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Home International Customs

Russia announces war against oil taxes

byCustoms Today Report
12/02/2015
in International Customs
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MOSCOW: Russia announced to fight against oil taxes as crude oil prices decreased in recent days, effecting state revenue collection mostly coming from energy production.

Oil’s rout has made an agreement last year, which reduced export taxes in return for higher levies on extraction, unworkable because the plan was based on $100 a barrel crude. Producers led by state-controlled OAO Rosneft have proposed changes to the tax regime, Deputy Energy Minister Kirill Molodtsov said in an interview.

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On the brink of its first recession since 2009, Russia’s state coffers are being depleted by lower energy revenue as sanctions and a plunging ruble put further pressure on the economy. While the government must maintain funds from oil, it can’t afford to wipe out the industry’s profitability and risk harming future production prospects.

“We face new realities and the entire set of taxes, and possible changes, are being weighed now,” Molodtsov said in Moscow. The proposals must be submitted to a presidential commission by the end of this month, a solution isn’t likely until the start of April at the earliest, he said.

Last year, the federal treasury got 6.75 trillion rubles of taxes from oil and petroleum products, or almost $178 billion using the central bank’s average exchange rate. As Russia reviews this year’s budget, the Economy Ministry is working on an average oil price of $50 per barrel compared with $98 in 2014.

The impact of lower prices will be partially offset by the weaker ruble, which has fallen 47 percent in the last 12 months against the dollar, making dollar income from oil go further when spent domestically.

Rosneft Chief Executive Officer Igor Sechin, a long-time associate of Vladimir Putin, discussed the tax regime with Russia’s president last week. Putin said everyone must honor the state’s interests.

“The interests of the company are important, because the company is a sector-forming one, but there are also the interests of the economy in general,” he said.

Nonetheless, the government recognizes some adjustments may be needed.

The Energy Ministry is analyzing possible changes in formulas to calculate oil export levies and crude extraction tax, as well as excise duties for petroleum products, Molodtsov said. It’s also discussing proposals to delay a planned ban on selling Euro-4 gasoline, an inferior grade to the current European benchmark, from 2016, as well as possible changes in planned refinery upgrades, he said.

Last year, Russia decided to gradually cut its oil export taxes in 2015 to 2017 to bring them in line with those of Kazakhstan, one of its two customs union partners. The government compensated for the reduction by accelerating increases in the extraction tax, based on average oil prices at $100 per barrel.

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