massive trash bag full of money begging. Men in an empty plateau near an old Soviet Chorine factory selling the scraps and piles of salvaged chlorine. electric toy ride on trucks and cars in the squares and parks…
Yes Az in the 90s was still in it's very early days of development. The economy of the country has been literally doubling in size every few years. YoY GDP growth has been in double digits for decades now. There's still LOTS to overcome but regionally it is far ahead than any of it's neighbors.
I need to tell you that there is no Lada 2 stroke cars
@@elmafias6141 Wtf was it? Closest I seen was a Trabant but they were from Eastern Germany. Maybe they were pouring it directly into the engine. My memory is foggy, it was a long time ago 😂
@@youtubeisproCCP I mean, 2 Stroke petrol cars still run on refined petrol, so you can’t just put crude oil and run them. If it was 2 stroke diesel engines there may be a possibility to use crude oil, but these engines are only used in industrial applications.
All cars from Soviet countries used petrol, not diesel to run. From a Trabant to a Volga. Maybe with a light oil like Azerbaijani oil and a sturdy diesel automotive engine you could somehow run on crude oil.
Perhaps they made a homemade distillation of the crude oil that they can extract low quality petrol or diesel. Is not necessary to have a huge refinery to produce petrol, and Ladas were tuned to run on very low quality gas.
Another crazy possibility is that they put 2 stroke diesel engines from tractors in the car.
Or maybe is just that Ladas work fine with Azerbaijani oil. ¿Who knows?
Saludos!
I just came from there 3 months ago from baku . I got stocked. So developed country beautiful .
Just saw someone criticizing, that the videos lack animations and such kind of things. Actually I pretty much like the simplicity how the videos are made. It just ppredisposes you for the essence of the video. Cheap animations don't make the content better. But before all it's amazing how much work and research is behind these essays. I very rarely write any comments, but felt obliged to say that I appreciate how everithing is done. Keep it up withe the good work.
Nikola from Sofia BG
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
Болгарцы < 3
I would rather have better information than better animation.
Animations take time and money. I'd rather Asianometry use that time to do more research for more videos instead.
I almost exclusively listen to this channel, so I'm not too interested in the visuals.
Having said that, when I do watch this channel I do enjoy the visual style. Don't change a thing!
Would love to see Wendover cover the logistics of evacuating Baku to the Volga too
I, too was wondering about the tie-in showing a Wendover (logo?), as he quipped regarding the relationship to evacuation of Baku's oil assets.
It’s always funny to me how tightly viewership for channels are related
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
The entire evacuation of soviet industry to the east is a fascinating topic that really should be covered more by the relevant youtube channels, they managed to pack entire factories and their workers onto trains, transport them over thousands of kilometers and got them back into operation within just a few months... if this hadn't succeeded it's entirely possible that world war 2 would have ended very differently.
You’re hitting all cylinders. Keep up the great work. Thank you Asianometry!
Imagine being too stupid to give a compliment...
you're hitting all cylinders. Keep up the great work. Thank you Asianometry.
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
The Nobel Peace Prize. Bought and paid for by military arms sales to Russia, lol...
Your soviet history videos are some of the most interesting out there!
this channel never fails to be infinitely interesting...
this topic is of a kind which other channels will pass without hesitation as "dry" and "uninteresting". But, not Asianometry.
Mr. Asianometry, perhaps this might be an interesting subject for you to do a video on: China had a chronic problem with iodine deficiency to the point that 25% of Chinese people had a goitre, and 80% of the population suffering from some form of illness due to deficiency. In the Eighties, Australia sent experts across and lobbied the CCP to add iodine to their salt, thereby saving the lives of millions. This was part of a broader programme by the Australian government to 're-orient' itself towards Asia and engage with China. The same Prime Minister who lead the campaign was also the PM when the Tiananmen Square massacre happened. His name was Bob Hawke (he also held the world record for drinking a yard glass of beer the fastest - 11 seconds I believe) and he granted all Chinese students in Australia citizenship as he believed they would be at risk if they were to return to China, as they knew too much.
