OT15725 - PRT: Tariff Receipts: Tariff Receipts Allowance
Calculation of TRA: Participators in Common
Tariff receipts allowance (TRA) is calculated by the A x B/C
formula contained in OTA83/SCH3/PARA2(1), see
OT15675. Where none of the participators
in the user field (see
OT15625) is also a participator in the
principal field, the ‘C’ factor is usually the
throughput from the user field. But see
OT15700 for an example where this is not
the case (
Chevron Petroleum (UK) Ltd v CIR (67TC414), tariff
relating to only part of the throughput).
The Chevron case led various oil companies to argue that the
‘C’ factor should be reduced where a company
participates in both the user and principal fields with the
consequence that there is self-to-self tariffing. On 4 November
1997 OTO wrote to UKOITC, OTAC and Brindex largely accepting this
view (see
4 November
1997 Letter ).
In cases where there are standard tariffing arrangements and
there is self- to-self tariffing, it has been accepted that the
application of the netting down principle described at
OT15210 means that only part of the oil
from the user field is oil for which a tariff is effectively
received. Where the self-to-self element is ignored for PRT
purposes, it is accepted that it refers to a discrete quantity of
oil that is not ‘oil to which … qualifying tariff
receipts relate’ (OTA83/SCH3/PARA2(1)), see
OT15675.
A 'standard tariffing arrangement' is, broadly, an agreement
whereby the participators in one field arrange for a tariff to be
paid to the participators in another field, in respect of all the
oil transported (or in respect of another qualifying activity) from
the user field. If the tariffing arrangement differs from this, the
application of the Chevron case will have to be considered in the
light of the particular facts.
Example
- X and Y are each 50% participators in Field A and 50% owners of a pipeline.
- X and Z are each participators in Field B. X has a 60% interest and Z has a 40% interest. Field B uses the Field A pipeline and the transportation contract requires a payment of £1 for each metric tonne of Field B’s oil that is transported through the pipeline.
- Field B produces 500,000 metric tonnes of oil, all of which is transported via Field A's pipeline.
- Following the netting down principle described in OT15210 of the £300,000 (60% x £500,000) tariff due from X in field B, only £150,000 (50% x £300,000), the proportion paid to Y, is recognised for PRT purposes. This £150,000 is recognised as referring to 150,000 metric tonnes of oil. The £150,000 not recognised for PRT purposes is treated as referring to 150,000 metric tonnes of oil for which tariffs are not paid.
- All the tariff paid by Z in field B is recognised for PRT: tariffs are paid on 200,000 metric tonnes.
- The ‘C’ factor is 350,000 metric tonnes being 100,000, the quantity of oil to which X's effective tariff relates (representing Z’s payment to X) plus 250,000, the quantity of oil to which Y's wholly effective tariff relates (50% of the gross tariff).
- The TRA computations for the tariffs received by field A are
for X, £100,000 x 250,000/350,000 = £71,429 (the A
factor is the £100,000 received from Z; the self-to-self
element is ignored);
for Y, £250,000 x 250,000/350,000 = £178,571.
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