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The
Algerian Parliament has decided to increase Algeria’s share of
oil production revenues by placing an “excess” profits tax
on oil shipments whenever oil prices exceed $30.00 per barrel.
Algeria, one of Africa’s largest oil and natural gas
exporters, will levy the new tax starting in 2007.
Depending on total output, the excess profits tax will range
from 5% to 50% on the Algerian profits of foreign companies,
including Shell, BP, Anadarko Petroleum and Hess
Corporation.
The
Parliament also signed into law a provision that the country’s
oil monopoly, Sonatrach, must take a 51 percent controlling
interest in all future production and refining contracts. This,
despite the fact that most of the financing and technical
expertise for oil and natural gas exploration, production and
refining has been furnished by foreign corporations and
financial institutions.
Not
included in the public announcement:
- existing
oil and natural gas contracts are worthless. If a foreign
oil company wants to continue its operations in Algeria, it
will have to agree to new contract terms;
- it
also remains to be seen if these taxes will decrease the
profits of the participating oil companies, or increase the
price of gasoline, diesel, propane and heating oil fuels.
National
mandates to increase the fees and taxes charged against
production and refining is happening throughout the world.
Existing contract obligations are disregarded at the whim of
each nation’s political establishment. This trend guarantees
higher prices are a permanent fixture of the world’s oil
and natural gas supply chain.
Who
will pay the bill?
If
we take a holistic approach to the study of oil depletion, this
trend is simply another confirmation we are approaching “Peak
Oil”. Greed – always a driver of producer nation
policy – has now been unfettered by a recognition that oil
supplies are both limited and finite.
But
there is a significantly more troubling consequence. This trend
implies consumer nations will never
be able to reach a long term contractual relationship with
producer nations for the allocation of earth’s remaining oil
and natural gas resources. Producer nations will continue to
pursue pricing and production decisions based on their selfish
best interest.
Including
the quest for greater political power.
Ronald R. Cooke
The Cultural Economist
©
2006 Ronald R. Cooke
The
Cultural Economist
Author, "Oil, Jihad
& Destiny" and "Detensive Nation"
Editorial Archive
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