Sounds really interesting
That's so wierd I thought the Chinese ate a lot of fish even inland from the big amount of rivers. I guess I was wrong.
@@janeblogs324 Their population decline means one child policy would have been scrapped. A China with less population would have been prosperous with more resources for less people and would have industrialised faster than irl China.
@@janeblogs324
You can tell how stupid this comment is based off the last sentence alone. Some people are just way too brainwashed to be reasoned with.
I didnt expect romania to be this important in WW2, a look into Romania's oil industry would be interesting
Easily one of the best channels on TH-cam. Great work man. I work in the semiconductor industry and I still learn a lot from those videos you do. Stuff like this is really impressive though because shows your breadth. Keep at it
I just read Tom Clancy’s Red Storm Rising last night. And here I am being treated by good content again.
Dude you're amazing. I love learning, and you are exactly what I need. I hope you find the success you deserve.
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
Just discovered your channel and holy crap ive spent the last 2 hours binge watching your videos. Keep up the good work.
regarding liftwaffe strategic attacks on oil fields - there were couple of extensive Volga mining campaigns
air-dropped mines are a thing, many were non-contact ones and had delay in number of ship to make trawlers pass and kill tankers
extensive spotter network was created to track mine drops
Amazing videos
Seriously flexing your research again John!
This has to be an episode that you must be extremely proud of.
From my understanding of history it was always the oil, not Moscow that was the reason for the absurd Barbarossa. It has been a while so I can't cite the historian that is best for that detail.
This episode could have been made three times longer, such was the whirlwind.
_Furiously Googles Scissors Crisis_
"flexing your research again"?
Where is Witold Zglenicki part in this video? You know, the Polish guy that invented and build first oil platform in the world and he did it in... Baku.
And his nickname is Polish Noble as he sponsored a foundation for the development of Polish culture and science.
There is also another Polish name Ignacy Łukasiewicz the guy that started the whole modern oil industry but he was from part of Poland occupied by Austro-Hungarian Empire but he was also not the gready part and was sharing his know-how all over the world(Rockefeller most likely got his know-how from him). He build first in the world modern oil rafinery and one of his first oil wells is operational and pumping oil to this day...
@@Bialy_1 There are only a few of us on John's channel. He always delivers brilliant, well researched stuff. Usually about semiconductors. I am always grateful for his work, even though I am not a Patreon person due to heating bills and such like. I do have time for clicking the like button and hopefully a positive comment that is more than just a data point of 'engagement' for the algorithm. Hopefully this prompts insightful comments such as yours!
Who knew? I for one will be able to follow your cues and learn a little more, plus, I can now jokingly blame the Poles rather than the Americans for the ravishing the planet has received thanks to global warming!!!
I like it how this world is interconnected and how it always has been. I like the unlikely alliances and the improbable happenstances that have made the story that much richer. Human ingenuity and creativity knows no ends.
Anyways, I thought John did a fab job considering that 'big oil' is not his area of expertise. I commend him for an original take on contemporary events.
You were supposed to be led by contemporary agenda and fairy tales about damned Boljševiks, not by voice of pragmatical reasons
As a Romanian, I was completely unaware of that. Thanks for the great videos!
I have been told twice that my surname is common in Romania. Any truth to that Andrei ?
@@markhonea2461 looks like
"In 1859, when Edwin Drake and Wiliam Smith took their first steps in the oil industry and made the first drilling in Pennsylvania in the United States, the Łukasiewicz mine in Bóbrka already employed over 100 workers and achieved a turnover of 20,000 Rhenish zlotys a year. In the field of petrochemistry, Łukasiewicz was a respected authority of international fame. Entrepreneurs from Germany, Romania and the United States traveled to his mine, where they learned the secrets of his knowledge. There is a legend related to one of the visits that Americans paid to Łukasiewicz. The Polish inventor showed the Americans all the secrets of his company, the entire process from extraction to distillation. The Americans allegedly wanted to pay him for it at the time, but Łukasiewicz refused. The American who visited Łukasiewicz's enterprise with his associates was supposed to be ... John Rockefeller himself. The American entrepreneur was to call the Pole a "madman" - does he have valuable knowledge and share it for next to nothing? In 1883, a year after the death of Ignacy Łukasiewicz, 51,000 tons of crude oil were produced in the Polish Lands annually. At that time, Poland was the third oil power in the world, after the United States and Russia."
