#20 - JRL 2008-103 - JRL Home
Moscow Times
May 27, 2008
Presidium Moves to Raise Oil Output
By Anatoly Medetsky / Staff Writer
The Presidium of the Cabinet emerged from its first-ever meeting Monday with
good news for the oil industry, approving long-sought tax benefits aiming to
ward off a production slump by promoting exploration and greenfield development.
A scaled-down version of the Cabinet, the Presidium will send its proposals
to the State Duma later this week and expects the resulting legislation will
take effect at the start of next year, said Deputy Finance Minister Sergei
Shatalov.
In a key decision hailed by the industry and analysts, Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin and other Presidium members endorsed tax holidays of up to 15
years for offshore oil fields, Shatalov said.
Companies involved in the entire process would qualify for the 15-year tax
holidays, while those beginning production at an already identified greenfield
would have a break of 10 years before taxes kicked in, Shatalov said.
Rosneft and Gazprom, through its oil arm Gazprom Neft, would be the winners
if these proposals become law, as existing legislation designates the two
state-controlled companies to lead work on offshore projects.
Another proposal approved Monday calls for a tax holiday of up to seven years
for the development of greenfields in the northern Yamal Peninsula and
Timan-Pechora provinces, Shatalov said.
The duration of the tax-free period could be shortened in cases where
companies had produced a certain amount of oil at a particular field, Shatalov
said. He said the total for offshore projects was 35 million tons and that a
figure for the Yamal and Timan-Pechora fields would be decided in the next 10
days.
Dmitry Dolgov, a spokesman for independent LUKoil, said production could be
expected to rise by as much as 10 percent, based on a five-year tax holiday,
Bloomberg reported. He did not provide an estimate for the 10- and 15-year
breaks.
Tax holidays of this type are currently only in place for greenfields in
eastern Siberia, where they cease once the total oil produced reaches 25 million
tons.
In another decision related to the oil industry, the Presidium supported a
reduction in the mineral-extraction tax for oil companies in an attempt to
offset steep rises in productions costs, Shatalov said.
Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin estimated that the oil industry would save 100
billion rubles ($4.2 billion) in taxes next year if the proposal, which he
announced in March, became law. Putin backed the idea during his confirmation
speech in the Duma earlier this month.
Although the cuts may only represent a fraction of the industry's total tax
bill, analysts have said the savings will be vital if the sector is to have the
necessary funds to finance new development and battle stagnating output. A slate
of investment banks and oil companies, including Rosneft, have been calling for
a tax cut since last year.
The proposal to cut taxes on existing production would raise the starting
point for the levy on oil revenues from the current $9 per barrel to $15 per
barrel.
The other major tax for the industry, the oil-export duty, will remain
unaffected by Monday's decision.
A spokesman for Rosneft, which works in Yamal and Timan-Pechora, said the
company was "extremely" pleased by the Presidium's announcement. It will be able
to spend the money to increase exploration and production, said the spokesman,
Nikolai Manvelov.
"Thus, the company receives an extra chance to invest in the development of
its business," he said.
The State Statistics Service reported last week that crude oil production
from January to April in Russia, the world's second-largest exporter of the
commodity, was down by 0.3 percent from the same period last year.
Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, however, expressed confidence in an
interview earlier this month that output would again be above last year's levels
by the end of this year.
The government is hurrying to lighten taxes in the sector because it was
alarmed to see a country with huge oil reserves suffer a slide in production,
said Anton Konchin, an analyst at UniCredit Aton.
"Let's hope that it's still not too late to reverse the disappointing
production curve," Konchin said.
The Presidium approved the oil-industry proposals as part of a discussion of
tax policies for the next three years. Other decisions included raising the
allowable corporate research-and-development exemption, simplifying small
business taxes and offering new tax breaks for spending on education, health and
housing.
The measures to promote research and development at companies, which could
take effect next year, include a 50 percent increase in the amount companies can
spend tax free on research and development, Putin said in opening remarks at the
meeting.
Small businesses will have their work reduced by the proposal to allow them
to file their accounting records once a year, instead of on a quarterly basis as
at present, Putin said.
"I want to emphasize that the small business sector is especially sensitive
to the quality of tax administration," Putin said. "And we need further actions
to improve it."
The Cabinet is also to submit a raft of amendments reducing income tax on
people raising children to the Duma later this week.
The proposed tax cuts would be tied to the portion of their incomes that
people spend on education, health care and housing, Putin said.
Money spent by companies on the training and education of employees would no
longer be taxed, Putin said, and the tax-free portion of employer health
insurance contributions would be doubled.
A portion of loans provided to help employees pay mortgage interest will also
be given tax-free status, he said.
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