
- •Introduction to Economics and management
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •What does economics study?
- •The economy and economic systems
- •Unit 2 Finance
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •Financial institutions
- •Financial management
- •Unit 3 stock
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •3. Read the text, do the exercises securities markets
- •How to make money in the stock market
- •Unit 4 the economy of petroleum industry
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •Oil and Gas in Russia. Development and Financing of Large Projects
- •Opportunities Await u.S. Independents willing to Change
- •Independent types
- •Lehman Bros: e&p spending to see slower growth
- •International spending
- •Halliburton
- •Rosneft
- •Unit 5 Taxation and audit
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •Taxation
- •Kazakhstan’s New Oil Tax Regime Two types of contracts
- •Different fiscal systems complicate reserve values
- •Term uncertainty
- •Fiscal systems
- •Definitions of reserves “Booked”
- •Auditors and their reports
- •Independent Auditor’s Report
- •Consolidated Balance sheet derived from the consolidated financial statements – year ended 31 December 2003
- •Unit 6 Production and Costs
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •Production and Costs
- •The Benefits of Being Small: Balancing Economies of Scale Against the Advantages of Intimacy Is a Delicate Task
- •Сущность и структура издержек производства
- •Unit 7 business plan
- •What does the model structure of business plan look like?
- •1.0 Executive Summary
- •Investment
- •3.0 Services
- •3.1 Service Description
- •3.2 Competitive Comparison
- •3.3 Sales Literature
- •3.4 Fulfillment
- •3.5 Technology
- •3.6 Future Services
- •4.0 Market Analysis Summary
- •4.1 Market Segmentation
- •4.2 Service Business Analysis
- •4.2.1 Business Participants
- •4.2.2 Competition and Buying Patterns
- •4.2.3 Main Competitors
- •5.0 Strategy and Implementation Summary
- •5.3 Sales Strategy
- •5.3.1 Sales Forecast
- •5.4 Milestones
- •6.0 Management Summary
- •6.1 Management Team
- •6.2 Management Team Gaps
- •6.3 Personnel Plan
- •7.0 Financial Plan
- •7.1 Important Assumptions
- •7.2 Key Financial Indicators
- •7.3 Break-even Analysis
- •7.4 Projected Profit and Loss
- •7.5 Projected Cash Flow
- •7.6 Projected Balance Sheet
- •7.7 Business Ratios
- •International Business Etiquette and ethics
- •Terms and Vocabulary
- •Business Etiquette
- •Business Ethics
- •Big Oil’s Dirty Secrets
- •References
Kazakhstan’s New Oil Tax Regime Two types of contracts
Mineral exploration and extraction activities are permitted only to those who
have an appropriate contract with the Republic of Kazakhstan, termed a subsurface user contract. The Tax Code offers alternative tax regimes for taxpayers involved in mineral exploration and extraction activities, which the legislation terms “subsurface users”.
Model 1 offers a regime under which the subsurface user is subject to all the
taxes which affect ordinary taxpayers (corporate income tax, social tax, vehicle tax, property tax, land tax, etc) and, in addition, certain specific taxes applicable to mineral extraction activities:
• Bonuses (both on signature of the contract and following a commercial discovery)
• Royalties
• Excess Profits Tax
• Rent Tax on Export of Crude Oil
Of these taxes, the first three existed prior to the 2004 tax changes, but the
reform package includes major changes to the way they operate which are described later in this article. The fourth, Rent Tax, is a completely new tax. This is also described in more detail below.
Royalties and Rent Tax apply to gross income and are deductible in calculating both corporate income tax ("CIT") and Excess Profits Tax. СГТ is deductible in computing Excess Profits Tax.
Model 2 offers a production sharing regime of the type familiar from other hydrocarbon provinces around the world. Though not explicitly confined to hydrocarbon extraction activities, the mechanism for allocating production between the State and the subsurface user is written with hydrocarbon liquid extraction activities in mind and may not be easily adapted to other kinds of minerals, including gas. Subsurface users which sign up to Production Sharing Agreements ("PSAs") are obliged to share production with the Republic in accordance with formulae set out in the PSA itself, and to the other taxes prescribed in tax legislation, excluding, however:
• Rent Tax on Export of Crude Oil
• Excise Tax on Crude Oil (including gas condensate)
• Excess Profits Tax
• Land Tax
• Property Tax
The gross income of the contractor for CIT purposes includes both cost recovery oil and the contractor's share of profit oil. The base for calculating the contractor's royalty obligation is the gross amount of crude oil produced before production sharing.
In 2003, the possibility of a third model was extensively discussed. This was to be based around a rent tax similar in concept to that discussed below, but the idea was abandoned, apparently following discussions with state oil company Kazmunaigaz.
