Argentina props up oil price at cost to producers

  • : Crude oil, Natural gas, Oil products
  • 20/05/19

Oil companies in Argentina are obligated to maintain production, payrolls and investment and cannot repatriate profits under a decree that establishes above-market prices for domestic crude.

The decree published today sets a minimum price of $45/bl for domestic sales of light sweet Medanito crude.

"This price will be adjusted for each type of crude by quality and by point of shipment," the decree stipulates. The minimum price, which is subject to quarterly revisions, will remain in place through December unless the price of Brent crude goes above $45/bl for 10 consecutive days.

Export taxes for crude and refined products have been eliminated, from a previous 8pc, as long as the Brent price remains below $45/bl. If the price surpasses that threshold, export taxes would be gradually reinstated and would be fully reimposed at a Brent price above $60/bl.

While the decree remains in effect, all oil producers must maintain the levels of activity and production registered in 2019. But the decree provides some leeway, emphasizing that the government will consider reduced domestic and international demand caused by pandemic restrictions.

Producers are also required to maintain existing service contracts and keep the same number of workers they had on 31 December 2019. Any company that fails to fulfill its annual investment plant could be fined. Fines range from the equivalent of 22m3 (138 bl) of crude at the domestic price to a maximum of 2,200m3 for each infraction.

While the minimum price is in effect, producing companies are also limited in their access to the foreign exchange market unless necessary for their daily operations, meaning they are effectively barred from sending profits outside Argentina.

Refiners are obligated to purchase all crude from domestic producers and are prohibited from importing any products that are available at home.

As part of the measure the government has vowed not to raise fuel taxes until 1 October, a move meant to thwart pump price increases.

Independent producers such as Vista and Pluspetrol and refiners such as Trafigura and Raizen are most impacted by the new decree. State-controlled YPF, Argentina's top producer and refiner, is less exposed because of its integrated operations, and the decline in demand stemming from the coronavirus restrictions means it has suspended outside crude purchases.

The decree, which emerged out of tense negotiations between independent producers and refiners, marks a big win for oil-producing provinces seeking to protect tax revenue.

"This new scheme gives predictability, security and trust. It puts forward clear agreed-upon rules to develop hydrocarbon activity," Neuquen governor Omar Gutierrez said. The southwestern province of Neuquen is home to the Vaca Muerta shale formation.


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24/04/18

Amapá cancela regime especial de ICMS

Amapá cancela regime especial de ICMS

Rio de Janeiro, 18 April (Argus) — O Secretário da Fazenda (Sefaz) do Amapá (AP) cancelou ontem o regime especial de tributação de empresas importadoras de combustíveis, colocando um fim a uma situação que gerava distorções de preços no mercado de diesel . A decisão do órgão foi publicada no diário oficial desta quarta-feira, dia 17, e contempla os regimes especiais do tributo estadual ICMS de oito empresas, entre elas a Refinaria de Manguinhos, que pertence ao grupo Fit, Amapetro, Axa Oil, Alba Trading e Father Trading. No caso da Amapetro, a empresa pagava uma alíquota efetiva de 4pc do valor da importação nas compras de outros países para uso próprio para consumo dentro do estado. Considerando a média do indicador Argus de importação de diesel de origem russa ao longo de março, isso equivaleria a R$136,9/m³.O valor atual do ICMS nos outros estados brasileiros é de R$1.063/m³ desde 1 de fevereiro. O estado teria importado 197.244m³ de diesel em março, de acordo com informações do Ministério do Desenvolvimento, Indústria, Comércio e Serviços (MDIC). Isso equivale a 15,9pc do total de diesel importado pelo Brasil no mês. O consumo de diesel A do estado foi de 6.250m³ no mês passado, equivalente a 0,1pc do consumo nacional, de acordo com os dados da Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis (ANP). As autorizações do estado criavam distorções de preços no mercado e perdas de arrecadação fiscal em várias estados onde o produto acabava sendo consumido. Associações de produtores e distribuidores de diesel vinham pressionando o poder público nos últimos meses para derrubar esses regimes especiais. De acordo com o Instituto Combustível Legal, a medida causou um prejuízo de R$1 bilhão aos estados onde o combustível importado no âmbito do regime especial era efetivamente consumido, citando os estados de São Paulo, Paraná e Pernambuco como principais destinos. No início do mês, a Refina Brasil, que reúne as refinarias de petróleo independentes do país, estimou que o contribuinte amapaense pagava um valor próximo a R$0,83/l em subsídios para importadores. Por Amance Boutin Envie comentários e solicite mais informações em feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . Todos os direitos reservados.

TUI Cruises receives methanol-ready ship


24/04/18
24/04/18

TUI Cruises receives methanol-ready ship

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Oil firm ReconAfrica agrees to class action settlement


24/04/18
24/04/18

Oil firm ReconAfrica agrees to class action settlement

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Uganda aims for net zero energy sector by 2062


24/04/18
24/04/18

Uganda aims for net zero energy sector by 2062

Kampala, 18 April (Argus) — Uganda has brought forward its target for net zero carbon emissions from its energy sector by three years, to 2062, energy ministry permanent secretary Irene Batebe told an oil and gas conference in Kampala. This new deadline is still lagging some way behind a 2050 "net zero operations" target pledged by 40 oil and gas firms , including African state-owned ones such as Libya's NOC and Sudan's Nilepet, at the UN Cop 28 climate summit. Signatories to the Cop 28 charter also pledged "near-zero upstream methane emissions" by 2030. Uganda's CO2 emissions from fuel combustion were 5.7mn t in 2021, according to most recent IEA data, but this will probably increase with the development of a 230,000 b/d crude project in its western Lake Albert region. The crude project had been scheduled to begin production in late 2025 — although the head of TotalEnergies' Ugandan operations recently said the company may miss this long-standing target. Batebe said the Ugandan government has plans to increase hydroelectricity capacity to around 52GW by 2050, to increase use of solar wind and nuclear power, and has a budget of $8bn by 2030 to finance these. The IEA estimates hydroelectricity accounts for around 90pc of Uganda's generating capacity. But this installed capacity is only around 1.5GW currently. The country's nuclear ambitions remain at the planning stage, and biomass — wood and charcoal — dominates energy consumption. "We want to phase out use of coal, but… countries that produced oil and gas should get out first and we shall follow," she said. "We cannot afford to remain poor. We shall produce our oil and gas responsibly, use LPG from the [planned] refinery and then connect more than the current 57pc of our population to electricity with affordability to use it for cooking and other uses other than lighting then meet our emissions targets." Batebe said the world's longest heated crude export pipeline, which will connect its oil fields with to the port of Tanga on Tanzania's Indian Ocean coast, will be insulated to "three layers" to limit emissions. TotalEnergies' Ugandan general manager Philippe Groueix said the two Lake Albert projects, Tilenga and Kingfisher, are designed to produce crude at 13kg of CO2/bl, far below the world average of 33 kg/bl. TotalEnergies is developing the 190,000 b/d Tilenga field and and Chinese state-controlled CNOOC the 40,000 b/d Kingfisher. By Mercy Matsiko Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

NSTA fines Neo Energy for North Sea methane venting


24/04/18
24/04/18

NSTA fines Neo Energy for North Sea methane venting

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