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Louisiana Public Service
Commissioner Promotes Broader State Oil Tax — by OGJ
editors, Sep. 8, 2006
HOUSTON — Louisiana’s outdated system for taxing oil and
gas means the state will collect no tax revenues on the
new petroleum field discovered off the state's coast, said
Louisiana Public Service Commissioner Foster Campbell.
He referred to a Gulf of Mexico Lower Tertiary play
announced earlier this week by Chevron Corp. and Devon
Energy Corp. (OGJ, Online, Sept. 5, 2006).
Devon, which entered a joint venture to explore the play
with Chevron in September 2002, expects four discoveries
in which it has participated to add 300–900 million bbl of
oil equivalent to the company’s resource base. It has
booked no reserves so far but expects production to start
in 2009.
“But when that oil comes ashore, it won’t raise a dollar
for the state treasury,” Campbell said. “Our state
continues to rely on the severance tax enacted in 1921,
meaning we tax only the oil and gas produced in our state
and within 3 miles of our coast. This new Chevron find is
270 miles southwest of New Orleans.
“This development is absolute proof that Louisiana must
move away from a system that taxes our declining in-state
oil and gas production and toward a lower and broader tax
on all oil and gas processed in the state,” he said.
Campbell suggested a 4% Processing Fee that he estimates
would yield $6 billion/year. Analysts for the state have
studied a broad-based tax that would apply to hydrocarbons
produced within the state as well as refined products via
tankers coming into Louisiana ports and gas delivered via
pipelines across the state.
The Legislature would have to approve such a tax proposal,
which then would be presented as a state constitutional
amendment. Similar measures have failed several times
within the last 10 years, a spokesman for Campbell told
OGJ.
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