Oil and Gas Tax Changes to Protect Energy Security & Jobs

  • The Energy Profits Levy will remain in place until March 2028, and the Government will introduce a new Energy Security Investment Mechanism to protect domestic energy supply and help safeguard some of the tens of thousands of jobs reliant on the sector

  • This forms part of the Government's strategy to support households with energy bills whilst providing certainty to investors to secure the long-term future of domestic energy production

  • The Energy Profits Levy has raised around £2.8 billion to date, helping the Government pay just under half the typical household energy bill last winter

Put in place to tax extraordinary profits made by industry following record high prices of oil and gas driven by Putin's invasion of Ukraine, the levy has raised around £2.8 billion to date and is expected to raise almost £26 billion by March 2028 - helping to fund the measures to help with the cost of living, such as the Energy Price Guarantee.

While the levy included an investment allowance to encourage firms to continue to invest in oil and gas extraction in the UK, industry has warned that companies are cutting back on investment. This puts the long-term future of the UK's domestic supply at risk, meaning we would be forced to import more from abroad at a time when reliable and affordable energy is a focus for families and businesses.

In response to this, the Government has today announced an Energy Security Investment Mechanism to give the oil and gas sector certainty to raise capital and invest in new and existing projects, securing affordable and reliable domestic energy supply and protecting some of the 215,000 British jobs the sector supports. It will mean that if prices fall to historically normal levels for a sustained period the tax rate for oil and gas companies will return to 40%, the rate before the Energy Profits Levy was introduced. Based on the independent Office for Budget Responsibility's (OBR) forecast the Energy Security Investment Mechanism won't be triggered before the tax's planned end date in March 2028.

In light of Putin's weaponisation of energy, the UK government is taking concrete steps to accelerate home-grown sources of energy to reduce the UK's reliance on foreign imports. In October 2022, the industry regulator the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) opened applications for oil and gas licences to explore and potentially develop 898 blocks and part-blocks in the North Sea which may lead to over 100 licences being awarded from later this year.

Gareth Davies MP, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, said:

It is right that we recover excess profits resulting from Putin's war and use the money to help people with their energy bills. Thanks to the revenue raised from windfall taxes on energy profits, we have helped save the typical household over £1,300 on their energy bill last winter.

While we stepped into help, never again can our energy supplies be at the whim of petrostate despots like Putin. That's why it's so important that we secure investment in our own domestic supply, protecting the tens of thousands of British jobs that come with it.

It would be beyond irresponsible to turn off the North Sea taps overnight. Without oil and gas from British waters, we would be forced to import even more from overseas, putting our security of supply at risk.

This 'windfall tax' takes the total revenues from taxes on oil and gas companies to £50 billion over the next five years. These taxes have helped the Government save the typical household over £1,300, just under half the typical energy bill last winter. It also helped cut the energy bills of businesses from pubs to leisure centres, with over £40 billion paid out across businesses and households to date.

The tax rate for oil and gas companies will only return to 40% if both average oil and gas prices fall to, or below, $71.40 per barrel for oil and £0.54 per therm for gas, for two consecutive quarters. This level is based on 20-year historical averages. The Energy Security Investment Mechanism is not expected to impact receipts from the Energy Profits Levy, based on current market forecasts.

Today the Government has also published the terms of reference for the oil and gas fiscal regime review that was announced at the Autumn Statement. The review will focus on how the tax regime can support the country's energy security and our net-zero commitments, while ensuring the country retains a fair return in exchange for the use of its resources when responding to any future price shocks.

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.