| < Company Profiles / Halliburton |
29.07.03
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Industry area Overview
History and
strategy By 1920, Halliburton had established the Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Company. Four years later he decided to expand, and the Halliburton corporation was born. Its trump card lay in its meticulous patenting of all new processes and devices, which left the oil companies unable to have oil wells cemented without using Halliburton services. The 1930s saw automobile production soar from 2.3 million vehicles in 1931 to 4.5 million by 1940. Domestic oil heating also grew from 100,000 homes supplied in 1929 to two million by 1940. This increase in demand allowed Halliburton to open four new branches and become involved in the marine oil exploration taking place in the Gulf of Mexico. Ironically, 1940 saw Halliburton buying up his old employer, Perkins Cementing Company, and opening his first South American subsidiary, in Venezuela. These two moves proved profitable and just one year later, turnover reached $13.5 million, of which $2million was net profit. Halliburton's first foray into war profiteering began
soon after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour. The company began
to make gun-mount bearings for the US Navy and parts for the B-29
bomber and Boeing aeroplane plant. Wartime contracts were lucrative,
and when World War II ended in 1945, the company's annual turnover
reached $25.7 million. Between 1950 and 1955 the company expanded
in all directions and now had 7,000 employees. Oil exploration in
the Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coast areas was flourishing; 23 vessels
as well as about $10 million worth of other equipment were available
for offshore drilling purposes. Research and development kept the
company at the forefront of oil exploration technology. Costing $3million
in 1956 alone, it rewarded the company's efforts with a new composition
for cementing deep wells amongst other developments. By 1965, Halliburton's acquisitions program resulted in 16 units that were autonomous but closely coordinated into three main areas. One division was oil-field services and sales (46% of total earnings). The second was the engineering segment headed by Brown & Root (51% of total earnings), the focus of which was such international construction projects as military bases in Saigon and parts of NASA's Manned Spacecraft Centre near Houston. The third division, speciality sales and services to general industry (3% of total earnings), included missile cleaning and, through two subsidiaries, insurance. In 1983, an economic recession plus lower oil prices
reduced Halliburton's earnings from $8.3 billion in 1980, to $1.2
billion. Its response was to slash its number of employees from 115,000
to 65,000 by 1986. A lawsuit accusing Brown & Root of mismanaging
a south Texas nuclear power plant construction project didn't help
matters either – it was forced to pay $750 million. In late 1995, Dick Cheney, who had served as US Secretary of Defense under George Bush (see Links with Government), was named chairman, CEO and president of Halliburton, taking over the helm from the retiring Thomas Cruikshank. Cheney quickly launched another round of acquisitions – perhaps the most ambitious in company history. Landmark Graphics Corp was acquired in 1996 for $550 million in stock. OGC International Plc for $118.3 million, and NUMAR Corporation for $360 million. However, these were as nothing compared to the 1998 merger between Halliburton and Dresser Industries, in effect creating the world's largest oil services firm. The new Halliburton, with revenues in excess of $16 billion was led by William E Bradford (Dresser's chairman and CEO) as chairman and Cheney as CEO. The Cheney years saw Halliburton's revenues rise from $5.7 billion in 1994 to $14.9 billion in 1999, fuelled primarily by growth outside the United States. During Cheney’s tenure as CEO, Halliburton’s overseas operations went from 51 percent of revenue to 68 percent of revenue. 