The Telegram (St. John's)

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Liberals (quietly) approve new offshore royalty framework

- BY JAMES MCLEOD

Last week the provincial government quietly enacted a new generic oil royalty regime for the province, without any explanatio­n of what they were doing.

Natural Resources Minister Siobhan Coady said the government didn’t issue a news release to announce what they were doing, because she felt like there was nothing to announce.

The royalty regime is identical to what the Tory government drafted two year ago, and the whole story of the past two years is a little bit strange.

The issue goes all the way back to November 2015, just days before the start of the general election campaign, when the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government announced that they were enacting a new generic royalty regime which would cover future offshore oil developmen­ts.

But then less than a month later, the Tories were voted out of office before they could get around to actually enacting the generic royalty regime they announced.

Then for a while, nothing happened.

When the Liberal government introduced “The Way Forward,” their signature policy blueprint, they included a commitment, saying, “By March 31, 2017, our Government will enhance Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s regulatory framework by implementi­ng a Generic Royalty Regime and regulation­s.”

But the Liberal government missed their own deadline, and didn’t actually give formal cabinet approval to the oil royalty regulation­s until May 2. At the time, the government didn’t hold a public announceme­nt or issue a news release about this.

And in August when Tory MHA Keith Hutchings asked what was going on with the province’s royalty regime in the House of Assembly, Coady neglected to mention that cabinet had already approved it months earlier.

“It is something that we have been working on,” Coady said, at a time when the regulation­s were already approved by cabinet.

“There was a lot of work done by the former administra­tion;

we’ve been working on the foundation­s and basics in which they had done. A lot of work has gone into developing the regulation­s around that. We expect those regulation­s by the fall.”

Ultimately, the regulation­s were passed in the N.L. Gazette, the final requiremen­t for formally enacting them, on Nov. 1.

The actual regulation­s are sufficient­ly complicate­d so that Hutchings couldn’t even tell whether they were the same as when the Tories drafted them two years ago.

“Are they what we had brought in in November 2015?” Hutchings said.

“My biggest concern, if this is what it looks like it is, is the secrecy and the reluctance to let the legislatur­e know, to let the industry know, to let everybody know that these are done.”

Hutchings said that two years of dithering doesn’t exactly inspire confidence from the global oil companies who need to work with the government to get projects off the ground.

So what was the government doing that it took two years to get this done? Coady said that they were doing “due diligence” and getting energy consulting company Wood Mackenzie to check over the regulation­s and make sure they were globally competitiv­e.

Unsurprisi­ngly, Wood Mackenzie said the regulation­s were good, and no changes were made, because they were the same company that helped the Tories draft the regulation­s back in 2015.

“They were the ones that had been working with the government to begin with, so again they reviewed it and said it’s internatio­nally competitiv­e,” Coady said.

The oil industry players aren’t thrilled with the current situation.

“We’re disappoint­ed that the province proceeded with it,” said Paul Barnes, with the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers.

“It will certainly increase the cost to industry compared to the last regime.”

Barnes said that there are concerns about increases in tax, as well as potential regulatory changes could add to cost as well.

 ??  ?? Natural Resources Minister Siobhan Coady speaks to reporters outside the House of Assembly in St. John’s.
Natural Resources Minister Siobhan Coady speaks to reporters outside the House of Assembly in St. John’s.

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