What this Ruling is about
1. Under the provisions of the Petroleum
Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987 (the
PRRTAA)1 a person
is liable to pay Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) on the taxable
profit from a petroleum project worked out under that Act.2
2. Taxable profit of a person for a year of tax in relation to a
petroleum project is the excess of the assessable receipts derived by
that person over the sum of:
-
(a)
-
the deductible expenditure incurred by the person
in relation to the project;
-
(b)
-
the total of any amounts transferred by the person
to the project in relation to the year of tax under section 45A
(that is, transfers of transferable exploration expenditure
between the person's PRRT projects); and
-
(c)
-
the total of any amounts transferred by another
person to the person in relation to the project and the year of
tax under section 45B (that is, transfers of transferable
exploration expenditure of PRRT projects between group
companies).3
3. Section 48 applies where a transaction has the effect of transferring
to the purchaser the whole of the entitlement of the vendor to derive
assessable receipts of a petroleum project. Section 48A applies where
the transaction has the effect of transferring part only of the vendor's
entitlement to assessable receipts.
4. Under subsections 48(1) and 48A(5), a purchaser takes over
expenditure incurred by a vendor in a petroleum project up to
immediately before the transaction in proportion to the share of the
vendor's assessable receipts in relation to a petroleum project
transferred in effect to the purchaser. The purchaser in effect inherits
the PRRT history of the particular interest in the project. This
expenditure is commonly referred to as 'inherited expenditure'.
5. Division 3A of Part V provides for the possible transfer of
exploration expenditure incurred on or after 1 July 1990 to another
project. Section 45A provides for transfers generally, by which
exploration expenditure of a petroleum project of a taxpayer must be
taken to be incurred in relation to other PRRT projects of that taxpayer
to the extent that it can be utilised in a financial year and so far as
the rules in the Schedule to the PRRTAA (the Schedule) allow its
transfer. Section 45B provides for the transfer of expenditure in
relation to group companies, by which exploration expenditure of a
petroleum project must be taken to be incurred in relation to other PRRT
projects of other companies in a group of which the taxpayer is a member
to the extent that it can be utilised in a financial year and so far as
the rules in the Schedule allow its transfer. Section 45C provides for
transfer of expenditure by the Commissioner where transfers required by
sections 45A or 45B have not been made. Section 45D provides for the
effect of transfers of expenditure, and section 45E provides for the
interaction between transfers in relation to the calculation of
instalments of PRRT and transfers in relation to a financial year.
6. The Schedule provides the rules according to which expenditure is
transferred. It also contains the rules according to which exploration
expenditure is taken to be incurred, in relation to deductible
expenditure actually incurred on or after 1 July 1990.
7. This Ruling considers whether and when a person may and must transfer
expenditure to other projects of the person or to another group company
under sections 45A or 45B where that expenditure was inherited under
sections 48 or 48A in relation to a project that did not have a
production licence before the expenditure is sought to be transferred.
Class of entities
8. This Ruling applies to a person4 who
has an interest in the assessable receipts of a petroleum project as
defined in section 19.
9. However, this Ruling does not deal with the transferability of
expenditure from petroleum projects covered by Part 2 (Class 2 Augmented
Bond rate exploration expenditure) and Part 3 (Class 2 GDP factor
expenditure) of the Schedule.
Ruling
10. Where a person acquires an interest or increases its interest in a
project and the project has not yet obtained a production licence, the
person cannot transfer any of the exploration expenditure they inherit
under sections 48 or 48A to other projects of theirs or to projects of
another group company pursuant to sections 45A or 45B.
11. Clause 15 of Part 4 of the Schedule is a current year rule to work
out how much of a person's exploration expenditure on a project that has
not obtained a production licence is available to be considered for, or
excluded from, possible transfer. Subclause 15(2) of the Schedule
identifies the part of the exploration expenditure that will be
available for transfer as limited to the excess of total deductible
expenditure actually incurred by the person over assessable receipts -
excluding any inherited expenditure, as this was not actually incurred
by the person.
Example
12. In February 2005 XYZ Ltd acquires a 10% interest in the assessable
receipts of a project for which an exploration permit has been granted.
No petroleum project is yet in existence as a production licence has not
been granted.
13. In the year ended 30 June 2008 XYZ Ltd enters into a transaction to
acquire an additional 50% in the assessable receipts of the project by
buying out a co-venturer's interest in project receipts.
