Consolidated Federal Oil & Gas and Federal & Indian Coal Valuation Reform, 607-675 [2014-30033]
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Vol. 80
Tuesday,
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January 6, 2015
Part II
Department of the Interior
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Office of Natural Resources Revenue
30 CFR Parts 1202 and 1206
Consolidated Federal Oil & Gas and Federal & Indian Coal Valuation
Reform; Proposed Rule
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Natural Resources Revenue
30 CFR Parts 1202 and 1206
[Docket No. ONRR–2012–0004]
RIN 1012–AA13
Consolidated Federal Oil & Gas and
Federal & Indian Coal Valuation
Reform
Office of Natural Resources
Revenue, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Office of Natural
Resources Revenue (ONRR) proposes to
change the regulations governing
valuation for royalty purposes of oil and
gas produced from Federal onshore and
offshore leases and coal produced from
Federal and Indian leases. The proposed
rule also consolidates definitions for oil,
gas, and coal product valuation into one
subpart applicable to the Federal oil and
gas and Federal and Indian coal
subparts.
DATES: You must submit comments on
or before March 9, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
to ONRR on this proposed rulemaking
by any method below. Please refer to the
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
1012–AA13 in your comments. (See also
Public Availability of Comments under
Procedural Matters.)
• Electronically go to
www.regulations.gov. In the entry titled
‘‘Enter Keyword or ID,’’ enter ‘‘ONRR–
2012–0004,’’ then click ‘‘Search.’’
Follow the instructions to submit public
comments. ONRR will post all
comments.
• Mail comments to Armand
Southall, Regulatory Specialist, P.O.
Box 25165, MS 61030A, Denver,
Colorado 80225.
• Hand-carry comments, or use an
overnight courier service, to the Office
of Natural Resources Revenue, Building
85, Room A–614, Denver Federal
Center, West 6th Ave. and Kipling St.,
Denver, Colorado 80225.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
comments or questions on procedural
issues, contact Armand Southall, ONRR,
telephone (303) 231–3221, or email at
armand.southall@onrr.gov. The authors
of the proposed rule are Sarah
Inderbitzin, Richard Adamski, Michael
DeBerard, Peter Christnacht, Kimbra
Davis, and Lance Wenger.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
I. Background
In 2007, the Royalty Policy Committee
(RPC) Subcommittee on Royalty
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Management issued a report titled
‘‘Mineral Revenue Collection From
Federal and Indian Lands and the Outer
Continental Shelf.’’ The Subcommittee’s
report recommended clarification of the
regulations governing onshore gas and
transportation deductions to provide
more certainty for ONRR, BLM, and
industry, which should result in better
compliance. More specifically, the
Subcommittee recommended revisions
to the gas valuation regulations and
guidelines to address the cost-bundling
issue and to facilitate the calculation of
gas transportation and gas processing
deductions. The Subcommittee also
recommended the use of market indices
for gas valuation in the context of nonarm’s-length transactions in lieu of
benchmarks, which have been used
since 1988.
The Subcommittee’s report also
recommended ‘‘revis(ing) and
implement(ing) the regulations and
guidance for calculating prices used in
checking royalty compliance for solid
minerals, with particular attention to
non-arm’s-length transactions.’’
The current Federal oil valuation
regulations have been in effect since
2000, with a subsequent amendment
relating primarily to the use of index
pricing in some circumstances. The
current Federal gas valuation
regulations have been in effect since
March 1, 1988, with various subsequent
amendments relating primarily to the
transportation allowance provisions.
The current Federal and Indian coal
valuation regulations have been in effect
since March 1, 1989, with minor
subsequent amendments relating
primarily to the Federal black lung
excise taxes, abandoned mine lands
fees, State and local severance taxes,
and washing and transportation
allowance provisions. In the years since
we wrote these regulations, the
Secretary of the Interior’s (Secretary)
responsibility to determine the royalty
value of minerals produced has not
changed, but the industry and
marketplace have changed dramatically.
ONRR proposes these amendments to
our valuation regulations to permit the
Secretary to discharge the Department of
the Interior’s (Department) royalty
valuation responsibility in an
environment of continuing and
accelerating change in the industry and
the marketplace. The Secretary’s
responsibilities regarding oil and gas
production from Federal leases and coal
production from Federal and Indian
leases require development of flexible
valuation methodologies that lessees
can accurately comply with in a timely
manner.
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To increase the effectiveness and
efficiency of our rules, ONRR is
proposing proactive and innovative
changes. We intend for this proposed
rulemaking to provide regulations that
(1) offer greater simplicity, certainty,
clarity, and consistency in product
valuation for mineral lessees and
mineral revenue recipients; (2) are more
understandable; (3) decrease industry’s
cost of compliance and ONRR’s cost to
ensure industry compliance; and (4)
provide early certainty to industry and
ONRR that companies have paid every
dollar due. Therefore, ONRR proposes
to amend the current regulations at 30
CFR part 1202, subpart F, and part 1206,
subparts C, D, F, and J, governing the
valuation, for royalty purposes, of oil,
gas, and coal produced from Federal
leases and coal produced from Indian
leases.
On May 27, 2011, ONRR published
Advance Notices of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRs) regarding the
valuation, for royalty purposes, of oil,
gas, and coal produced from Federal
leases and coal produced from Indian
leases (76 FR 30878, 30881). ONRR
received responses to the Federal oil
and gas valuation ANPR from 19 State,
industry, industry trade association, and
the general public commenters. ONRR
then conducted 3 public workshops on
Federal oil and gas valuation in
September and October 2011 in
Houston, Texas, Washington, DC, and
Denver, Colorado. At the workshops,
ONRR asked attendees to discuss,
among other things, the use of index
prices to value oil and gas, alternatives
to the current requirement to track
actual costs to determine transportation
allowances, and alternate methods for
valuing wellhead gas volumes to
eliminate the requirement to trace the
value of liquids removed from
processed gas.
ONRR received responses to the
Federal and Indian coal valuation ANPR
from 11 industry representative, Tribe,
State, community group (representing
several member groups), coal
publication, and trade organization
commenters. ONRR then conducted 3
public workshops on Federal and Indian
coal valuation in October 2011 in
Denver, Colorado; St. Louis, Missouri;
and Albuquerque, New Mexico. At
those workshops, ONRR asked attendees
to discuss, among other things, (1)
possible alternatives to the current
methods that we use to value arm’slength and non-arm’s-length coal sales,
(2) coal comparability factors, (3)
possible alternatives to the current
methods we use to value coal
cooperative sales of coal, (4) use of
index prices to value coal, and (5)
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possible alternatives to the current
requirements to track actual costs to
determine transportation and washing
allowances.
