Feature
posted 14 Mar 2006 in Volume 8 Issue 9
Oil and gas exploration in South Africa : in search of stability
By Peter Leon, partner, and Kevin Williams, senior associate, Webber Wentzel Bowens.
SA drilling programme on the back burner
In November 2005, BHP Billiton (and its
Royalty uncertainty
The project was suspended owing to uncertainty regarding the level of royalties that will be payable to the South African government (the SAG), from 2009, under
The Royalty Bill is part of a comprehensive legislative process aimed at transforming the South African minerals and petroleum industries, the legislative anchor of which is the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 2002 (MPRDA). The Royalty Bill was initially published for public comment in March 2003. The Royalty Bill proposes a revenue rather than a profit-based royalty and provides for the following royalty rates:
- “1% for natural gas and natural gas condensate petroleum crude offshore production where the water depths are deeper than 500 metres” and
- “3% for natural gas and natural gas condensate petroleum crude onshore and offshore production where the water depths are shallower than 500 metres”.
The current figures are based primarily on rates in international mining royalty legislation. It seems that no empirical research in South Africa was conducted into the level of royalties that would ensure an appropriate balance between collecting part of the receipts of mineral, gas and petroleum sales, and exploiting South Africa’s diminishing natural resources as effectively as possible (or in the case of oil and gas, promoting exploration). While the royalty rates are in line with royalty rates elsewhere in the world, they do not take sufficient account of the circumstances of natural resource producers in SA, including the costs of implementing socio-economic reforms and black economic empowerment initiatives and managing the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Over 130 submissions were received on the Royalty Bill, including well-researched and argued papers by the Chamber of Mines[1], Marius van Blerk, a director of Standard Bank and tax expert and Dr Fred Cawood, a geologist and academic at
Oil and gas rights in flux
Prior to the MPRDA’s entry into force on May 1, 2004, oil and gas exploration in
Tax incentives to be renewed in the MPRDA
Another issue is the status of certain tax incentives granted in the OP26 leases. In the SA National Treasury’s 2006 budget review, it noted that these incentives would be renewed in the legislation and also, encouragingly, stated that the proposed amendments would do away with the possibility of a 40 per cent discretionary surcharge on oil and gas profits provided for in the OP26 leases. The review also stated that amendments to tax legislation would provide for the accelerated depreciation of drilling equipment.
References
1. The Chamber of Mines’ calculations, based on 2003 resource price and exchange rate figures, indicated that the proposed 3% royalty on gold could lead to the sterilisation of over 600 tons of gold.
2. Although the MPRDA provides for the payment of royalties to the state, it does not specify the rate of such royalties. Instead, the MPRDA defines “state royalties” as “any royalty payable to the state in terms of an Act of Parliament”. In addition, sections 86(2)(c) and 86(2)(e) of the MPRDA place an obligation on the holder of a production right (for oil and gas) to pay the state royalties.
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