@@БородаЧ-у6х that's weird. It looks like this is the only comment you have ever made in your 2 years on you tube.
I wonder what your title translates as in English.
@@markhonea2461 it’s not only one dude
There are some more details of the early period. 1) Pipelines in Russia were not introduced by Nobel brothers. It's Mendeleev's research and calculations, following by his letters to the govenment. First decades of the Nobel brothers leadership in oil production were not genuinely due to the technology improvements, it was only a good amount of money spent on many wild and known oil fields. The way for oil mining and transportation by Nobels was just the same as it was in many decades - hand labour or animal traction, later they introduced carriages amd so on. Nobels didn't encounter transportation problems, it was just a matter of the cost of oil for people and industry - being a wealthy leader like Nobels in such a small business mainly based on primitive technology and few oil fields was quite easy. However, Mendeleev's calculations for profit and economy on the pipeline can be traced as a separate and very detailed chapter in the published full set of his works. He was in close touch with the govenment ministers and I am not sure, but it seems that somehow he had a proposal about taxes for oil extraction.
2) Despite many economical projects in Mendeleev's research, it was his famous quote as a chemist, that every Russian heard at school: "Oil is not a fuel, instead you can burn bank assignations in the stove" (meaning, that it is more logical to burn money, in terms of value). Of course, he was in tough relations with Nobel brothers and both sides had their patrons in the government. No doubt he wouldn't have been awarded the Nobel prize for his research in chemistry 🥲.
No need to point that the video is lacking information about a very important figure? a Polish geologist and oil industry pionier Witold Zglenicki? ->not only an explorer of rich oil pools in the Caucasus but also a pioneer of oil extracting from the bottom of the sea. He directed the early development of the oil industry of the port of Baku in Russian Azerbaijan.
He also sponsored a foundation for the development of Polish culture and science which brought him the reputation as the "Polish Nobel".
"that every Russian heard at school: "Oil is not a fuel, instead you can burn bank assignations in the stove" (meaning, that it is more logical to burn money, in terms of value)."->Yes, he was no Ignacy Łukasiewicz -> guy that singlehandly invented the modern oil industry ->discovery of how to distill kerosene from seep oil, the invention of the modern kerosene lamp (1853), the introduction of the first modern street lamp in Europe (1853), construction of the world's first modern oil well (1854), 1856 the world's first modern oil refinery...
@@Bialy_1wow😳😳
Wow wow wow...these are important information...hey men,thank you very much...indeed poland very interesting country...are you polish? Which part of poland? l ❤ poland...
Fantastic video! Any chance you can add English subtitles?
As an Azerbaijani from Baku, I want to thank you for this video and spreading awareness of our small but rich with history and culture country 👏
Lol
Damn, these videos are too damn good, congratulations Jon, you just earned yourself another Patron!
Felt like leaving us on a cliffhanger tonight??? Who hurt you? 😢
cloth hangers?
Oil prices
Spoiler alert : it didn't end well for the soviets 🤣
@@aakhthuu Dissolution of the USSR is not imaginable without it, being headless since late '50s, with different kinds of scum occupying more and more chairs.
You confused stars, reflected in the surface of a pond with sky.
Once again marvelous Asianometry, you have filled another knowledge gap in a way that was so effective. Cheers from NZ.
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
I can’t describe how refreshing it is to watch a video on oil without being preached to about global warming. Literally everyone else just talks about “they’re so evil because [insert your pet peeve here]” but you simply present what happened and let us come up with out own conclusions about what’s good and what’s bad. That presentation style is why I keep coming back here again and again. Keep up the great work!!