ONRR considered the input from the
ANPRs and the workshops and proposes
this consolidated rulemaking to improve
the current regulations. The proposed
rule would not alter the underlying
principles of the current regulations. By
proposing these amendments, the
Department reaffirms that the value, for
royalty purposes, of crude oil and
natural gas produced from Federal
leases and coal produced from Federal
and Indian leases is determined at or
near the lease and that gross proceeds
from arm’s-length contracts are the best
indication of market value. Like the
current regulations, these proposed
regulations would not restrict ONRR to
a comparison of arm’s-length sales of
other production occurring in the field
or area to value production not sold
under an arm’s-length contract. Thus,
like the current regulations, in this
proposed rule, ONRR may begin with a
‘‘downstream’’ price or value and
determine value at the lease by allowing
deductions for the cost of transporting
production to downstream sales points
or markets, or by allowing appropriate
adjustments for location or quality.
Federal and Indian lessees are not
obligated to sell their production
downstream of the lease. A lessee is at
liberty to sell production at or near the
lease, even if selling downstream might
yield a higher royalty value than selling
it at the lease. If a lessee chooses to sell
downstream, the choice to sell
downstream does not make otherwise
non-deductible costs deductible (for
example marketable condition and
marketing costs). See Independent
Petroleum Ass’n of America. v. DeWitt,
279 F.3d 1036 (D.C. Cir. 2002), cert.
denied sub nom., Independent
Petroleum Ass’n of America. v. Watson,
537 U.S. 1105 (2003) (‘‘Independent
Petroleum Ass’n v. DeWitt’’); Devon
Energy Corp v. Norton, No. 04–CV–0821
(GK), 2007 WL 2422005 (D.D.C. Aug. 23,
2007), aff’d sub nom., Devon Energy
Corp. v. Kempthorne, 551 F.3d 1030
(D.C. Cir. 2008), cert. denied, 130 S. Ct.
86 (2009) (‘‘Devon’’) and cases cited
therein.
As noted above, the changes proposed
in this rule reflect an effort by ONRR to
update its royalty valuation regulations
to, among other things, simplify
processes and provide early clarity
regarding royalties owed. However,
even with the changes outlined in this
rule, royalty valuations will continue to
be complex, and the markets for oil, gas,
and coal will continue to evolve.
Therefore, ONRR continues to be
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interested in opportunities to further
streamline the valuation process, while
also bringing added transparency to the
system. In particular, we seek ideas and
comments on:
1. The potential for creating
standardized ‘‘schedules’’ for
transportation and processing
allowances to reduce the need to rely on
case-by-case operator reporting and
agency review of actual costs.
2. Opportunities to more
fundamentally reassess how non-arm’s
length transactions are treated for the
purposes of determining royalties owed.
ONRR recognizes that the costs and
benefits of making further changes to its
valuation regulations (beyond those
specifically proposed in this rule) will
depend on the specific commodity at
issue (i.e., oil, gas or coal), as well as
geographic or other factors. Thus,
detailed comments that elaborate on
specific situations where further
valuation changes should be considered
would be particularly useful to ONRR as
it proceeds with this rulemaking as well
as any future rules that may be
considered.
II. Explanation of Proposed
Amendments
Based on comments ONRR received
on the ANPRs and at the public
workshops, and other relevant
information, we propose this
consolidated rule to improve the current
regulations to ensure greater clarity,
efficiency, certainty, and consistency in
production valuation.
The general consensus of comments
received on the ANPR about arm’slength oil sales was that actual proceeds
are the best indicator of value, and
ONRR should not change to index
prices. Most commenters agreed the
valuation methodology for non-arm’slength sales of Federal oil is working, as
is using actual costs to determine
transportation allowances. Thus, ONRR
is not currently proposing major
changes to oil valuation methodologies
except to eliminate both unused
valuation options, such as tendering,
and associated definition(s), and to
make the oil rule consistent with our
proposed changes to the proposed
Federal gas rule.
The comments we received regarding
gas produced from Federal leases were,
in certain instances, polarized. Very
large companies generally support index
pricing as an option if it is revenueneutral and there are no required trueups (end-of-year comparison of the
index value to actual sales and payment
on the higher of the two). Independent
gas producers and States generally
disagreed with the major companies and
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609
did not support index pricing because
they believe it may not reflect actual
value and may not be revenue neutral.
The majority of respondents generally
support using actual costs for gas
transportation and processing
deductions to maintain revenue
neutrality. In response, ONRR proposes
no major changes for the valuation of
arm’s-length gas sales. However, for
non-arm’s-length gas sales, ONRR
proposes to eliminate current
benchmarks (a series of indicators of
market value). Instead, ONRR proposes
valuation methodology options based on
how gas is sold using the first arm’slength-sale price (affiliate resales),
optional index prices, or weighted
average pool prices.
The general consensus of ANPR
commenters for coal valuation was not
to change royalty valuation of arm’slength sales and not to use coal index
values because of their very limited
applicability. Commenters suggested
modifying the non-arm’s-length coal
benchmarks and eliminating seldomused benchmarks. Commenters agreed
ONRR should keep Federal and Indian
rules separate. Therefore, at this time,
ONRR is proposing no changes to the
valuation of arm’s-length coal sales.
For non-arm’s-length coal sales,
ONRR proposes to eliminate the current
benchmarks. Instead, ONRR proposes to
value coal on the gross proceeds
received from the first arm’s-length sale.
ONRR also proposes to value sales of
coal between coal cooperative members
using the first arm’s-length sale or a
netback methodology. In addition, if
there is no coal sale, and lessees or their
affiliates use the coal to generate
electricity and sell the electricity, then
ONRR proposes to value the coal for
royalty purposes based on the gross
proceeds the lessee or its affiliate
receive for the power plant’s arm’slength sales of the electricity, less
applicable deductions. ONRR proposes
the same changes for both Federal and
Indian coal, with some minor
exceptions, but would continue to
maintain separate regulations.
ONRR also proposes other changes to
our regulations, although we did not
specifically request comments on these
changes in the ANPRs or at the
workshops. One such proposed change
is adding a new ‘‘default provision’’ to
address valuation when ONRR
determines (1) a contract does not
reflect total consideration, (2) the gross
proceeds accruing to you or your
affiliate under a contract do not reflect
reasonable consideration due to
misconduct or breach of the duty to
market for the mutual benefit of the
lessee and the lessor, or (3) it cannot
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ascertain the correct value of production
because of a variety of factors,
including, but not limited to, a lessee’s
failure to provide documents. In these
cases, the Secretary may enforce his/her
authority and exercise considerable
discretion to establish the reasonable
value of production using a variety of
discretionary factors and any other
information the Secretary believes is
appropriate.
