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FISICAL REGIMES AND PSAs

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Title: FISICAL REGIMES AND PSAs


1
FISCAL REGIMES FOR Hydrocarbons
Shirley B Mushi (PhD)
2
Covered areas
  • Context of fiscal regimes for hydrocarbons
  • Ideal fiscal systems
  • Considerations a country makes in determining
    which fiscal tools to use and how to use them
  • The take
  • Categories of fiscal tools
  • Advantages and disadvantages of fiscal tools
    categories
  • Common/ popular fiscal tools
  • Key fiscal related aspects in international oil
    and gas contracts (focus on PSA)
  • Loopholes and pitfalls in fiscal regimes

3
FISCAL REGIMES FOR Hydrocarbons
  • A fiscal regime is the set of instruments or
    tools (taxes, royalties, dividends, etc.) that
    determine how the revenues from Hydrocarbon and
    mining projects are shared between the state and
    companies. 
  • The Hydrocarbon Legal framework (Laws,
    Regulations and Contracts) contain the details of
    what fiscal tools are used and how they are
    applied.
  • Fiscal terms are usually agreed to early in the
    project before extraction is underway. Natural
    resource extraction is costly and represents a
    risk, as the investment may not equal future
    profits. At times projects are not successful.
    Fiscal terms are therefore essential in decision
    making. 

4
Mutual interest An aligned Objectives
  • In any extractive project, the host government
    and the investor have the common objective of
    ensuring that the venture generates elevated
    levels of revenue
  • Though they share the objective, host government
    and investment companies have different aims

5
Host Governments Aims
  • Host governments aim to obtain the maximum value
    for their countries over time in terms of net
    receipts for treasury
  • The goal is to maximize the wealth from their
    natural resources and, at the same time, attract
    foreign investment
  • They also have development and socioeconomic
    objectives, such as job creation, transfer of
    technology, and development of local
    infrastructure

6
Investors/ Companies Aims
  • Oil companies aim to ensure that the return on
    capital is consistent with the risk associated
    with the project and with the strategic
    objectives of the corporation

7
IDEAL FISCAL SYSTEMS
  • Host governments
  • Investors/ Companies
  • A minimum number of front-end loaded
    non-profit-sensitive taxes.
  • The ability to repatriate profits to shareholders
    in their home countries.
  • An overall policy environment that is
    transparent, predictable, stable, and based on
    internationally recognized industry standards and
    the rule of law so that decisions can be made
    with reasonable confidence.
  • Supports macroeconomic stability by providing
    predictable and stable tax revenue flows.
  • Permits capturing a greater share of the revenue
    during periods of high profits.
  • Avoids the introduction of distorting effects
    through the fiscal instruments.
  • Maximizes the present value of revenue receipts
    by providing for appropriations during the early
    years of production.
  • It is neutral and encourages economic efficiency
    as a yardstick.

8
Considerations a country makes in determining
which fiscal tools to use and how to use them
  • Attraction of investment respond to the needs of
    the companies.
  • Timing of the revenues Some fiscal tools provide
    governments with more money early in the life
    cycle of an extractive project, while others do
    not deliver significant revenues until the
    project has already turned a profit, which can
    take years. 
  • For example, signature bonuses represent revenues
    early in the extraction project, called front-end
    loaded, while profit-based taxes tend to be
    back-loaded
  • Government preferences. Governments consider
    broad issues and then choose a combination of
    fiscal tools that meet their objectives. 
  • Country and resource position competition,
    market, political stability etc.

9
The Take
10
Government Take
  • The share of oil and gas revenues that
    governments capture. 
  • The take statistics for a given country are a
    benchmark to determine the competitiveness of a
    countrys fiscal terms. 
  • The type of mineral being extracted, the quality
    of the crude or ore, and the costs of developing
    a project vary greatly and have a considerable
    influence on government take. This necessitates
    government to use a variety of fiscal policy
    tools to maximize revenue capture.