All the technology we take for granted was only possible because of the oil industry. Without it we would be living in huts and still having 4/5 of our children dying.
@16:11 puh-LATE-able... that one got me good man.
I love your vids. I hope you make them for years to come
I want more! What about the energy crisis on the 1970s and the later downfall of the Soviet Union? What about the post-Soviet Russian industry? Great Video!
I really find this channel interesting. I have learned SO MUCH ! 👍
John Astell is writing an amazing monograph on Soviet energy during the Great Patriotic War (WWII), including oil. I've been lucky to read a draft and I'm looking forward to see it published.
Thank you for providing the name of this scholar.
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
The author of the channel reads a lot and this makes his view of things impartial and clear. This was the generation before the Internet era. I read comments full of ignorance and uncontrolled emotions. Only a few people will be able to appreciate your channel.
John remaining the powerhouse he is, needing less then 15 seconds to ask people to sub and like and filling the rest of the vid with a hyperdense and illustrated narration of the history of some technological development like always. Keep at it! So much infos, so little bullshit.
I wish I had been exposed to these events when at school in the 1940’s. How narrow our perception was. Thank you.
"...[Lenin] asked the members not to make any written record of their discussion of this matter." Narrator: They did.
Such obvious logical implications don’t require elaboration.
Man, just when I thought you’ve covered it all, you come up with another amazing topic like this!!! Our minds love to learn about all the same kinds of things 🤩🤩🤩
Sometimes it feels like this channel was made just for me 🥰
Imagine being stupid enough to think 1 person can cover all topics that have ever existed in detail...
@@RyuuOujiXS oh right. It takes a lot of help and cooperation to be as good as Asianometry
I would like to say, this channel is amazing. I look forward to more on this in the future, if possible?
Asianometry is doing a great job
Awesome videos, you have the best content on my feed by far
You do amazing work. I would never tell somebody that if they didn’t earn it. Your thinking and presentation are top shelf.
I learn so much from this channel. This is such great content!
One of my Ancestors was in Baku in the oil business at that time, when the revolution was spreading there, he got some sort of emergency diplomatic order to leave the country, that was that
Do you have his name and surname as well as the country that he represented?
For the next topic how about Indonesia State Owned Company economic direction?
One small point, if Case Blue succeeded the Soviet Black Sea fleet would not have had any ports to operate from.
The ashkenazis always destroy their host from within
Russia 🇷🇺, Bolshevik
Germany 🇩🇪
Now the last host , the USA 🇺🇸
Cheers from west Africa
🦅
Such a high quality channel. Well done. 😁
I love your rundown of these videos. Keep it up!
Another very interesting fact is that Stalin himself actually got his start in the Oil Industry. He gave speeches and radicalized people during the height of the tsarist/company-run age of Baku.
i read about that in the court of the red tsar.
The videos about soviet things are uniques. Keep up the good work.
Thank you I always enjoy your work, it's both educational and keeps my interests to watch.
Would be very interested to learn more about European and American industrial supervision in early Soviet Industrialisation. I'm certain it would make a great video with a few very interesting characters, politics and scandal. Love you and your work!
As a Bakuvian myself, I appreciate this video.
Thanks for your vids. Very nice and clear explanations of context as well as the facts.
Yes!!! Finally reporting on the energy market. Please please please go deep asianmetry! We need more transparency to the convoluted oil market
In the 1930s the great majority of intercity steam locomotives ran on coal, though some began shifting to diesel. This was true for UK, US, Germany, USSR, France, Japan, etc. Intracity trains, especially passenger ones, usually ran on electricity from thermal power plants (often coal-fueled) and hydroelectric, to reduce smoke emission in cities and subways. Conversion to diesel-electric is a post-WWII phenomenon.
Though some navies began converting to oil in the early 1900s, the merchant fleet lagged behind. Even Titanic, the world's premier ocean liner, was coal-fired. This was true too for the US; its largest merchant line Sea-Land Service was using coal in the 1970s. One of the earliest fuel-fired merchant ships was a Russian one that sailed the Caspian Sea in the 1880s - oil was more plentiful there than coal. Since the 1960s, heavy fuel oil has been the king of marine fuels. Prior to that it was coal.