14. XYZ Ltd is taken to have incurred the 'incurred exploration
expenditure amount' that would have been the incurred exploration
expenditure amount of the vendor had the financial year ended at the
time when XYZ Ltd acquired the additional 50%.5
15. XYZ Ltd will calculate its transferable expenditure in relation to
the exploration permit in accordance with Part 4 of the Schedule.
16. Under Part 4 of the Schedule only exploration expenditure actually
incurred by a person is taken into account in calculating the amount of
reduced notional exploration expenditure that is transferable by a
person in relation to an income year.
17. Therefore, XYZ Ltd cannot transfer any of the exploration
expenditure inherited on the acquisition of the 50% interest to another
petroleum project in which it is interested pursuant to section 45A. Nor
can XYZ Ltd transfer any of the exploration expenditure so inherited to
a petroleum project of another member of the same company group pursuant
to section 45B.
Date of effect
18. This Ruling applies to years of income commencing both before and
after its date of issue. However, this Ruling will not apply to
taxpayers to the extent that it conflicts with the terms of a settlement
of a dispute agreed to before the date of issue of this Ruling (see
paragraphs 75 and 76 of Taxation Ruling TR 2006/10).
Commissioner of Taxation
4 February 2009
Appendix 1 - Explanation
|
This
Appendix is provided as information to help you understand how
the Commissioner's view has been reached. It does not form part
of the binding public ruling. |
Legislation
19. Under the provisions of the PRRTAA a person is liable to pay PRRT on
their taxable profit from a petroleum project.
20. Section 22 calculates taxable profit of a petroleum project as the
excess of assessable receipts derived by a person over:
-
·
-
deductible expenditure incurred by the person in
relation to the PRRT project;
-
·
-
the total of the amounts (if any) transferred by
the person to the project in relation to the year of tax under
section 45A; and
-
·
-
the total of the amounts (if any) transferred by
another person to the person in relation to the project and the
year of tax under section 45B.
21. Division 3A of Part V provides for the possible transfer of
exploration expenditure incurred on or after 1 July 1990.
22. Section 45A provides for transfers generally, by which exploration
expenditure may be taken to be incurred in relation to other PRRT
projects of a person.
23. Section 45B provides for transfers of exploration expenditure to
projects of other companies in the same group.
24. Section 2 defines transferable exploration expenditure (for the
purposes of sections 45A and 45B) as expenditure that is, according to
the Schedule, transferable by the person in relation to the financial
year. This does not mean that any transfer is either required or
possible in relation to that or any other financial year. The terms of
the Schedule mean that such 'transferable expenditure' is only taken to
be incurred when and to the extent that the expenditure can be deducted
against assessable receipts in a financial year, even in relation to the
project on which the expenditure from which it derives was actually
incurred.
25. The Schedule contains provisions relating to incurring and transfer
of exploration expenditure derived from expenditure actually incurred on
or after 1 July 1990.
26. Part 4 of the Schedule provides the basis on which to calculate the
amount of exploration expenditure that is transferable, being actually
incurred in relation to an exploration permit or retention lease prior
to the issue of a production licence.
27. To the extent that an amount of exploration expenditure is
determined to be transferable under Part 4 of the Schedule, the transfer
of any of that expenditure would still need to meet rules relating to
the transfer of expenditure in Parts 5 and 6 of the Schedule. In
particular, what is commonly referred to as the 'common interest rule'6 would
need to be met. The amount to be transferred is the amount, after
augmentation under Part 7 of the Schedule, that can be absorbed against
assessable receipts of a petroleum project in the transfer year. That
amount must, and no greater amount may, be transferred.
28. Part 5 of the Schedule outlines the 'General rules relating to
transfer of exploration expenditure'. Part 6 of the Schedule outlines
'Rules relating to transfer of exploration expenditure between group
companies'.
29. Under sections 48 and 48A, a purchaser takes over expenditure
incurred by a vendor in a petroleum project7 in
proportion to the share of the vendor's entitlement to assessable
receipts in relation to a petroleum project transferred in effect to the
purchaser.8 Expenditure
taken over in this way is commonly referred to as 'inherited
expenditure'.
30. Section 48 applies where the transaction has the effect of
transferring the whole of the entitlement of the vendor to derive
assessable receipts in relation to a petroleum project.
