Summary of changes to oil and gas profits
taxation
- From 1 January 2023, the rate of the Energy Profits Levy will
be increased to 35% to ensure oil and gas companies benefitting
from extraordinary prices pay their fair share.
- To continue encouraging companies to reinvest their profits
in the UK, we will maintain the existing cash value of the levy’s
investment allowance, ensuring there is still a significant
increase in relief compared to the permanent system. To achieve
this, the rate of the allowance will be reduced from 80% to 29%
for all investment expenditure besides decarbonisation
expenditure. The allowance will remain at 80% for decarbonisation
expenditure (defined as investment in carbon emissions reducing
technology) such as installing bespoke wind turbines to power the
production installation.
- In addition to this, a new and temporary tax of 45% will be
introduced on the extraordinary profits of electricity generators
who, like the oil and gas sector, have seen profits increase well
above their company predictions
What is the Energy Profits Levy?
- The Energy Profits Levy was introduced on 26 May 2022 to help
fund more cost-of-living support for UK families.
- Demand for energy post COVID-19 and the invasion of Ukraine
by Russia have meant oil and gas prices have risen substantially
since last year with gas prices in 2022 reaching unprecedented
levels.
- Prices, and in turn profits, are expected to remain high
among oil and gas producers for the foreseeable
future.
- The Energy Profits Levy, which currently places a 25% charge
on these profits, ensures oil and gas producers pay their fair
share. This is in addition to the permanent 40% tax rate paid by
oil and gas producers, taking the combined headline tax rate for
the sector to 65%.
What part of the Energy Profits Levy is
changing?
- Today [17th November] we are announcing that from the start
of 2023 the Energy Profits Levy will increase by 10% points to
35%.
- We have also confirmed that the levy will remain in place
until the end of March 2028 providing companies with the
certainty they need to plan and take investment
decisions.
- This will bring the headline tax rate for the sector to 75%
which is comparable to other North Sea tax regimes, including
Norway.
- This ensures oil and gas companies benefitting from the
prolonged period of increased prices continue to pay their fair
share of tax towards restoring public finances and helping to
contribute to cost-of-living support.
- Before these changes, the levy was expected to raise around
£20 billion through to 2025-26. Taken together, both of these
changes are expected to raise just under £20 billion more over
the next six years raising just over £40 billion in total.
- The government will also no longer consider phasing out the
levy ahead of its end date of March 2028, giving companies
greater certainty to plan their investments.
- In total we expect the oil and gas sector to pay around £80
billion in tax over the next six years.
How will the Energy Profit Levy’s investment allowance
change?
- The government has always been clear that it wants to see the
oil and gas sector reinvest its profits to support the economy,
jobs, and the UK’s energy security.
- The energy profits levy included a ‘super-deduction’ style
relief which aimed to encourage companies to invest in UK oil and
gas extraction, putting more UK gas on the grid for longer,
supporting jobs and the economy and bolstering the future energy
security of the UK.
- This 80% Investment Allowance meant businesses would get a
£91.25 tax saving for every £100 they invest – providing them
with an additional incentive to invest. This nearly doubled the
tax relief available and means the more investment a firm makes,
the less tax they will pay.
- Under the 35% levy rate, the government is reducing the rate
of the allowance to 29% which, due to the higher rate, will
broadly maintain the existing cash value of the
allowance.
- This means business will be able to claim £91.40 in tax
relief for every £100 invested rather than the previous
£91.25
- We also recognise the crucial role oil and gas firms in
helping us to achieve our ambitious net zero targets by investing
in world leading renewable infrastructure and green energy
products.
- The government has always been clear that it wants to see the
sector reinvest its profits to further support Net Zero, domestic
jobs and the UK’s energy security. The Net Zero Strategy also
recognised that remaining oil and gas installations will use low
carbon power, with the sector currently working towards reducing
emissions by 25% in 2027 and by 50% in 2030.
- To encourage this, decarbonisation expenditure such as
modifying existing installations to use power from offshore
windfarms, installing bespoke wind turbines to power the
installation or running electricity cables to the installation
from shore will continue to qualify for the current investment
allowance rate of 80%.
- This means from the 1st of January 2023, a company spending
£100 on upstream decarbonisation will now be able to deduct
£109.25p when calculating its levy profits. The example below
shows how this works: [update of the chart below]:
Tax
|
Tax rate
|
Relief
|
Relief rate
|
Amount of relief (for £100 investment in
expenditure)
|
Amount of relief (for £100 decarbonisation
investment)
|
Ring Fence Corporation Tax
|
30%
|
First year capital allowance
|
100%
|
30
|
30
|
Supplementary Charge
|
10%
|
First year capital allowance
|
100%
|
10
|
10
|
Supplementary Charge
|
10%
|
Investment allowance
|
62.5%
|
6.25
|
6.25
|
Total tax relief under the permanent
regime
|
46.25
|
46.25
|
EPL
|
35%
|
First year capital allowance
|
100%
|
35
|
35
|
EPL
|
35%
|
Investment allowance
|
29% (for expenditure)/80% (for decarbonisation
expenditure)
|
10.15
|
28
|
Additional tax relief under EPL
|
45.15
|
63.00
|
Total tax relief
|
91.40
|
109.25
|
What about the Electricity Generator Levy?
- The structure of the electricity market means the price of
electricity is tied to the wholesale gas price and, as a result,
many electricity generators are also seeing extraordinary returns
by the unprecedented increase in gas prices.
- To ensure that electricity generators also pay their fair
share towards strengthening public finances and supporting
households and businesses get through the current cost of living
challenges, we are introducing a new, temporary 45% levy on these
extraordinary profits, defined as electricity sold above
£75MWh.
- This is approximately 1.5 times the average price of
electricity over the last decade.
- Combined with corporation tax, this brings the cumulative
rate on earnings over £75Mwh to 70%.
- This levy will also replace the Cost Plus Revenue Limit
announced in October. The new levy is a more proportionate
measure that is not only administrable through the corporate tax
system which generators are familiar with but will leave
generators with a greater proportion of their returns to invest
in growing the UK’s renewable energy capacity.
- Many countries have taken, or are in the process of taking,
steps to reduce or claw-back extraordinary returns being realised
by low-carbon generators. That includes France, Italy and Spain
that have all introduced some form of ex-post price cap on low
carbon generation or introduced a tax on their excess
returns.
- Unlike the Energy Profits Levy which applies to all profits,
only returns above the set benchmark of £75MWh are within scope.
Due to this, the rate for the levy is being set higher than the
levy on oil and gas producers.
- By applying to only the extraordinary and unforeseen profits
the Electricity Generator Levy will minimise any increase to
underlying business costs.
- This is expected to raise over £14 billion between 2023 and
2028 and will help pay for the more than £55 billion of support
being provided for household and business energy bills.
- The levy will apply from 1 January 2023 and will be
legislated for in in the next Finance Bill.
- The temporary and proportionate levy is not expected to harm
long term investment due to it applying to only a portion of
excess profits and electricity generators still being able to
write off their investments against corporation tax by deducting
their investment spending from their profit.
- The tax will not apply to electricity that is generated under
a Contract for Difference entered into with the Low Carbon
Contracts Company Ltd (LCCC).