Oil overtook coal to become the world's largest energy source in 1964. (I think some people make the mistake of thinking because oil today is so prevalent and vital it's been so since the early 1900s. This is not the case.)
Re USSR oil production, it was the world's second largest producer in the mid 1930s. The completion of the first five-year plan and the start of the second one saw its domestic need for oil increase greatly. However, the world's number oil exporter during this era was Venezuela and not the #1 producer USA. American demand for oil was so great it was importing oil from Mexico in the '20s and Venezuela in the '30s until costly tariffs were applied. Venezuela used only about 7% of its domestic crude production, its crude was cheap to refine, and the gov't lightly taxed it, which made its oil the amongst the world's cheapest.
BTW, of Germany's reserves on the eve of Barbarossa, about 20 million barrels had been captured in the low countries and France. I don't know why you claim Romania being one of Germany's largest suppliers of oil was 'unexpected'. Romania was one of Europe's largest producers and important supplier to France until the pipeline from Iraq to Tripoli, Lebanon was completed. Other European crude suppliers to Germany were Austria, Hungary, and Poland. Pre-War Germany was constrained by its lack of foreign exchange, so it endeavoured to conduct barter trade, such as with Mexico, by exchanging German industrial manufactures for oil. It also introduced a special trade currency called the Aski mark its used to pay for imports and that could only be used to purchase German-made goods by its trade partners. Such trade formed the bulk of Germany's imports and exports as it shifted trade to Central and Eastern Europe in the lead up to the War.
The quote attributed to Lenin @ 6:10, I've googled the whole thing but couldn't find it anywhere.
Great Video. Also, can you do a video on India's Coal or any resources (mostly in the states of Odisha Chattisgarh n Jharkhand ) ?
also discuss environmentally friendly habits in Soviet Union
Yeah, we shouldn't underestimate how much forcibly shipping millions of people hither and yon to barely survivable conditions reduced their carbon footprint.
If the West produces energy it produces pollution. If you buy it from someone else the amount you pollute goes way down. Your WEF buddies stop teasing your at Davos
@@westrim They got two massive nuclear accidents and if you watch the map where they made nuclear tests you will be surprised how much of its own territory they were ready to polute with this crap...
@@Bialy_1 You know why uninhabited islands are uninhabited islands?
@@westrim that's actually the favourite solution of Social-Darwinists to reduce «carbon footprint»
romashkino field is over 4000 sq/km? wow thats a lot of oil there.
Loving these Russian history videos, keep them coming!
Another possible cool video would be the Soviet plan to divert some of their Major arctic rivers the Ob and Irtysh to the Aral sea. Would create some crazy economic growth and canals. Even a possible canal from the Aral to the Caspian. Was a big debate in the Mid-80s world wide on the Potential and Consequences of diversion. There is also a potential plan in more modern times for the same thing but from the Far East Lena river to China.
@@JPJ432 Russian history...🤣 They are so butthurt about Poland that we are the only country that conquered them that they are whitewashing "Russian history" from Polish influence.
The guy that build first in the world oil platform did it in Baku and he is called Polish Noble for using his wealth earned in Baku for promotion of science and somehow the single most important name conected to the Baku oil industry is not mentioned in this video...
From english wikipedia:
"Witold Zglenicki was not only an explorer of rich oil pools in the Caucasus but also a pioneer of oil extracting from the bottom of the sea. He directed the early development of the oil industry of the port of Baku in Russian Azerbaijan."
Azerbaijan != Russia
The USSR != Russia
@@Bialy_1 Oh good god a Polish tribal ultranationalist spouting Polished(ha) history full of Polish propaganda that didn't actually happen. Please go back to your echo chamber.
@@Bialy_1 pot calling the kettle black
Great video! Great job! 👏👏👏
The sinclair logo.... are so cool.
"Everything that can be weaponized will be weaponized" -- Russia.