'You’ve got to go where the oil is. I don’t think about it [political volatility] very much,' Cheney told the Panhandle Producers and Royalty Owners Association annual meeting in 1998.11 Current CEO, David J. Lesar, took hold of the reins in 2000 and, by December 2001, had hit the jackpot by securing a 10-year deal known as the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP) from the Pentagon. The contract basically means that the federal government has an open-ended mandate and budget to send Brown and Root anywhere in the world to run military operations at a profit.12 In March 2002, Lesar separated Halliburton into two wholly-owned operating subsidiaries: Halliburton's Energy Services Group and KBR (Kellogg Brown & Root) Engineering and Construction.13 The KBR subsidiary went on to bring in all but $1 million of Halliburton’s $657.5 million military loot.14 June 2002 saw the first LOGCAP contract in the 'war on terrorism' (LOGCAP is a U.S. Army initiative that uses civilian contractors to support U.S. forces in Department of Defense missions15) with KBR awarded a $22 million deal to run support services at Camp Stronghold Freedom, located at the Khanabad air base in central Uzbekistan. Khanabad was one of the main US bases in the Afghanistan war that housed some 1,000 US soldiers from the Green Berets and the 10th Mountain Division.16 In November 2002, Brown and Root began a one-year contract, estimated at $42.5 million, to cover services for troops at bases in both Bagram and Khandahar, in Afghanistan. Brown and Root employees were set to work running laundry services, showers, mess halls and installing heaters in soldiers' tents. That same year saw the beginning of KBR's contract in Kuwait with 1,800 Brown & Root employees arriving to set up tent cities to provide accommodation for tens of thousands of soldiers and officials. These cities included 'popular' fast food outlets such as Burger King, Subway and Baskin-Robbins.17 Products/
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| Footnotes 1'Halliburton
pays $6m claim,' David Teather, 02.06.03, The Guardian, http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,968446,00.html
viewed: 03.07.03
2'Halliburton
misses $600m Iraq contract,' Mark Tran. 31.03.03, The Guardian,
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,926422,00.html
viewed: 03.07.03
3Cheney
&' Halliburton: Go where the oil is,' Bruno K & Valette J, Multinational
Monitor, 22(5), May 2001, http://multinationalmonitor.org/mm2001/01may/may01corp10.html
, viewed: 18.07.03
4'Halliburton
pays $6m claim,' David Teather, 02.06.03, The Guardian, http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,968446,00.html
viewed: 03.07.03
5'Lieberman
Calls for Halliburton Hearings,' US Senate, 20.05.03, CorpWatch, http://www.corpwatch.org/bulletins/PBD.jsp?articleid=6829
viewed: 07.07.03
6www.fortune.com/fortune/search?query=halliburton&publication_id=6&Search.x=0&Search.y=0&Search=Go
viewed: 14.07.03
7www.halliburton.com
viewed: 25.06.03
8'Cheney
& Halliburton: Go where the oil is,' Bruno K & Valette J, Multinational
Monitor, 22(5), May 2001, http://multinationalmonitor.org/mm2001/01may/may01corp10.html
, viewed: 18.07.03
9
Ibid.
10Halliburton,
International Directory of Company Histories, 25:188-192.
11'Cheney
& Halliburton: Go where the oil is,' Bruno K & Valette J, Multinational
Monitor, 22(5), May 2001, http://multinationalmonitor.org/mm2001/01may/may01corp10.html
, viewed: 18.07.03
12'Cheney's
Ties to Brown & Root,' Pratap Chatterjee, CorpWatch, 20.03.03
13'Halliburton
Company,' Disinfopedia, 03.07.03, http://www.disinfopedia.org/wiki.phtml?title=Halliburton
viewed: 09.07.03
14'Cheney
& Halliburton: Go where the oil is,' Bruno K & Valette J, Multinational
Monitor, 22(5), May 2001, http://multinationalmonitor.org/mm2001/01may/may01corp10.html
, viewed: 18.07.03
15'LOGCAP
– who and where we are', www.amc.army.mil/LOGCAP/WhoWhere1.html
, viewed: 18.07.03
16'Halliburton
Makes a Killing on Iraq War,' Pratap Chatterjee, CorpWatch, 20.03.03,
www.corpwatch.org/issues/PID.jsp?articleid=6008
, viewed: 18.07.03
17'Cheney's
Former Company Profits from Supporting Troops,' Pratap Chatterjee, CorpWatch,
20.03.03
18'Cheney's
corporate past,' Seth Gitell, The Boston Phoenix, 21.09.00 http://www.bostonphoenix.com/archive/features/00/09/21/TALKING_POLITICS.html
viewed: 22.07.03
19'Brazilian
project impacts Halliburton,' OilOnline, 08.07.03 http://www.oilonline.com/news/headlines/internet/20030708.Brazilia.11840.asp
viewed: 23.07.03
20'Cheney's
Former Company Profits from Supporting Troops,' Pratap Chatterjee, CorpWatch,
20.03.03
21'Conflict
in Democratic Republic of the Congo,' Reuters, 22.05.03 http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/photoalbum/1053596476.htm
viewed: 24.07.03
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