Bonuses
The Tax Code continues to provide for 2 types of bonuses:
• Signature Bonus
• Commercial Discovery Bonus
The major change in respect of Signature Bonuses is an explicit statement that the amount will be set by competitive tender. The framework of the competitive tender is to be prescribed by a proposed new PSA law.
The calculation of the amount of Discovery Bonus continues to be based on the officially approved estimate of recoverable reserves. The rate is now fixed at 0.1 percent of the value of recoverable reserves, rather than this figure being specified as the minimum amount as previously.
Royalty
The most important change to the royalty regime is the introduction of a fixed
scale of royalty rates for oil production based on tons produced. In the past, royalty rates (except for those applicable to "commonly occurring useful minerals" which were specified in the Tax Code) have been subject to negotiation within broad parameters and in at least two cases have not been applied to a project on economic grounds.
Associated gas is to be converted to equivalent using a formula of 1,000 cu. m. equals 0.857 t.
The new rules provide that the Government may publish separately, rates for
solid minerals, but is completely silent on how the base for dry gas will be calculated. Presumably, one should apply the conversion factor specified for associated gas and then apply the sliding scale for oil, but this is not clearly stated anywhere. There is also considerable uncertainty about how the sliding scale should actually be applied.
For example, what rate would be applied if the amount extracted was exactly 2 min t? Once the production passes 5 min t in the year does the scale operate to subject all production, since the beginning of the year, to the 6-percent rate?
Rent Tax on the Export of Crude Oil
The most fundamental change introduced by the recent amendments is the
creation of a completely new tax which applies to exports of crude oil. The tax will apply to taxpayers who export crude oil, apart from those who are parties to PSAs. It is not clear whether the tax will apply to an oil trader who purchases crude from the producer in Kazakhstan and then exports it.
Reflecting government concerns about transfer pricing, the tax base is not the actual sale price of the exported crude, but a formula which applies an average price for a basket of widely-traded benchmark oil prices, to the volume of oil sold. There is provision to adjust this deemed price for quality differentials as a result of mixing the oil in pipelines, though it is not completely clear how this is to operate. The components of the basket will be fixed by the Government. Transportation costs should be deducted to arrive at the base for calculating the tax. Which transportation costs is not explained, nor is it indicated whether these are only the costs incurred by the producer or whether one can take into account the costs of shipping crude to a location comparable with one where the benchmark crudes are traded.
In the rather likely event that the deemed price is not a round number of dollars per barrel, the legislation is silent on how the resulting fraction will impact the rate, e.g., if the deemed price is $25.57 per barrel, then should the rate be 16 percent or 17 percent or somewhere between the two?
The tax period is to be a calendar month, and the taxpayer will be required to
pay tax for a particular month by the 10th day of the month following. A tax declaration will be due by the 15th of the following month. Like all turnover taxes, the rate of rent tax has no relationship to profitability, and will, therefore, tend to depress the economic viability of projects in the hostile conditions of the North Caspian.
Words and expressions
extraction appropriate contract tax code taxpayer legislation term corporate income tax property tax land tax royalty excess profits tax rent tax gross income deductible explicitly to sign up to set out recovery oil cost abandoned recoverable reserves to be fixed at associated gas broad min t amendment to apply to apart from benchmark deemed price transportation costs resulting fraction turnover taxes profitability |
добыча; извлечение нефти, газа подходящие контракты налоговый кодекс налогоплательщик законодательный срок налог на доход корпорации налог на собственность земельный налог плата за право разработки недр налог на сверхприбыль налог на аренду валовой доход нестрахуемый минимум детально, подробно подписать установить переработаная нефть затраты, издержки оставленный извлекаемые запасы быть зафиксированным на нефтяной газ, попутный газ широкий, многочисленный тонн в минуту поправка заявить, подать заявку на отдельно от база (сравнения) разумные цены транспортные расходы результирующая фракция налог с оборота прибыльность, рентабельность |
Exercise 6. Answer the questions
Who is likely to be interested in this information?
Are alterations in tax regime favourable for foreign oil and gas companies?
Is everything clear and well thought over in the new oil tax regime?
Write out the names of taxes which should be paid by “subsurface users” according to Model I. Are the same taxes paid according to Model II? What is different?
Find those parts of the text where the author says about some uncertainties in the new tax application. Comment on them.
Find the conclusion the author made on the economic viability of projects in Kazakhstan. Do you agree with it?
Exercise 7. Quick Reading
Look through the text and be ready to answer some questions.
Does the first sentence of the text have the same meaning as the title?
What problem is discussed?
Is it a local or a global issue?
What kinds of fiscal systems are mentioned in the text?