Finally, we rewrote all sections of the
current regulations in Plain Language to
meet the criteria of Executive Orders
12866 and 12988 and the Presidential
Memorandum of June 1, 1998, and to
make our rules more clear, consistent,
and readable. All citations to the current
ONRR regulations in title 30 of the Code
of Federal Regulations (CFR) in this
preamble refer to the July 1, 2012, CFR.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Before reading the additional
explanatory information below, please
turn to the proposed rule language that
immediately follows the List of Subjects
in 30 CFR parts 1202 and 1206 and
signature page in this proposed rule.
The Department will codify this
language in the CFR if we finalize the
proposed rule as written.
After you read the proposed rule,
please return to the preamble discussion
below. The preamble contains more
information about the proposed rule,
such as why we define a term in a
certain manner and why we chose one
valuation method over another.
The derivation table below only
shows a crosswalk of the recodified
sections of the current and the proposed
regulations in part 1206.
DERIVATION TABLE FOR PART 1206
The requirements of section:
Are derived from section:
Subpart C
1206.20 ................................
1206.101 ..............................
1206.102 ..............................
1206.103 ..............................
1206.106 ..............................
1206.107 ..............................
1206.108 ..............................
1206.109 ..............................
1206.110 ..............................
1206.111 ..............................
1206.112 ..............................
1206.113 ..............................
1206.114 ..............................
1206.115 ..............................
1206.116 ..............................
1206.117 ..............................
1206.118 ..............................
1206.101; 1206.151; 1206.251; 1206.451.
1206.102.
1206.103.
1206.104.
1206.105.
1206.106.
1206.107.
1206.108.
1206.109.
1206.110.
1206.111.
1206.112.
1206.113.
1206.114.
1206.115.
1206.116.
1206.117.
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Subpart D
1206.140 ..............................
1206.141(a)(1)–(4) ...............
1206.141(b)(1)–(3) ...............
1206.141(b)(4) ......................
1206.142(a)(4) ......................
1206.142(b) ..........................
1206.142(c) ..........................
1206.143(a)(1) and (b) .........
1206.143(a)(2) ......................
1206.143(c) ..........................
1206.144 ..............................
1206.145 ..............................
1206.146 ..............................
1206.147 ..............................
1206.148 ..............................
1206.149 ..............................
1206.150 ..............................
1206.151 ..............................
1206.152(a) ..........................
1206.152(b) ..........................
1206.152(c)(1) ......................
1206.152(f) ...........................
1206.153(b) ..........................
1206.153(c) ..........................
1206.154(a) ..........................
1206.154(e)–(h) ....................
1206.154(i) ...........................
1206.154(i)(3) .......................
1206.155 ..............................
1206.156 ..............................
1206.157(a)(1) and (c) .........
1206.157(a)(2) and
1206.158.
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1206.150.
1206.152(a)(1).
1206.152(a)(2).
1206.152(b)(1)(iv).
1206.153(a)(1).
1206.153(a)(2).
1206.153(b)(1)(i).
1206.152(b)(1)(ii); 1206.153(b)(1)(ii).
1206.152(f); 1206.153(f).
1206.152(b)(1)(iii); 1206.153(b)(1)(iii).
1206.152(c)(1)–(3); 1206.153(c)(1)–(3).
1206.152(e)(1) and (2); 1206.153(e)(1) and (2); 1206.157(c)(1)(ii) and (c)(2)(iii); 1206.159(c)(1)(ii) and (c)(2)(iii).
1206.152(i); 1206.153(i).
1206.152(k); 1206.153(k).
1206.152(g); 1206.153(g).
1206.152(l); 1206.153(l).
1206.154.
1206.155.
1206.156(a).
1206.156(b); 1206.57(a)(2) and (b)(3).
1206.157(a)(2) and (b)(4).
1206.157(a)(4).
1206.157(f).
1206.157(g).
1206.157(b).
1206.157(b)(2)(i)–(iii).
1206.157(b)(2)(iv).
1206.157(b)(2)(v).
1206.157(c)(1)(i), (ii).
1206.157(c)(2)(i)–(iv).
1206.156(d).
1206.157(e).
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611
DERIVATION TABLE FOR PART 1206—Continued
The requirements of section:
Are derived from section:
1206.159(a)(1) ......................
1206.159(b) ..........................
1206.159(c)(1) and (2) .........
1206.159(d) ..........................
1206.160 ..............................
1206.161 ..............................
1206.162 ..............................
1206.163 ..............................
1206.164 ..............................
1206.165 ..............................
1206.158(a).
1206.158(b).
1206.158(c)(1) and (2).
1206.158(d)(1).
1206.159(a).
1206.159(b).
1206.159(c)(1).
1206.159(c)(2).
1206.159(d).
1206.159(e).
Subpart F
1206.250 ..............................
1206.251 ..............................
1206.252(d) ..........................
1206.260(a)(1) and (b) .........
1206.260(c)(2) ......................
1206.260(d) ..........................
1206.260(e) ..........................
1206.260(f) ...........................
1206.260(g) ..........................
1206.261 ..............................
1206.262 ..............................
1206.263 ..............................
1206.264 ..............................
1206.265 ..............................
1206.266 ..............................
1206.267(a) ..........................
1206.267(b)(2) ......................
1206.267(c) ..........................
1206.267(d) ..........................
1206.267(e) ..........................
1206.268 ..............................
1206.269 ..............................
1206.270 ..............................
1206.271 ..............................
1206.272 ..............................
1206.273 ..............................
1206.250.
1206.254; 1206.255; 1206.260.
1206.258(a); 1206.261(b).
1206.261(a).
1206.261(a)(2).
1206.261(c)(3).
1206.261(c)(1), (c)(2), and (e).
1206.262(a)(4).
1206.262(a)(2) and (a)(3).
1206.262(a)(1).
1206.262(b).
1206.262(c)(1).
1206.262(c)(2).
1206.262(d).
1206.262(e).
1206.258(a).
1206.258(c); 1206.260.
1206.259(a)(4).
1206.259(a)(2) and (a)(3).
1206.258(e).
1206.259(a)(1).
1206.259(b).
1206.259(c)(1).
1206.259(c)(2).
1206.259(d).
1206.259(e).
