The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Government shares plans for North Sea

Industry: Late-life tax relief one option

- BY ALAN SHIELDS

The UK Government has launched a discussion paper on possible North Sea tax relief for late-life assets.

It comes after the Press and Journal revealed earlier this month that the chancellor of the Exchequer was to form an expert panel to discuss proposals for increasing production and investment in the struggling sector.

The purpose of the new paper is to extend the life of older assets and maximise the amount of oil and gas recovered from the UK continenta­l shelf while minimising the impact on the taxpayer.

The feedback received by the Treasury will then be looked at in greater detail by the expert panel and considered by ministers.

Estimates suggest that between 10 and 20billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe) are trapped underneath the seabed in UK waters.

But many of these valuable reserves risk being stranded forever due to high operating costs and the continued low oil price.

Among the ideas put forward in the paper include the possibilit­y of transferri­ng the tax history with the sale of an asset.

This would permit a seller to transfer a portion of their ring-fence corporatio­n tax payment history to the buyer of the asset.

Currently, this is not possible as tax history is attached to thecompany­who originally paid the tax and cannot be transferre­d.

The government claims this could lead to a new wave of younger companies taking over from older prospector­s and squeezing the last drop of reserves out of historic fields.

The report states: “In the past few months, HM Treasury has had numerous discussion­s with stakeholde­rs on the interactio­n between tax and late-life asset transactio­ns. Thispaperc­overs the issues that were most frequently raised.”

The paper sets out nine questions summarisin­g initial feedback from associated industries.

The paper states: “In the discussion­s HM Treasury has had to date, it has been stated on numerous occasions by industry stakeholde­rs that some form of transferab­le tax history (TTH) could assist some deals.”

The government say any solutions must deliver “sufficient and proportion­ate benefit" for the UK taxpayer.

Submission­s in response to the discussion paper are to be submitted before June 30, 2017.

The government will present its findings at the Autumn Budget 2017.

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