Adolf Henrik Lundin,, was an independent oil and mining Swedish entrepreneur.
Education
Adolf Lundin earned an Master of Science degree in 1956 from the in Stockholm. Between 1957 and 1960 he worked as a Petroleum Engineer for the Royal Dutch Shell Group in South America. In 1961 he earned an Master of Business Administration degree from the Centre d'Etudes Industrielles in Geneva, Switzerland.
Between 1961 and 1966 he was responsible for oil exploration activities in the North Sea and Portugal for the Ax:son Johnson Group.
In 1966, he moved with his family to Geneva to work as Assistant Director of the Centre d'Etudes Industrielles (which later became Institute for Management Development Lausanne).
Career
In 1971, he started his career as an independent oil and mining entrepreneur on a global scale. His first successful venture was Gulfstream Resources which, in 1976, co-discovered the North Gas Field, offshore Qatar. This field remains today as the single largest known gas accumulation in the world.
From the 1970s through the 1990s Lundin established numerous natural resource companies both in the mining sector and the oil & gas sector, which in turn made a number of world class discoveries in the Middle East, Africa, Europe and South America.
Several of these deposits are still producing commercial quantities of oil, gas, gold, copper and other minerals. Others are still under development.
In 1998, he was named International Swede of the Year by His Majesty the King of Sweden. In 2002, he received an honorary doctorate degree from Plekhanov Russian Academy of Economics in Moscow.
Lundin Mining was founded in 1994.
Lundin Petroleum was founded in 2001. Adolf Lundin died in 2006, aged 73, from leukemia.