Subpart J
1206.450
1206.451
1206.460
1206.463
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
1206.450.
1206.453; 1206.454; 1206.459.
1206.461(a)(1).
1206.461(c).
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A. Section-By-Section Analysis of 30
CFR Part 1202—Royalties, Subpart F—
Coal
ONRR proposes to amend subpart F
regarding Federal and Indian coal
production volumes on which you must
pay royalties. The proposed rule merely
moves current 30 CFR 1206.253 and
1206.452 to 30 CFR part 1202, subpart
F to a new § 1202.251. We also rewrote
the current sections in Plain Language
without substantive change.
B. Section-By-Section Analysis of 30
CFR Part 1206—Product Valuation,
Subpart A—General Provisions and
Definitions, Subpart C—Federal Oil,
Subpart D—Federal Gas, Subpart F—
Federal Coal, and Subpart J—Indian
Coal
ONRR proposes to amend subparts A,
C, D, F, and J relating to the valuation
of oil and gas produced from Federal
leases and coal produced from Federal
and Indian leases.
Subpart A—General Provisions
1206.20 What definitions apply to
subparts C, D, F, and J?
ONRR proposes to consolidate the
definitions from Federal Oil (30 CFR
1206.101), Federal Gas (30 CFR
1206.151), Federal Coal (30 CFR
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1206.251), and Indian Coal (30 CFR
1206.451). The consolidated definitions
reside in a proposed § 1206.20 under
proposed Subpart A—General
Provisions and Definitions.
ONRR proposes to consolidate the
existing definitions for these products to
provide greater clarity and eliminate
redundancy. Where common terms exist
in the four subparts, ONRR modifies the
definitions to incorporate the active
voice and to use plain and simple
language similar to the language
reflected in the 2000 Federal crude oil
rule. For example, the term arm’s-length
contract applies the modern language of
the 2000 Federal crude oil rule and
extends its applicability to Federal gas
and Federal and Indian coal. Where a
definition has different meanings for
different subparts, we define the term
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for each subpart in that definition. For
example, see the definition of ‘‘gross
proceeds’’ below. Terms we currently
reference in only one subpart, for
example ANS (Alaska North Slope),
remain unmodified, except we propose
to locate these definitions in the
consolidated definitions in § 1206.20.
Finally, ONRR proposes to add new
definitions.
We identify all new definitions in the
table below and show if each existing
definition remains unchanged, is
modified, or is eliminated.
SUMMARY OF TERMS AND STATUS
Status
Term
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Modified
Ad valorem lease .............................................................................................
Affiliate .............................................................................................................
Allowance .........................................................................................................
ANS ..................................................................................................................
Area .................................................................................................................
Arm’s-length contract .......................................................................................
Audit .................................................................................................................
BIA ...................................................................................................................
BLM ..................................................................................................................
BOEM ..............................................................................................................
BSEE ...............................................................................................................
Coal ..................................................................................................................
Coal cooperative ..............................................................................................
Coal washing ...................................................................................................
Compression ....................................................................................................
Condensate ......................................................................................................
Constraint .........................................................................................................
Contract ...........................................................................................................
Designee ..........................................................................................................
Exchange agreement .......................................................................................
FERC ...............................................................................................................
Field .................................................................................................................
Gas ..................................................................................................................
Gas plant products ..........................................................................................
Gathering .........................................................................................................
Geographic region ...........................................................................................
Gross proceeds ...............................................................................................
Index ................................................................................................................
Index pricing point ...........................................................................................
Index zone .......................................................................................................
Indian allottee ..................................................................................................
Indian Tribe ......................................................................................................
Individual Indian mineral owner .......................................................................
Keepwhole contract .........................................................................................
Lease ...............................................................................................................
Lease products ................................................................................................
Lessee .............................................................................................................
Like quality .......................................................................................................
Like quality coal ...............................................................................................
Like-quality lease products ..............................................................................
Location differential ..........................................................................................
Market center ...................................................................................................
Marketable condition ........................................................................................
Marketing affiliate .............................................................................................
Mine .................................................................................................................
Minimum royalty ...............................................................................................
Misconduct .......................................................................................................
Net-Back method .............................................................................................
Net output ........................................................................................................
Net profit share ................................................................................................
Netting ..............................................................................................................
NGLs ................................................................................................................
NYMEX price ...................................................................................................
Oil .....................................................................................................................
ONRR ..............................................................................................................
ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin .....................................................
ONRR-approved publication ............................................................................
Outer Continental Shelf ...................................................................................
Payor ................................................................................................................
Person ..............................................................................................................
Posted price .....................................................................................................
Processing .......................................................................................................
Processing allowance ......................................................................................
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 / Proposed Rules
SUMMARY OF TERMS AND STATUS—Continued
Status
Term
Modified
Prompt month ..................................................................................................
Quality differential ............................................................................................
Region ..............................................................................................................
Residue gas .....................................................................................................
Rocky Mountain Region ..................................................................................
Roll ...................................................................................................................
Sale ..................................................................................................................
Sales type code ...............................................................................................
Section 6 lease ................................................................................................
Short ton ..........................................................................................................
Spot market price ............................................................................................
Spot price .........................................................................................................
Spot sales agreement ......................................................................................
Tendering program ..........................................................................................
Tonnage ...........................................................................................................
Trading month ..................................................................................................
Transportation allowance .................................................................................
Warranty contract ............................................................................................
Washing allowance ..........................................................................................
WTI differential .................................................................................................
We explain the new and modified
terms and definitions below. For most
modified terms, we rewrote the terms in
Plain Language and make no substantive
change.
Subpart C—Federal Oil
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1206.100 What is the purpose of this
subpart?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.100.
1206.101 How do I calculate royalty
value for oil I or my affiliate sell(s)
under an arm’s-length contract?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.102 except for two
substantive changes. First, proposed
paragraph (a) contains the same
provisions as existing § 1206.102(a) with
one modification. Proposed paragraph
(a) adds that the value in this paragraph
does not apply ‘‘if ONRR decides to
value your oil under § 1206.105.’’
Proposed § 1206.105 is ONRR’s new
proposed default valuation mechanism.
