At oilhistory.UAEHistoryAndCulture.com, we believe that a complete historical record is built from a multitude of perspectives, including those of industry veterans, policymakers, researchers, and citizens who witnessed the transformation firsthand. Your insights, archival materials, and scholarly contributions are invaluable in helping us build a nuanced and authoritative account of this era. This page is designed to facilitate a professional and evidence-based dialogue with our team.
The most effective way to reach our editorial team is via our dedicated email address: contact@oilhistory.UAEHistoryAndCulture.com. This inbox is monitored regularly, and we strive to respond to all substantive and professionally framed inquiries within three to five business days. To help us manage and route your query effectively, we kindly request the use of specific and descriptive subject lines. For example, “Personal Account from Early ADNOC Employee” or “Academic Query on 1970s Oil Production Data” allows for a prompt and relevant response. We are particularly eager to connect with retired oil industry professionals, energy economists, archivists, and historians with relevant expertise.
To ensure our communications are rigorous and productive, we must outline their scope. While we read every message with interest, the volume of emails may prevent us from providing detailed, personalized replies to every single one. We welcome data-driven suggestions for topics or recently declassified documents to analyze. However, we do not accept unsolicited, pre-written articles or guest posts without prior editorial discussion. For partnership proposals from academic institutions, energy museums, or research organizations, please begin your subject line with “Partnership Inquiry:” for a prioritized review. It is critically important to understand that we are a historical and educational resource. We are not an oil company, a government agency, or an energy consultancy. We cannot provide information on current oil prices, employment opportunities, bidding rounds, or investment advice. Our focus is exclusively on the history of the industry. If you identify a factual inaccuracy in our content or have access to primary sources that could enhance our narrative, your contribution is key to our academic integrity.