This is pretty much the doctrine of the United States basically. As per George Kennan's declassified State Department foreign policy strategy documentation (Policy Planning Study 23 written in 1948) - "We have about 50% of the world's wealth but only 6.3% of its population....In this situation, we cannot fail to be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task in the coming period is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us this position of disparity....To do so, we will have to dispense with all sentimentality and daydreaming: and our attention will have to be concentrated everywhere on our immediate national objectives....We should cease to talk about vague and unreal objectives such as human rights, the raising of the living standards, and democratizations. teh day is not far off when we are going to have to deal in straight power concepts. The less we are then hampered by idealistic slogans the better."
I copied the text verbatim. And that's exactly what we've done. If you look at America's track record in the 20th century it is horrific. We killed one third of Korean population because La May was an insane devotee to the Kennan doctrine of containment. But you know what, even George Kennan spoke out against Nato expansion eastward. He came out of retirement even to do it. The irony would be hilarious if the situation wasn't so dire.
I should also add that the Russians were devastated on the eastern front. Suffering some 30 million casualties at the hands of the Nazis. The mighty German 4th, 9th, 13th armies weren't defeated by the Allies. They were defeated by the Russians. It was the Russians that won the war basically. By the time the Allies landed at Normandy they were fighting Hitler's youth. Hardly the cream of the Nazi crop. Moreover, if you recall the Battle of the Bocage even these second tier Nazi divisions proved superior tacticians for the allies. And look at how we've treated them for their efforts after the war. Germany was treated better FFS.
Your comment is staggeringly ignorant mate. Stupidity supreme. It isn't Russia that has 1000 military bases around the world.
@@Screaming-Trees lmaoo losing a lot of men = doing the lion share of the work. Bro the US provided a lot of armor, supplies and food to the Russians that helped them make that comeback and they still almost collapsed if it was not for the winter and hitler shooting himself in the foot.
You could say that about any world power.
@@philipmolina1114 Yeah 30 million casualties is "lmaoo" funny mate. The US did not provide a "lot of armour or supplies". That's utter nonsense. What school did you go to? There is a well established and respected consensus among historians about production of war materiel during this period. Avail yourself of these studies. You ever hear of a T34 tank? It was only considered one of the best tanks of the WW2 period.
The Soviets weren't the recipients of any kind of aid. They had to do it on their own. And again, every historian agrees that it was the Soviet's ability to produce staggering amounts of war materiel that played a crucial role in their overcoming the Nazis. But if you fast forward to today we have idiots like yourself "lmaoo" at the thought of 30 million dead. If it weren't for the Soviets you'd be speaking deutsch right now.
If the Soviets didn't defeat the 4th, 5th, 6th, 9th, 13th armies on the eastern front the allies would have been faced with those armies on the western front. That would have been a completely different prospect. A lot ignorant ingrates like yourself though can't bring yourself to recognize a contribution so massive and so crucial even in spite of all historians agreeing on this.
@@Screaming-Trees That's what we call "double standard moral" from the West.
If they did a TV show set in 1880s Baku and called it The Wild East, I for one would watch it.
These are great listening and well researched by my eyes!
3:40 History doesn't repeat itself, but it certainly moves in circles.
Excellent video.
Great video
Ivan Gubkin looks like Burt Lancaster in COME BACK, LITTLE SHEBA.
Wow. Had no idea Nobel was active in oil industry. Always thought it was just explosives.
I really lik eyour videos and topics. But this one rocks 👏
Germans did take some soviet oil fields while executing case blue by capturing Maikop, but the soviets destroyed the oil fields while retreating and the germans could never bring them back to their previous levels of production nor could transport enough from it to justify their offensive.
They couldn't make the good stuff. That high octane aviation fuel. US Lend-Lease sent aviation fuel equivalent to 57 percent of what the Soviet Union itself produced. Much of the American fuel was added to lower-grade Soviet fuel to produce the high-octane fuel needed by military aircraft.