ONRR also proposes to add a new
provision to paragraph (c)(1) allowing
ONRR to decide a lessee’s oil value if
the lessee fails to make the election in
this paragraph. Under the current
regulations, if a contract is either nonarm’s-length or an exchange agreement,
a lessee can choose one of two different
valuation methods. ONRR proposes to
add a new provision to clarify the
current regulations by explaining the
consequences if a lessee fails to properly
make the election. For example, if a
lessee improperly classifies its contract
as an arm’s-length contract under the
current regulations, the lessee will most
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likely pay royalties on the price
specified in its contract. However, if the
lessee or ONRR subsequently
determines the contract actually was
non-arm’s-length or an exchange
agreement, the existing regulations do
not specify if the lessee may make the
election retroactively. To remove this
ambiguity, ONRR proposes to eliminate
the lessee’s election in these situations
and provide that ONRR can determine
the lessee’s oil value under the new
default valuation mechanism in
§ 1206.105.
1206.102 How do I value oil not sold
under an arm’s-length contract?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.103 except for two
substantive changes. The first
substantive change is to paragraph (a),
which explains when you may value oil
under this section. Proposed paragraph
(a) requires you to use this section to
value your oil ‘‘unless ONRR decides to
value your oil under § 1206.105.’’
Proposed § 1206.105 is ONRR’s new
proposed default valuation mechanism.
ONRR also proposes to remove
current 30 CFR 1206.103(b)(1)
containing the option for lessees to use
a tendering program to value oil they
produce from Federal leases in the
Rocky Mountain Region. Since the final
oil valuation regulations were published
in March 2000, ONRR is aware of only
one company that valued its oil using
this provision. At that time, we received
feedback from oil producers that it was
administratively inefficient to
implement a tendering program for
valuation purposes. We do not believe
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any oil producer has used this provision
since then. Therefore, because industry
has abandoned its use of this provision,
we propose to remove tendering from
the options available to value Federal
oil produced in the Rocky Mountain
Region.
Finally, ONRR proposes to amend
paragraphs (d) and (e) of § 1206.103 in
the current regulations. Under the
current regulations, lessees may apply
paragraphs (d) and (e) to value their
production with ONRR approval. ONRR
proposes to amend paragraphs (d) and
(e) to instead state that ONRR may
decide to use these paragraphs to value
production under § 1206.105.
1206.103 What publications are
acceptable to ONRR?
The substantive requirements of this
proposed section are the same as current
30 CFR 1206.104. However, we propose
to remove our requirement to publish a
notice of acceptable publications in the
Federal Register. Instead, we propose to
provide acceptable publications on our
Web site.
1206.104 How will ONRR determine if
my royalty payments are correct?
In this section, ONRR proposes
amendments to the text of its gross
proceeds provisions to rewrite them in
Plain Language and to make them
consistent with other valuation
regulations. Thus, rather than repeat the
requirements or procedures in each
applicable section of this rule, ONRR
proposes to have this section apply to
this entire subpart. However, the
substantive requirements of proposed
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 / Proposed Rules
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) remain
unchanged. We propose the same
changes to the Federal gas amendments
that we propose in this section, so
please refer to the discussion of the
substantive changes we propose to make
to the Federal gas regulation in
§ 1206.143 below for more information.
1206.105 How will ONRR determine
the value of my oil for royalty purposes?
ONRR proposes to add a new
‘‘default’’ valuation § 1206.105 under
which ONRR can value your oil if we
decide to do so pursuant to the criteria
under § 1206.104 or any other provision
in this subpart. If ONRR determines
value under this new default section, we
may consider any information we deem
relevant. Also, this proposed section
enumerates factors ONRR may consider
if we decide we will determine value,
for royalty purposes, under this section,
which may include, but not be limited
to:
(a) The value of like-quality oil in the
same field or nearby fields or areas;
(b) The value of like-quality oil from
the same plant;
(c) Public sources of price or market
information ONRR deems reliable;
(d) Information available and reported
to ONRR, including but not limited to,
on Form ONRR–2014 and Form ONRR–
4054;
(e) Costs of transportation or
processing, if ONRR determines they are
applicable; or
(f) Any information ONRR deems
relevant regarding the particular lease
operation or the salability of the oil.
This proposed section allows ONRR
to consider any criteria we deem
relevant, as well as criteria similar to the
current gas valuation benchmarks under
30 CFR 1206.152(c)(1) and (2) and
1206.153(c)(1) and (2). Like the
valuation regulations in effect prior to
the 1988 rulemaking that resulted in the
current gas valuation regulations, 30
CFR 206.103 (1984) (onshore) and
206.150 (1984) (offshore), under
proposed § 1206.105, ONRR has the
authority and responsibility to establish
the reasonable value of production for
royalty purposes and possesses
considerable discretion in determining
that value. Independent Petroleum
Ass’n v. DeWitt, 279 F.3d at 1039–1040,
and cases cited therein. Thus, under this
proposed section, ONRR has broad
authority to value your oil in the
manner we deem most appropriate
considering the factors we deem most
appropriate.
We add the same default provision to
Federal gas in § 1206.144, Federal coal
in § 1206.254, and Indian coal in
§ 1206.454.
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1206.106 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of value under
this subpart?
1206.107 What are my responsibilities
to place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
The two proposed sections above are
the same as current 30 CFR 1206.105
and 1206.106, except we rewrite the
sections in Plain Language.
1206.108 How do I request a value
determination?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.107 except we
make some substantive changes to
provide greater clarity to the process a
lessee may use to request valuation
guidance and determinations, as well as
the effect of ONRR’s response to such
requests. Because we are making the
same changes to the Federal gas
amendments in this proposed
rulemaking, please refer to proposed
§ 1206.148 of the Federal gas regulation
below for more information.
1206.109 Does ONRR protect
information I provide?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.108, except we
rewrite the section in Plain Language.
1206.110 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.109 except we
reword the section name and make the
following substantive changes. First, in
proposed paragraph (a)(2)(ii), we add a
new provision that states you may not
take a transportation allowance for the
movement of oil produced on the OCS
from the wellhead to the first platform.
Because we are making the same change
to the Federal gas amendments we
propose in this rulemaking, please refer
to § 1206.152(a)(2)(ii) of the Federal gas
regulation below for more information.
Second, we propose in paragraph (b)
to clarify that if you request to use a
different cost allocation than that in
paragraph (b), and we approve your
request, you can only use your proposed
allocation methodology prospectively.
We make this proposed change to clarify
that you may not request retroactive
changes to your royalty reporting and
payment. We make the same change to
proposed §§ 1206.112(b), 1206.112(i)(1),
1206.112(j), 1206.113(c)(2),
1206.150(c)(4), 1206.152(b),
1206.154(b)(3), 1206.154(i)(1),
1206.161(b)(3), 1206.151(h)(1),
1206.262(b)(3), 1206.262(h)(1),
1206.269(b)(3), 1206.269(h)(1),
1206.462(b)(3), 1206.462(h)(1),
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1206.463(d)(4)(i), 1206.469(b)(3),
1206.469(h)(1), and 1206.470(d)(4)(i).