11
Categories of fiscal tools
These Categories may determine how government
revenue changes with a profitability change in
the project. As commodity prices, production
techniques and production rates change over time,
so does the profit margin for the project. 
  • Neutral fiscal tools give the state the same
    share of revenue whether profitability increases
    or decreases
  • Progressive fiscal tools give the government a
    larger share of the profit when profits increase
  • Regressive fiscal tools give the government a
    lesser share as profits increase

12
Advantages and disadvantages of fiscal tools
categories
13
Common/ Popular Fiscal Tools
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Key fiscal related aspects in international oil
and gas contracts
20
Bonus Payments
  • Developing countries that tend to use PSAs are
    perennially short of money, and typically there
    is a signature bonus payable on signing. 
  • First there is an exploration phase, with a
    minimum work programme and often also a minimum
    exploration expenditure level, with any shortfall
    in expenditure payable to the state in cash. 
  • Further cash bonuses may be payable on moving to
    subsequent PSA phases, on the commencement of
    production, or on production reaching a certain
    specified level, or on the cumulative production
    of a certain volume of petroleum.

21
Production Sharing
  • The commercial heart of the agreement is the
    sharing of production between the contractor and
    state. 
  • Contractors fund the operations as well as carry
    them out, although there is state control through
    some form of management committee. 
  • The contractor recovers both its capital costs
    and its ongoing operating costs out of the share
    of production that is allocated for cost
    recovery. Oil allocated for cost recovery is
    known as cost recovery oil. The remainder of
    production is known as profit oil and is shared
    between the state and the contractor.
  • The contractors cost can only be recovered out
    of production from the same PSA contract area.
    Its costs are not recovered at all unless
    operations result in a commercial discovery and
    development. 

22
Production Sharing
  • What happens if there is more than one
    development in a single PSA contract area? The
    best situation from the contractors viewpoint is
    to be able to recover the cost of the second (and
    subsequent development) out of production from
    the first. 
  • Usually, the practice is that different
    developments are ring fenced so that the costs
    of a second development are recovered only out of
    production from that development. Some PSAs may
    provide for different profit splits on second and
    subsequent developments in the contract area.
  • The share of production allocated to cost
    recovery, and the contractors share of profit
    oil, go to the heart of the contractors
    economies for the venture.
  • In some established petroleum provinces, PSA
    terms are fixed contractors are invited to bid
    for PSAs simply based on et terms. 
  • In less established regions, however, the whole
    PSA may be up for negotiation, and the
    negotiation of cost recovery and profit share is
    certainly to be highly contentious and
    protracted.

23
Cost Recovery
24
The contractors costs
Most PSAs provide for an order of priority in the
recovery of these costs, typically with operating
costs having priority and being recovered in the
year they are incurred.  Capital costs are
recovered over a period of years within the
proportion of production allocated for cost
recovery.
  • capital cost
  • operation cost a distinction familiar to those
    in the upstream business
  • extraordinary operating costs, consisting of
    one-off items such as repairs

25
Cost recovery complexities
26
Profit Shares
  • The early PSAs Divided on a percentage basis the
    production remaining after quantities allocated
    to cost recovery. 
  • The actual percentages varied widely from country
    to country and from prospect to prospect. 
  • With many IOCs seeking PSAs, the bargaining power
    shifted steadily in Favour of the state with
    proven petroleum reserves, so it became
    increasingly common for the contractors profit
    share to decline with cumulative production,
    although they were still expressed as simple
    percentages. 
  • Through the 1980s and 1990s many states adopted
    mechanisms designed to restrict the contractors
    economic return. There are many different
    variations, but the contractors share of profit
    oil is tied to and declines not with production,
    but with the return it has achieved on its
    investment.

27
The R factor
  • A simple mechanism that reduces the contractors
    share of profit oil when it has fully recovered
    its initial capital investment
  • This is the most used mechanism
  • A sophisticated mechanism involves calculating
    the contractors actual rate of return, known as
    a ROR contract

28
Taxation of Contractors Profit
  • In its pure original form, the PSA expressly
    exempted the contractor from all local taxes and
    duties. Another common way of achieving the same
    end was to require the contractors local taxes
    to be paid out of the states share of
    production. 
  • Tax exemptions for foreign companies were not
    easy to sell to local politicians and local
    public opinion. 
  • Modern PSAs 
  • The contractor does pay local taxes on its share
    of profit oil

29
State participation
  • The State wishes to be on both sides, that is to
    be part of the contractor group. 
  • The IOC resists this proposal, although they are
    not always successful in doing so. State 
  • Participation on the contractor side reduces the
    share of the project available to the IOC, but
    more significantly it gives the state direct
    access to the internal information, plans and
    finances of the contractor group.
  • A state may propose to participate in the
    contractor group with a carried interest that is
    with its share of investment paid by the rest of
    the group.
  • The IOC sometimes must accept this if their
    bargaining position is weak. Some states have
    seen this as another means of reducing the
    contractors share of the take. But it serves no
    such purpose.
  • The IOCs calculation of their return from the
    project takes account of any carried interests,
    and they will not invest without an overall
    return that meets their internal criteria

