Calgary Herald

ROYALTY RESET IN N. L.

Profits to dictate rates

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The Newfoundla­nd and Labrador government released details of its new generic offshore oil royalty regime on Monday, saying the simplified system will make the province more competitiv­e on the world stage.

Natural Resources Minister Derrick Dalley said the new framework will see royalty rates increase as fields become more profitable, but he said the new regime will also provide a more predictabl­e starting point for energy companies.

Under the old regime, the province negotiated separate royalty regimes and benefit agreements on a per project basis.

“This generic royalty ... provides the fiscal certainty that industry has been seeking,” Dalley said in a statement.

The new royalty system applies to all new production licences, including those based on existing exploratio­n and significan­t discovery licences. That means the framework will apply to the proposed Bay du Nord deepwater project in the Flemish Pass. Statoil ASA of Norway, which announced the find in 2013, has yet to decide to develop that field.

On Monday, Dalley told a news conference that talks with Statoil to develop Bay du Nord had reached an impasse. He said the company wanted more than the province was willing to give, and stressed the new royalty system was not a factor.

The Bay du Nord project is considered a must- have in a province that has suffered financiall­y since oil prices started plunging in June 2014. Offshore energy royalties account for about one- third of the province’s budget. The Bay du Nord oilfield, the largest global discovery in 2013, is under 1,100 metres of water about 500 kilometres east of St. John’s. Early estimates suggest it contains up to 600 million barrels of recoverabl­e light crude.

The project would provide a major economic lift to the province.

Four months ago, Premier Paul Davis said the province was “weeks away” from signing a term sheet with Statoil. He also said the new royalty regime would be modelled on the more streamline­d approach taken by Norway.

Under the new framework, a basic royalty will apply to gross revenue when a project starts producing oil, increasing from one per cent to 7.5 per cent as the project recovers its costs.

Once costs have been recovered and profits start to roll in, a net royalty will be applied to net revenue, ranging from 10 per cent to 50 per cent — and the basic royalty becomes a credit against net royalties. The highest royalty rate will be payable by oilfields that have returned $ 3 to the producers — after royalties — for every dollar spent.

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TIM FRASER/ ?? An offshore oil rig sits in a bay outside of St. John’s, N. L.,. A new simplified royalty system is to be put in place and will apply to all new production licences, including Bay du Nord oilfield, the largest global discovery in 2013, said to contain...
FOR CALGARY HERALD TIM FRASER/ An offshore oil rig sits in a bay outside of St. John’s, N. L.,. A new simplified royalty system is to be put in place and will apply to all new production licences, including Bay du Nord oilfield, the largest global discovery in 2013, said to contain...

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