31. Section 48A applies where the transaction has the effect of
transferring part only of the entitlement of the vendor to derive
assessable receipts in relation to a petroleum project.
32. Sections 48 and 48A apply to a transaction that has the effect of
transferring an entitlement of a vendor to derive assessable receipts in
relation to a petroleum project, whether or not an eligible production
licence is then in force and whether or not an eligible production
licence ever comes into force in relation to the project. Therefore, the
sections apply even when there is only the transfer of an interest in
assessable receipts while there is an exploration permit or retention
lease or any other entitlement and even when an eligible production
licence is not in force.9
33. Sections 48 and 48A expressly apply in relation to expenditure that
would have been included in the 'incurred exploration expenditure
amount' of the vendor of any year up to the transfer by the vendor, had
the financial year ended immediately before the transfer by the vendor
(subparagraph 48(1)(a)(ia) and paragraph 48A(5)(c)). This includes
exploration expenditure actually incurred by the vendor in relation to
the project, uplifted frontier expenditure of the vendor in relation to
the project, and any amounts the vendor itself is taken to have incurred
by operation of subparagraph 48(1)(a)(ia) or paragraph 48A(5)(c) (under
the definitions of incurred exploration expenditure amount of clause 1
of the Schedule). Expenditure that the purchaser is taken to have
incurred by application of these rules is taken to have been incurred at
the time when the vendor incurred it, or is taken to have incurred it.10 This
kind of expenditure taken over in this way is commonly referred to as
'inherited exploration expenditure'.
Project did not have a production licence before the inherited
expenditure is sought to be transferred
34. Where an exploration right or retention lease exists (but not a
petroleum project as defined in section 19, because there is no
applicable production licence) in relation to the transferring entity
then the amount of transferable exploration expenditure that may and
must be transferred to any other project, if all the relevant provisions
in Part 5 of the Schedule are met, is calculated in accordance with the
terms of Part 4 of the Schedule.
35. Transferable expenditure that is incurred in respect of an
exploration permit or retention lease prior to an issue of a production
licence is calculated in accordance with the terms of Part 4 of the
Schedule. The undeducted exploration expenditure is transferable in the
same way as transferable expenditure incurred in respect of a project.
36. Non-transferable expenditure is calculated in accordance with the
terms of Part 4 of the Schedule for each financial year and is then
added up to give a total amount (Clause 15 of the Schedule). This
assessment is performed afresh for each financial year.
37. Under subclause 15(1) of the Schedule, if assessable receipts
derived in relation to the notional project exceed deductible
expenditure then all (if any) exploration expenditure is excluded from
transfer.
38. Paragraph 15(1)(a) of the Schedule is about all exploration
expenditure of the year, whether actually incurred or acquired,
including any uplifted frontier expenditure (that is, exploration
expenditure uplifted because it is in relation to a designated frontier
area). However the exclusion in paragraph 15(1)(b) of the Schedule is
based on an equality or excess of total assessable receipts for the
year, including acquired receipts, over total deductible expenditure
actually incurred, excluding acquired expenditure. Once there is no net
deductible expenditure actually incurred remaining, all exploration
expenditure of the year must be excluded from being transferable.
39. Subclause 15(2) of the Schedule then identifies the part of the
exploration expenditure that will be available for transfer as limited
to the excess of the year's total deductible expenditure actually
incurred by the person - necessarily excluding any acquired expenditure
- over the year's assessable receipts - including any acquired receipts.
(This amount includes any uplifted frontier expenditure for designated
frontier expenditure actually incurred by the person, under paragraph
15(2)(b) of the Schedule.)
40. Subclauses 15(3) and 15(4) of the Schedule simply create an 'oldest
first' rule for excluding the exploration expenditure actually incurred,
where the year's exploration expenditure exceeds the year's cap.
41. Clause 15 of the Schedule is a current year rule to work out how
much of the year's exploration expenditure actually incurred by the
person (including uplifted frontier expenditure for designated frontier
expenditure actually incurred) is available for or excluded from
possible transfer. It works before the whole-of-project rules in clauses
16, 17 and 18 of the Schedule which further test on the basis of
expenditures and receipts over the whole notional project.
42. Clause 16 of the Schedule then works out the amounts needed in
calculating what expenditures over the life of the notional project
(since the beginning of transferability, 1 July 1990) and to the end of
the year, may be considered for transfer under Part 5 of the Schedule.
