Taxes and Non-Renewable Resources: The Impact on Exploration and Development

Jeff Strnad
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Oil & gas projects consist of a series of options. The mineral owner must first decide whether to spend money on "exploration" in order to learn the extent of potential reserves, the cost and timing of recovering the reserves, and the probability that the reserves are actually recoverable. The mineral owner holds an "exploration option" since the owner need not explore immediately but may wait until an increase in mineral prices makes the potential rewards from exploration more promising. After exploration of a property, the owner holds a "development option." The owner may pay to drill a test well to see if the reserves are recoverable, or the owner may put off any such test until prices are higher. If the test well proves there are recoverable reserves, the owner has a "production option." This option consists of the ability to complete the test well as a producer, and to drill and complete any other wells required to completely drain the recoverable reserves. The incentives for exploration, development, and production depend on the "threshold prices" at which an investor will execute each option. This article examines the impact of various tax policies on exploration and development threshold prices, using a simplified production model that collapses the production option into the development option. Capitalizing rather than expensing development costs (such as intangible drilling costs) creates incentives to do projects that have a lower probability of success, that have shorter well lives, and that have lower development costs. This shift in incentives creates a nonneutrality, causing investors to develop some properties prematurely while unduly delaying the development of other projects. Capitalizing development costs also causes a slight increase in the exploration threshold price and therefore reduces exploration. Capitalizing rather than expensing exploration costs (such as the costs of seismic analysis to detect potential underground deposits) results in a more complicated pattern of effects. This policy causes a large increase in the exploration threshold price, thereby reducing exploration. Since the taxpayer will not recover capitalized exploration costs until development, this policy also reduces the cost of development and lowers development threshold prices. As a consequence, capitalizing exploration costs results in more intensive development and production of known reserves as well as reduced exploration. This pattern is undesirable if the goal is to enhance national security by encouraging the creation of a pool of reserves that are available for immediate exploitation in case foreign supplies become unavailable. It also is possible that taxpayers may be able to circumvent most of the impact of rules requiring capitalization of exploration costs by strategically realizing losses. This possibility may blunt the undesirable national security impact of such rules, but the costs of the associated trading are social costs that would not arise under expensing.
税收和不可再生资源:对勘探和开发的影响
石油和天然气项目包括一系列的选择。矿主必须首先决定是否花钱进行“勘探”,以便了解潜在储量的范围、回收储量的成本和时间,以及储量实际可开采的可能性。矿产所有者拥有“勘探选择权”,因为所有者不需要立即勘探,而是可以等到矿产价格上涨,使勘探的潜在回报更有希望。在对房产进行勘探之后,业主拥有“开发选择权”。业主可能会花钱钻一口测试井,看看储量是否可采,或者业主可能会推迟任何此类测试,直到价格更高。如果测试井证明有可采储量,业主就有“生产选择”。该选项包括作为生产商完成测试井的能力,以及钻井和完井所需的任何其他井,以完全开采可采储量。勘探、开发和生产的动机取决于投资者执行每种期权的“门槛价格”。本文使用一个简化的生产模型,将生产选项分解为开发选项,研究了各种税收政策对勘探和开发门槛价格的影响。将开发成本(如无形钻井成本)资本化而不是费用化,可以激励人们去做那些成功概率较低、井寿命较短、开发成本较低的项目。这种激励机制的转变造成了一种非中立性,导致投资者过早地开发一些房地产,而过度地推迟了其他项目的开发。资本化开发成本也会导致勘探门槛价格小幅上升,从而减少勘探。将勘探成本(如为探测潜在地下矿藏而进行地震分析的成本)资本化而不是费用化,会导致更为复杂的影响模式。这一政策导致勘探门槛价格大幅提高,从而减少了勘探。由于纳税人在开发之前不会收回资本化的勘探成本,因此该政策还降低了开发成本并降低了开发门槛价格。因此,将勘探成本资本化会导致对已知储量进行更密集的开发和生产,同时减少勘探。如果目标是通过鼓励建立一个储备库来加强国家安全,以便在无法获得外国供应的情况下可以立即开采,那么这种模式是不可取的。纳税人也有可能通过战略性地认识到损失,来规避要求将勘探成本资本化的规则的大部分影响。这种可能性可能会减弱此类规则对国家安全的不良影响,但相关交易的成本是社会成本,不会在支出项下产生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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