This video was a step up in terms of humour
Really hope there is a follow on video which extrapolates this conclusion section and looks at the late Soviet and Post Soviet Russian Federation Oil AND Gas Industry.... especially the role drop in oil prices played in the fall of the USSR
He already has a video on the economy of the USSR which talks about that.
I enjoy your contents, very informative, I notice clear bias, pro-Taiwan, anti-China, anti-Korea, anti-Japan, but that's ok, the quality of your contents make it worthwhile, I still enjoy your channel
You should do a video on the natural gas of Russia and how The West refused to help Russia with the technology to store and transport LNG. The Russians eventually figured it out on their own.
Their technology its on them whom they share it with. Good on the Russians for figuring it out themselves, but most likely its industrial espionage that did the heavy lifting t'was the cold war after all.
@@alexanderphilip1809 That is a given. The point that you don't seem to understand is that it was a very shortsighted geopolitical move.
"The Russians eventually figured it out on their own." ekhm, so generaly you want a whole video about Russian IP theft?
The list of important technologies would be a very long one... UAZ 452 is a good example: produced to this day and hardly any Russian is aware that it is just rip off of Jeep FC Double. USA stoped producing it in 1965 and most likely Moscow purchased tools from Jeep closed production line and whole Jeep production line ended up in USSR as 1965 is the exact year when Russians started production of this obsolete car.
Internet is full of comments made in recent year about Russian amazing tech and every time Ukrainians capturing any of it and opening the device it is full of western technology with only Russian made cover.
Its also very easy to tell when there is western tech inside, they are always securing the case with anti tampering seals...
And just recently: Motor Sich head Boguslayev charged with treason and working for Russia.->Ukrainian helicopter engines were ending up in Russian helicoters and thx to the fact that so many of them were shot down the treason was discovered...
@@Bialy_1 Im constantly amazed at how crafty and resourcefull the russians are
whenever they see a chink in enemies armour they always exploit it
the west can just just cry and be butthurt
So it's more or less IP rights that kept the Sovs (and now Russia?) dependent on Western oil tech? I imagine the Russians today would have plenty of brains of their own to come up with engineering solutions to whatever issue faced them. In the atmosphere of a deep sanctions war, IP rights might go out the window
This was a VERY dense video! I would need to look up sources for those many events You sometimes mention only shortly (e.g. Scissors crisis or the oil statistics) ... and it is not at all easy to find these sources; googling for "Russian oil production" will lead you to _modern_ statistics since 1991, not to Tsarist Imperial Russia.
The first Oil well in Baku(which was also the first of its kind in the world) was drilled in 1848 by Major Alekseev, whereas the first kerosene plant was built by Djavad Melikov in 1863 however the real boom was kickstarted after the 1870s when foreign and local capital started to flow into the city en masse by turning it into the rapidly industrialized area that attracted qualified engineers and capitalists across the world(Royal Dutch Shell, Rothschilds, Nobel brothers, Taghiyev, Mantashev and etc). For instance, Dmitry Mendeleev was one of the active proponents of linking Baku's oil production facilities to the global market through the pipeline that would connect it to the Batumi port on the Black Sea Shore(eventually it was built around the 1880s)
16:11 “Puh-late-able?” Isn’t is “palatable” in the sense that “I can tolerate eating that even with my delicate palate?”
16:52 Wasn't Yugoslavia neutral? They traded with both sides, but kept themselves independent.
Good video
Both “ch” in Chechnya pronounced the same, as in “chair”
Reason that Russia invaded Crimea is because on late 2010th western gas production companies discovered a huge amount of natural gas in northern Crimea. Gas fields so big, that it would be enough to get rid of dependency to russian natural gas.
Imagine sending your brother to buy some wood and instead he buys an oil refinery....
Anthony Sutton documented Western involvement in the Soviet oil fields over the decades 1920s-1960s very well.
3:05 “a division between the owners and the bureaucrats managing the company” - could you expand on that? The Managerial Revolution as a form of “seizing the means of production” in capitalist economies is very significant and overlooked.