Third, in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, we propose to remove current
30 CFR 1206.109(c)(2) that allows a
lessee to request to exceed the limit on
transportation allowances of 50 percent
of the value of the oil. We also propose
to terminate existing approvals to
exceed the 50 percent limit under
paragraph (d)(2). Because we are making
the same change to the Federal gas
amendments in this proposed
rulemaking, please refer to § 1206.152(e)
below for more information.
Fourth, like the default provision for
valuation we discuss above under
§ 1206.104, proposed paragraph (f)
provides that ONRR may determine
your transportation allowance under
§ 1206.105 if (1) there is misconduct by
or between the contracting parties, (2)
the total consideration the lessee or its
affiliate pays under an arm’s-length
contract does not reflect the reasonable
cost of transportation because the lessee
breached its duty to market oil for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the
lessor by transporting oil at a cost that
is unreasonably high, or (3) ONRR
cannot determine if the lessee properly
calculated a transportation allowance
for any reason. Because we are making
the same change to the Federal gas
amendments we propose in this
rulemaking, please refer to the
discussion of § 1206.152(g) below for
more information on this provision.
Finally, we also propose a new
provision under paragraph (g) to clarify
that you do not need ONRR’s approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs you incur. This is
consistent with existing practice.
1206.111 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.110, except for
three substantive changes. ONRR
proposes to eliminate the provision in
current 30 CFR 1206.110(b)(4) that
allows a lessee to include the costs of
carrying line fill on its books as a
component of arm’s-length
transportation allowances. Rather, we
propose to specifically preclude
including this cost in transportation
allowances under new paragraph (c)(9)
of this section. We propose to eliminate
allowing this cost because we believe
this is a cost to market the oil we
disallow as a deduction under our
existing valuation regulations. Line fill
occurs after the royalty measurement
point and is necessary for the pipeline
operator to get Federal oil production to
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 / Proposed Rules
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
market. We request comments on
whether this is a marketing cost.
We also propose to add a new
paragraph (d) that applies if you have no
contract in writing for the arm’s-length
transportation of oil. In that case, ONRR
determines your transportation
allowance under § 1206.105. Under the
proposed rule, you may propose to
ONRR a method to determine the
allowance using the procedures in
§ 1206.108(a) and may use that method
to determine your allowance until
ONRR issues its determination. This
proposed paragraph does not apply if a
lessee performs its own transportation.
Instead, proposed § 1206.112 for nonarm’s-length transportation allowances,
applies.
Finally, ONRR proposes to eliminate
the provision in current 30 CFR
1206.110(g) that allows a lessee to report
transportation costs, in certain
circumstances, as a transportation
factor. We propose that a lessee must
report separately all transportation costs
under both arm’s-length and non-arm’slength sales contracts as a transportation
allowance on Form ONRR–2014. ONRR
believes requiring lessees to report all
deductions for transportation costs
separately as allowances on Form
ONRR–2014 is more transparent,
supports ONRR’s increased data mining
efforts to promote accurate upfront
royalty reporting, and assists State and
Federal auditors in their compliance
work.
1206.112 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I do not
have an arm’s-length transportation
contract?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.111 except for the
following substantive changes.
We replace current 30 CFR
1206.111(b)(3) and (b)(4) with proposed
paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section, which
allows you to elect to calculate
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment in a
transportation system under proposed
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(1) or a return on
undepreciated capital investment with
no depreciation under proposed
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(2). The proposed
regulation provides that once you make
an election, you may not change it
without ONRR’s approval. In addition,
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii) replaces
current 30 CFR 1206.111(b)(5).
Currently, 30 CFR 1206.111(b)(5) allows
you to continue deducting 10 percent of
the cost of capital expenditures once
you have depreciated the asset below 10
percent under current 30 CFR
1206.111(j). However, under proposed
paragraph (i)(1)(iii) of this section,
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instead of allowing a 10 percent
deduction, we base the return on
undepreciated capital investment on the
reasonable salvage value of the asset.
ONRR believes this method more
reasonably reflects the actual costs for
oil transportation systems. Also, it
makes the treatment of depreciation
consistent with other royalty valuation
rules, including the current Federal gas
rule at 30 CFR 1206.157(g) (proposed
§ 1206.154(i)).
In proposed paragraph (c)(2)(ii), we
prohibit you from including actual or
theoretical line loss as a transportation
cost. ONRR proposes to eliminate the
provision in the current regulations at
30 CFR 1206.111(b)(6)(v) which allows
a lessee to reduce the royalty volume
measured at the royalty measurement
point by actual or theoretical line loss
occurring after the royalty measurement
point. This change is consistent with
long-standing mineral leasing laws that
require royalty on the volume of
production removed from the lease.
Mineral Leasing Act, 30 U.S.C. 181–287;
Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired
Lands, 30 U.S.C. 351–359 (onshore
acquired lands); Indian leasing statutes,
25 U.S.C. 396a—396g (tribal leases); 25
U.S.C. 396 (allotted leases); and the
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43
U.S.C. 1331–1356. This change also
makes Federal oil valuation consistent
with ONRR’s other product valuation
regulations.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2)(iii),
ONRR eliminates the provision in
current 30 CFR 1206.111(b)(6)(ii) which
allows a lessee to include the costs of
carrying line fill on its books as a
component of non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances. We believe
this is a cost to market the oil, which we
disallow as a deduction under current
valuation regulations. Line fill occurs
after the royalty measurement point and
is necessary for the pipeline operator to
get Federal oil production to market. We
request comments on whether this is a
marketing cost.
Proposed paragraph (i)(1) allows you
to calculate depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment using
either a straight-line method (based on
either the life of the equipment or the
life of the reserves that the
transportation system services) or a unit
of production method. This
depreciation method was in ONRR’s oil
valuation regulations in effect for
producer-owned transportation systems
prior to the effective date of the 2000
Federal oil valuation regulations. This
new proposed paragraph (i)(1) would
replace the provision in current 30 CFR
1206.111(h), which allows a lessee to
depreciate a transportation asset a
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615
second time after the lessee already
fully depreciated that asset. The current
Federal oil valuation regulations
authorize fully depreciated
transportation assets to be recapitalized
a second time when they are purchased
from the original owner. ONRR
proposes to remove this provision.
