CA50220 - MEA: Qualifying expenditure: Acquisition of mineral deposits and rights
The term ‘mineral asset’ is defined in CAA01/S397 as
‘any mineral deposits or land comprising mineral deposits or
any interests in or rights over such deposits or land’.
The cost of obtaining an option over mineral deposits
constitutes qualifying expenditure within CAA01/S395 (1)(b) and
CAA01/S398.
Expenditure on non-mineral bearing land acquired to give
access to adjacent mineral deposits is not qualifying expenditure
even though the access land may have been bought at a premium over
its existing use value.
The costs of production licences represent expenditure on
mineral assets rather than exploration and access.
The terms of the planning permission or licence to exploit a
mineral deposit will normally require the mine operator to
undertake a range of work to make the land fit for future use once
the mining operations have ceased. This ‘restoration
expenditure’ is part of the costs of acquiring the rights to
the mineral deposits and is qualifying expenditure within
CAA01/S395 (1)(b) - see
CA50280.
Expenditure incurred in acquiring mineral deposits (or land
comprising them) may fall within both CAA01/S.396 - mineral
exploration and access - and CAA01/S397 - acquisition of a mineral
asset. Where this happens CAA01/S398 states that the expenditure is
treated as being on the acquisition of a mineral asset. The
practical effect of this is that allowances are only available at
10%.