The transferable amounts are worked out by reference to the total
amounts of receipts derived and the total expenditures incurred from 1
July 1990 up to the end of the financial year in relation to which the
transfer is to take place. These total amounts are the 'notional'
amounts.
43. Only exploration expenditure of a permit or lease that exceeds
assessable receipts (after deducting other expenditure), and was not
excluded by clause 15 of the Schedule, can be transferable expenditure.
44. Consequently, if notional assessable receipts exceed notional
deductible exploration expenditure no exploration expenditure is
transferable. (Clause 17 of the Schedule).
45. Conversely, if notional deductible expenditure exceeds notional
assessable receipts and the excess equals or exceeds notional
exploration expenditure then an amount called the reduced notional
expenditure (that is, so much of the exploration expenditure as was not
excluded by clause 15 of the Schedule) is transferable. (subclause 18(1)
of the Schedule).
46. Both notional deductible expenditure and notional exploration
expenditure are limited to deductible expenditure or exploration
expenditure 'actually incurred' by the person. Part 4 of the Schedule
does not make reference to the term ' incurred
exploration expenditure amount' as
defined in Clause 1 of the Schedule.
47. 'Incurred exploration expenditure amount' specifically refers to any
amount that a person is taken to have incurred by subparagraph 48(1)(a)(ia)
or paragraph 48A(5)(c). It is not relevant to the operation of Part 4 of
the Schedule.
48. There is no specific reference to sections 48 or 48A in Part 4 of
the Schedule nor can it be inferred that the Part includes sections 48
or 48A 'inherited expenditure'.
49. Therefore, any potential amounts inherited under sections 48 or 48A
are not 'transferable exploration expenditure' under Part 4 of the
Schedule for the purposes of Part 5 and 6 of the Schedule.
50. Any 'transferable exploration expenditure' would also need to
satisfy the 'common interest rule' in subclauses 22(1) and 31(1) of the
Schedule if the transfer is to projects of another group company.
51. Clauses 2 and 3 of the Schedule outline the requirements of what it
means to have held an interest in relation to a petroleum project at a
particular time, for the purposes of the Schedule.
52. A person will be taken to have held an interest in a petroleum
project at any time they were entitled to receive receipts from the sale
of petroleum from the project's production licence area, retention lease
area or exploration permit area as applicable at the time or from the
sale of marketable petroleum commodities produced from such petroleum.
53. Subject to a number of exceptions (contained in subclauses 22(2),
22(2AA), 22(2AB), 22(2A), 22(3) and 22(4) of the Schedule),11 the
'common interest rule' states that the person must have held an interest
in both the transferring project or exploration right12 and
the receiving project at all times from the beginning of the financial
year in which the expenditure was incurred to the end of the transfer
year (clause 22(1) of the Schedule).13
54. The question is whether the person has an interest at every relevant
time.
55. Expenditure in relation to a project can be transferred if the
earliest relevant exploration permit is granted, or the person's
interest in the project is acquired, during the year and the expenditure
is actually incurred by the person after that time (clauses 22(2) and
22(2AA) of the Schedule).
56. Under these circumstances the person doesn't need to hold the
interest in the transferring entity for the whole year if the
expenditure is actually incurred after the interest is acquired, or if
the interest was held from the date of the earliest relevant exploration
permit and that was granted only during the year. The expenditure can be
transferred under these circumstances so long as it was incurred by the
transferee and does not represent inherited expenditure under sections
48 or 48A (paragraph 22(2AA)(c) of the Schedule).
57. As the inherited exploration expenditure under sections 48 or 48A is
taken to have been incurred by the purchaser at the time the vendor
incurred it,14 where
the person had no prior interest in the transferring project they will
be unable to satisfy the 'common interest rule' in subclause 22(1) of
the Schedule.
58. Therefore, the person will not be able to transfer the 'inherited
exploration expenditure' they are taken to have incurred because of the
operation of sections 48 or 48A pursuant to sections 45A or 45B.
Appendix 2 - Detailed contents list
59. The following is a detailed contents list for this Ruling:
|
|
Paragraph |
|
What this Ruling is about |
1 |
|
Class of entities |
8 |
|
Ruling |
10 |
|
Example |
12 |
|
Date of effect |
18 |
|
Appendix 1 - Explanation |
19 |
|
Legislation |
19 |
|
Project did not have a production licence before
the inherited expenditure is sought to be transferred |
34 |
|
Appendix 2 - Detailed
contents list |
59 |
Footnotes
[1]
All legislative references are to the PRRTAA unless otherwise indicated.