Under proposed paragraph (i)(1)(ii),
ONRR allows depreciation of pipeline
assets only one time. If the pipeline
asset is sold, we allow the purchaser to
continue the remaining allowance
depreciation schedule if applicable.
This change makes Federal oil valuation
consistent with ONRR’s other product
valuation regulations.
Proposed paragraph (i)(1)(iii)(B)
changes the return on undepreciated
capital investment from10 percent to the
reasonable salvage value of the asset
multiplied by the rate of return in
proposed paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
New proposed paragraph (i)(2)
provides an alternative to depreciating
the asset under paragraph (i)(1). Under
this option, you may elect to use a cost
equal to the allowable initial capital
investment in the transportation system,
multiplied by the rate of return in
proposed paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
If you chose this option, you may not
include depreciation as a cost in your
allowance. ONRR removed the
provision limiting this option to
transportation assets put in place after
March 1, 1988. When ONRR published
its Federal oil valuation regulations on
May 5, 2004, it changed the
requirements for transportation
allowances. In recognition that certain
transportation facilities had been given
approval prior to these regulations’
effective date (August 1, 2004), ONRR
made the new requirements apply only
to facilities that were placed in service
on or after the effective date of these
regulations. Now, almost ten years later,
ONRR believes that none of facilities
affected by the 2004 rule change are still
eligible for depreciation under the
requirements in effect prior to August 1,
2004. Therefore, we remove this
language from the proposed regulations.
Proposed paragraph (i)(3) would
amend current 30 CFR 1206.111(i)(2) to
change the Standard & Poor’s BBB bond
rate we allow as an approximation of
the cost of capital for non-arm’s-length
transportation. Currently, 30 CFR
1206.111(i)(2) allows a lessee to
compute the rate of return on the
undepreciated cost of capital by
multiplying the undepreciated amount
remaining by 1.3 times the Standard &
Poor’s BBB bond rate. ONRR proposes
to decrease the multiplier of the
Standard & Poor’s BBB bond rate from
1.3 to 1.0. In the final Federal oil
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valuation regulations published in
March 2000, we increased the multiplier
of the Standard & Poor’s BBB bond rate
from 1.0 to 1.3. We propose to change
it back to 1.0 times the BBB bond rate
because we believe this rate better
reflects the cost of borrowing to finance
capital expenditures involved in
pipeline construction. It also is
consistent with our other product
valuation regulations.
When a company or affiliate invests
in shipping its own production, it
considers if it can more profitably
transport its own production or contract
with a third party to provide the service.
At this stage in production
development, a company has a solid
asset to demonstrate its ability to repay
the capital investment necessary to
construct the pipeline. ONRR consulted
with FERC and has concluded that the
BBB bond rate is an adequate
representation for the cost of capital for
the construction of producer-owned
pipelines.
1206.113 What adjustments and
transportation allowances apply when I
value oil production from my lease
using NYMEX prices or ANS spot
prices?
1206.114 How will ONRR identify
market centers?
1206.115 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
Proposed §§ 1206.113 through
1206.115 are the same as current 30 CFR
1206.112 through 1206.114, but we
rewrite the sections in Plain Language
and update the examples in current 30
CFR 1206.112(d) using November 2012
prices.
1206.116 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.115 except we
make each sentence a paragraph. We
also add a new paragraph (d) that
explains you must follow the reporting
requirements for arm’s-length contract
under § 1206.115 if you are authorized
under § 1206.112(j) to not use your
actual costs.
1206.117 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.116 except we
make each sentence a paragraph and
add ‘‘penalties’’ to the heading to better
describe the section.
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1206.118 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation
allowances?
1206.119 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
These two proposed sections, 30 CFR
1206.118 and 1206.119, are the same as
current §§ 1206.117 and 1206.119,
respectively, but we rewrite the sections
in Plain Language.
1206.120 How are operating
allowances determined?
We propose to remove current 30 CFR
1206.120 on how to determine operating
allowances because it is unnecessary. If
a lease has provisions for operating
allowances, that lease term will govern
valuation under proposed
§ 1206.100(d)(4) of this subpart.
Subpart D—Federal Gas
ONRR proposes to add new
§§ 1206.140 through 1206.149 to this
subpart to codify, clarify, and enhance
current ONRR Federal gas valuation
practices.
1206.140 What is the purpose and
scope of this subpart?
We propose to redesignate the current
regulations at § 1206.150 to § 1206.160.
Also, in this proposed rule, we rewrote
the redesignated sections in Plain
Language. Proposed § 1206.140 is the
same as current 30 CFR 1206.150 except
for three changes. First, we propose to
add a new paragraph (b) to explain that
the terms ‘‘you’’ and ‘‘your’’ in this
subpart refer to the lessee. Second, we
propose to redesignate paragraphs (b)
and (c) as paragraphs (c) and (d).
Finally, we propose to remove existing
regulations in paragraph (d), which state
this subpart is intended to ensure leases
are administered in accordance with
governing mineral leasing laws and
lease terms. We believe current
paragraph (d) is unnecessary and
duplicative of our authority to
promulgate this rule.
1206.141 How do I calculate royalty
value for unprocessed gas I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm’s-length or
non-arm’s-length contract?
This proposed section explains the
valuation of unprocessed gas for royalty
purposes. Proposed paragraph (a)(1)
explains that this section applies to
unprocessed gas—meaning gas that is
never processed—consistent with the
current gas regulations.
Proposed paragraph (a)(2) explains
this section applies to gas you are not
required to value under proposed
§ 1206.142, or that ONRR does not value
under proposed § 1206.144. Proposed
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§ 1206.142(a) explains what gas ONRR
considers processed for valuation
purposes, and proposed § 1206.144
explains ONRR’s new proposed default
valuation mechanism. We discuss
proposed §§ 1206.142 and 1206.144
below.
Under proposed paragraph (a)(3), we
state this section also applies to
processed gas you must value prior to
processing under § 1206.151 of this part.
Proposed § 1206.151 contains the dual
accounting provisions for Federal gas in
current 30 CFR 1206.155.
Under proposed paragraph (a)(4), we
consider unprocessed gas any gas you
sell prior to processing if price is based
on an amount per MMBtu or Mcf, and
not on the value of residue gas and gas
plant products. Therefore, this proposed
paragraph applies to the valuation of gas
when price is not based on a processed
gas price.
Paragraph (b) proposes a new
valuation methodology based on the
first arm’s-length sale of the gas. ONRR
promulgated the current gas valuation
regulations in 1988 to achieve market
value based on transactions between
independent, non-affiliated parties. The
Department has long believed the values
established in arm’s-length transactions
are the best indication of market value,
and the 1988 rules reflect that belief.
