Redesigning Petroleum Taxation

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A01=Emre Usenmez
Allowance Mechanism
Arm's Length Sale
Arm’s Length Sale
Author_Emre Usenmez
base
Base Case Scenarios
case
Category=KCVG
Economic Rents
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
equity
Equity Partner
fence
fiscal
Fiscal Regime
fiscal regime stability
Fiscal Review
Fixed Tax Rate
investment incentives oil sector
legal framework analysis
Long Term Government Bond Rate
Marginal Tax Rates
Maximising Economic Recovery
Non-arm's Length
Non-arm’s Length
NPV Method
oil fiscal policy
Older Fields
Petroleum Taxation
prt
regime
Resource Rent Tax
resource rent taxation
review
ring
Ring Fence
scenarios
Stabilisation Clauses
Tariff Incomes
Tariff Receipts
Taxpayer Positions
UK Continental Shelf
UK petroleum fiscal reform analysis
UK Sector
UK's Sovereignty
UK’s Sovereignty
upstream energy law
Wood Report

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367585259
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Since its inception some 40 years ago, petroleum-specific taxation in the UK has been subject to numerous modifications. Often these modifications were brought into place not only to sufficiently incentivise the investors but also to capture a fair share for the government. However, it is evident from the frequency of changes that finding the right balance between these two aims is no easy matter. Such a balance, and the consequent fiscal stability, is necessary for the long-term relationship between the parties to endure to their mutual benefit. Still, it does not take much for one or other party to feel that they are out of balance. As a consequence, one party feels that the other party is taking an undue proportion of the value generated and that they are losing out.

Yet achieving that balance and fiscal stability is possible. To understand this possibility, this book first clarifies what is meant by sufficient incentivisation and fair share before developing a new fiscal system that manages this balance and stability. Such clarification yields objective criteria against which to assess not only the existing regime, but also the newly proposed regime. This approach is further complemented by the critical analysis of the fiscal legislative framework and the evaluation of the legal positions of specific contractual elements and mechanisms found within that framework. This latter analysis is important in order to reduce the legal uncertainty such elements may create, which can otherwise lead to further reactive amendments and revisions to the fiscal regime in the future.

Emre Üşenmez is a petroleum economist and a legal expert in the upstream oil and gas sector. He is a Senior Lecturer in Finance at the University of Aberdeen’s AFG College and a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Aberdeen Law School. Until August 2018 he also served as Dean for Internationalisation focussing on China and East Asia at the University of Aberdeen. He is also an associate at the Aberdeen Energy Institute and Aberdeen University Centre for Energy Law (AUCEL). Prior to joining the University of Aberdeen, he worked in the natural resources sector in Azerbaijan and has significant experience working with the staff of national ministries, and state and private oil companies around the world.

He is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and holds a PhD in Economics, Finance and Law, an MSc in Petroleum, Energy Economics and Finance, and an LLM in Oil & Gas Law from the University of Aberdeen. He also holds a BSc in Economics and a BA in Political Science from North Carolina State University.

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