Very interesting
You forgot to mention why Baku oil production had dropped significantly in 1905! ;)
Didn't the Rothchilds have a large stake in the Caucasus oil fields? I have no source for that, I just vaguely remember it, but if I'm actually correct I'm surprised you didn't mention it
Would it even be relevant?
@@jtgd I know they had a big relationship with shell and had a majority stake in it so probably yeha
I am not sure why I was unsubscribed from this channel which is one of my favourites, Has anyone else had this problem?
Not since I started writing it in comments
@Asianometry
Can you please make a Video about:
The Evolution of Drones and Drone Warfare 🙂
Good points.
Barnsdall is located in Oklahoma and sits in the oilfields that were owned by the Osage Nation mineral rights. This would be the basis for the movie that will be out later this year.
Fantastic vid
Thank you
According to youtuber History Legends, he said the Silicon Industry in Taiwan(province of ROC) led to Taiwan's development of high tech industries which produces one of the most important resources : "Semiconductors". High tech industries in Taiwan creates lucrative jobs opportunities for the young Taiwanese, so many Taiwanese prefer to spend time pursue their studies in the colleges just to earn a degree to work in the high tech industries. But it also discourage the young Taiwanese to enroll themselves in military and law enforcements sector, so the government of Republic of China had to reduce the conscription service duration from 2 years to 4 months, so the young people had more time to go to Universities, so they can get employed in the high tech industries. But this later resulted in lack of well trained reserve troops to defend itself against PLA's military threats.
The "Semiconductors" as an important is a "gift" and a "curse" to Taiwan.
So, the "Oil" as an important resources in Saudi Arabia and Soviet Union brought "wealth and prosperity" but it also a "curse" because Saudi Arabia and Soviet Union (later Russian Federation) became over reliant on "oil", and neglect other areas which would led to their downfall in the future.
Interesting video ! Especially worthfull to understand some historical backgrounds in regard to current Ukraine war, which is continuation of the competition on ownership of south east Europe and west Asia. And Oil and Gas is essential in political relations to caucasus, central asia and Iran up today.
14:11 The Luftwaffe neutralized the full use of the black sea fleet.
"And then Hitler ordered attack on Stalingrad" - that was already a primary objective of the campaign, yeah it was the threat from the Stalingrad area that reversed the push for the rest of the oil fields.
Great video, keep them up. Just one point, at 3:45 you mention that Shell et all wanted to invade Baku, but weren't supported by the British government. In fact, the British government was heavily involved in the collapse of the Ottoman empire, and looking to profit from the Russian breakdown by expanding its control of Persia. As for Baku, it sent Dunsterforce to support the independence movements and prevent Ottoman incursion, but its retreat and the subsequent crushing of these independent states was followed by the Armenian genocide and the occupation of Baku by the Soviets.
I'm not sure what Shell was doing at the time, but it was BP - at the time, Burmah Oil and the Anglo-Persian Oil Company - that led the colonial expansion in the middle east. BP (APOC) was 51% owned by the British government, as it supplied oil to the Royal Navy. Interestingly, the chairman of Burmah oil at the time of the Iranian revolution in 1979, which was quickly followed by the nationalisation of Burmah's oil interests in Iran, was Denis Thatcher, husband of the Prime Minister. Although since then Iran has paid compensation to BP, and BP accepted it as full payment for its assets, Britain still maintains an aggressive stance towards Iran, sailing its warships up and down the Persian Gulf, just waiting for an opportunity to start a war to recover its old position as colonial master.
3:31
"Shell, and the other big Britisch oil companies"
Nice touch 😆
The old guns and oil ties.
Vital Education in the deliberately denied history of Pirate Empires. Excellent Teaching.
@Asianometry
16:54 (Map not dated so:) Yugoslavia was not a "Soviet aligned nation". Neither was it NATO. It was a founding member of Non-aligned movement. It tried to avoid being a puppet to bullying scumbags on both sides.
Daniel Yergin, "The Prize"...
And it was oil that Reagan used to finish the Soviets, with the Saudi's help. That was what was behind the sudden plunge in oil prices, which led to the bankruptcy of the USSR.