30
Domestic Supply Obligation
  • Many PSAs allow the resource holder to require
    the contractor to deliver its share of production
    to meet domestic supply requirements. Domestic
    supply obligations invariably provide that the
    contractor will be paid for production supplied
    to local markets at an international market rate,
    so it may appear that the contract has little to
    lose from this provision.
  • IOCs often resist the clause altogether, or at
    least try to narrow the circumstances in which
    the resource holder can exercise that power or
    limit the proportion of the contractors
    production to which it applies. 
  • Often because many of the countries that use PSAs
    are potentially short of both fuel and money. The
    fear then is that the domestic supply obligation
    will be exercised on the basis that local markets
    are short of fuel, and that the production will
    not be paid for. This would leave the contractor
    in an unfortunate position with neither the
    production nor any sale proceeds, facing the
    unappealing prospect of pursuing legal action
    against the resource holder or some other state
    entity for the unpaid sums.

31
Stabilization
  • Stabilization is not only quite common in PSAs
    but is also regarded as an important provision by
    IOCs. 
  • A stabilizing clause is short. It says that if
    the state makes legislative, fiscal or any other
    changes that reduce the economic benefit of the
    PSA to the contractor, then the parties will
    renegotiate the commercial terms of the PSA to
    put the contractor in the same economic position
    as it originally had. 
  • Although this provision is an agreement to agree
    and is not binding, it does provide the
    contractor with the leverage to demand a
    renegotiation if its return is damaged by
    subsequent actions by the state.

32
TYPICAL REVENUE FLOWS IN A PRODUCTION SHARING
CONTRACT
33
LOOPHOLES AND PITFALLS IN FISICAL REGIMES
  • Companies like any other taxpayer will try to
    minimize the amount they must pay for the
    government using various loopholes

34
Common Loopholes exploited by companies
35
  1. TRANSFER PRICING 

Transfer pricing occurs when taxable income is
shifted from a high to a low tax jurisdiction.
Transfer pricing in the extractive industries
typically takes one of two forms.
The subsidiary in a resource-rich country may
sell its oil or minerals to a sister company at
an artificially low sales price to reduce its
declared revenues and thus the size of its
royalty or income tax obligations within that
country. 
The subsidiary within the resource-rich country
may purchase goods and services from a sister
company at an inflated price, thereby increasing
its declared costs and decreasing its declared
profits within the resource-rich country.
  • A multi-national enterprise may seek to shift
    taxable income to its home country (if tax rates
    are lower there or the government provides
    special tax incentives) or to a tax haven
    country. 
  • Governments can reduce the risk of transfer
    pricing on the revenue side by requiring
    commodity sales to be accounted for tax purposed
    using objective market prices rather than the
    sales value declared by companies. 

36
Thin capitalization
  • Thin capitalization frequently occurs when the
    interest payments that a company makes on loans
    are tax deductible. 
  • This can encourage a company to finance a project
    with a large amount of debt (including debt from
    related companies), allowing the company to
    inflate its interest deductions and reduce
    taxable income. 
  • States can adopt rules to limit interest
    deductions to a reasonable level to prevent the
    loss of tax revenues.

37
Production costs
  • Companies can decrease revenue to the government
    by increasing production costs. This can be done
    through gold plating, spending more on production
    than is necessary, or inaccurate accounting. 
  • Countries can reduce this risk by developing
    rules that encourage efficient production and
    closely auditing the companys production costs. 
  • Another way companies can decrease government
    revenues is by deducting costs incurred on a
    project from the taxable income of another
    project. A company may have legitimate reasons to
    do so, especially if it is engaged in several
    exploration or development efforts within the
    same country.
  • Countries seek to prevent this practice by
    mandating ring fencing, which allows a company to
    apply the production costs only against the
    taxable income of the same project. 
  • Other countries choose not to ring fence so that
    they can encourage investment in new mines.

38
Cash flow distribution and related fiscal aspects
to be covered tomorrow
  • Negotiation context to follow.......
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