[2]
Section 21. The tax is separately imposed, by the Petroleum
Resource Rent Tax Act 1987.
[3]
Section 22.
[4]
Person is not defined in the PRRTAA and therefore has at least the
common law meaning. However, the PRRTAA expressly applies to
partnerships (section 12) and to unincorporated associations (section
13) as if they were persons, with special rules in relation to the
operation of the law in relation to partners and in relation to members
of such associations. Neither partnership nor unincorporated association
are specially defined for the purposes of the PRRTAA, but unincorporated
association is defined to exclude a joint venture (definition, section
2) and so persons who are members of joint ventures that are not
partnerships and not incorporated are separate taxpayers under the
PRRTAA.
[5]
Section 48 and definition of 'incurred exploration expenditure amount'
in Clause 1 of the Schedule.
[6]
Clauses 22 (Part 5) and 31 (Part 6) of the Schedule.
[7]
Note that sections 48 and 48A apply not only to the transfer of an
interest in assessable receipts of projects that have an eligible
production licence but also to the transfer of an interest in assessable
receipts where an exploration permit, retention lease or any other
entitlement is in force even at any time when a production licence is
not in force. See Miscellaneous Taxation Ruling MT 2004/1 Petroleum
resource rent tax: effects of transferring an interest in an exploration
permit or retention lease.
[8]
Paragraph 48(1)(a) and subsection 48A(5).
[9]
Paragraph 5 of MT 2004/1; such transfers may occur 'before the vendor's
first year of tax in relation to the petroleum project', subsections
48(1A) and 48A(3), and eligible real expenditure (including exploration
expenditure) may generally be incurred in relation to a project at any
time even before or after the project (section 45), which exists while
there is an applicable production licence in effect (sections 19 and
20).
[10]
Subsections 48(2) and 48A(7).
[11]
Also refer to exceptions in relation to group companies in subclauses
31(2) and (3) of the Schedule.
[12]
An exploration right includes both exploration permits and retention
leases: exploration
right, clause 1 of
the Schedule.
[13]
See also subclause 31(1) of the Schedule in relation to Group companies.
[14]
Subsection 48(2) and 48A(7).
Previously issued as TR 2008/D7
References
ATO references:
NO 2007/19099
ISSN: 1039-0731
Related Rulings/Determinations:
MT 2004/1
TR 2006/10
Subject References:
petroleum
petroleum industry
petroleum resource rent tax
PRRT assessable petroleum receipts
PRRT augmented bond rate exploration expenditure
PRRT deductible expenditure
PRRT exploration expenditure
PRRT GDP factor expenditure
PRRT petroleum projects
PRRT transferable exploration expenditure
Legislative References:
PRRTAA 1987
PRRTAA 1987 2
PRRTAA 1987 12
PRRTAA 1987 13
PRRTAA 1987 19
PRRTAA 1987 20
PRRTAA 1987 21
PRRTAA 1987 22
PRRTAA 1987 45
PRRTAA 1987 Pt V Div 3A
PRRTAA 1987 45A
PRRTAA 1987 45B
PRRTAA 1987 45C
PRRTAA 1987 45D
PRRTAA 1987 45E
PRRTAA 1987 48
PRRTAA 1987 48(1)
PRRTAA 1987 48(1)(a)
PRRTAA 1987 48(1)(a)(ia)
PRRTAA 1987 48(1A)
PRRTAA 1987 48(2)
PRRTAA 1987 48A
PRRTAA 1987 48A(3)
PRRTAA 1987 48A(5)
PRRTAA 1987 48A(5)(c)
PRRTAA 1987 48A(7)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 1
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 2
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 3
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Pt 2
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Pt 3
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Pt 4
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(1)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(1)(a)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(1)(b)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(2)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(2)(b)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(3)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 15(4)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 16
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 17
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 18
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 18(1)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Pt 5
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(1)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(2)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(2AA)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(2AA)(c)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(2AB)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(2A)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(3)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 22(4)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Pt 6
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 31
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 31(1)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 31(2)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Cl 31(3)
PRRTAA 1987 Sch Pt 7
Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Act 1987