Although the Secretary’s
responsibility to determine the royalty
value of minerals produced has not
changed, the industry and marketplace
have changed dramatically since we
wrote the 1988 regulations. As
discussed below, industry and
marketplace changes, as well as
litigation necessitate changes to ONRR’s
valuation regulations. Indeed, ONRR
already amended the Indian gas (30 CFR
part 1206, subpart E) and Federal oil (30
CFR part 1206, subpart C) valuation
regulations to simplify those regulations
and provide early certainty by valuing
those products based on the first arm’slength sale and/or on publicly available
prices.
When we developed the 1988 rules,
producers most commonly sold natural
gas at the wellhead to natural gas
pipeline companies, which transported
and sold the gas to local distribution
companies. However, from mid-1980 to
early 1990, a series of FERC rulemakings
resulted in deregulation of some
pipeline systems. As a result, industry
now sells directly to end users or
distributors, and pipelines only provide
transportation services. Producers also
created marketing affiliates to which
they initially transferred production.
For lessee sales to affiliates, the
current Federal gas valuation
regulations require a lessee to value
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production based on a series of
‘‘benchmarks’’ to be applied in a
prescribed order (30 CFR 1206.152(c)).
The first benchmark is the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee in a sale
under its non-arm’s-length contract,
provided that those gross proceeds are
equivalent to the gross proceeds derived
from, or paid under, comparable arm’slength contracts (30 CFR
1206.152(c)(1)). This method has posed
practical difficulties since companies
are not privy to other companies’
‘‘comparable’’ sales transactions. In
addition, ONRR and lessees have found
it difficult to determine what portion of
lease production a lessee must sell at
arm’s-length to reliably determine the
value of the remaining production.
Likewise, the remaining benchmarks at
30 CFR 1206.152(c)(2) and (3) have
proven difficult for industry to follow
and ONRR to administer. ONRR
proposes to replace the current
regulations in § 1206.152(c)(1), (2), and
(3) with proposed paragraph (b).
To simplify and clarify valuation of
non-arm’s-length sales, proposed
paragraph (b) bases value on the first
arm’s-length sale with applicable
allowances. The first arm’s-length sale
may occur immediately, or may follow
one or more non-arm’s-length transfers
or sales of the gas. However, under the
proposed rule, you will use the first
arm’s-length sale regardless of whether
you sell or transfer gas to one or more
affiliates or other persons in non-arm’slength transactions before the first
arm’s-length sale, and regardless of the
number of those non-arm’s-length
transactions. This arm’s-length sales
value will apply unless you exercise the
index-based option in proposed
paragraph (c) of this section we discuss
below.
Proposed paragraph (b)(1) would state
value is the gross proceeds accruing to
you under an arm’s-length contract, less
applicable allowances.
Similarly, under proposed paragraph
(b)(2), if you sell or transfer your Federal
gas production to your affiliate, or some
other person at less than arm’s length,
and that person or its affiliate then sells
the gas at arm’s length, royalty value
will be the other person’s (or its
affiliate’s) gross proceeds under the first
arm’s-length contract. For example, a
lessee might sell its Federal gas
production to a person who is not an
‘‘affiliate’’ as defined, but with whom its
relationship is not one of ‘‘opposing
economic interests’’ and therefore is not
at arm’s length. An illustrative example
is when a number of working interest
owners in a large field form a
cooperative venture that purchases all of
the working interest owners’ production
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and resells the combined volumes to a
purchaser at arm’s-length. Xeno, Inc.,
134 IBLA 172 (1995), involved a similar
situation. If none of the working interest
owners own 10 percent or more of the
new entity, the new entity would not be
an ‘‘affiliate’’ of any of them.
Nevertheless, the relationship between
the new entity and the respective
working interest owners is not at arm’s
length because of the lack of opposing
economic interests regarding the
contract. In this case, we believe it
appropriate to value the production
based on the arm’s-length sale price the
cooperative venture receives for the gas.
Therefore, under proposed paragraph
(b)(2), you must value the production
based on the gross proceeds accruing to
you, your affiliate, or other person to
whom you transferred the gas (or its
affiliate) when the gas ultimately is sold
at arm’s length, unless you elect to use
the index pricing option we propose
under § 1206.141(c) of this section or
ONRR decides to value your gas under
the new default valuation provision in
proposed § 1206.144 discussed below.
In summary, to provide early certainty
and simplification, ONRR proposes to
amend its valuation regulations for
Federal gas to provide that, with certain
exceptions, the first arm’s-length sale is
the value for royalty purposes consistent
with valuation of non-arm’s-length sales
of Federal oil production under current
30 CFR 1206.102(a).
Proposed paragraph (b)(3) explains
valuation if you, your affiliate, or
another person sell under multiple
arm’s-length contracts for gas produced
from a lease that is valued under this
proposed paragraph (b). In this case,
unless you exercise the index-based
option we provide in paragraph (c) of
this section, because you sold non-arm’s
length to your affiliate or another
person, under the proposed rule, you
must value the gas based on the volumeweighted average of the value
established under this paragraph for
each contract for the sale of gas
produced from that lease. This is
identical to current 30 CFR 1206.102(b)
applicable to valuation of Federal oil. In
addition, we believe this provision is
consistent with ongoing practice under
the current gas valuation rule.
Proposed paragraph (b)(4) contains
the provisions of the current gas
valuation rule at 30 CFR
1206.152(b)(1)(iv) that explains how to
value over-delivered volumes under a
cash-out program, but we rewrite this
provision in Plain Language.
ONRR proposes to add a new
paragraph (c) containing an index price
valuation methodology that a lessee may
elect to use in lieu of valuing its gas
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617
under proposed paragraphs (b)(2) and
(b)(3) of this section based on the gross
proceeds accruing to its affiliate or other
person under the first arm’s-length sale.
The proposed methodology is based on
publicly available index prices less a
specified deduction to account for
processing and transportation costs.
Under the proposed rule, this valuation
methodology also applies to ‘‘no
contract’’ situations we describe below
under paragraph (e).
We believe this index price option
simplifies the current valuation
methodology and provides early
certainty. Many pipelines and service
providers now charge producers
‘‘bundled’’ fees that include both
deductible costs of transportation and
non-deductible costs to place
production into marketable condition.
Both ONRR and lessees with arm’slength transportation contracts have
found allocating the costs between
placing the gas in marketable condition
and transportation is administratively
burdensome and time consuming.
Similarly, when processing plants
charge bundled fees that include nondeductible costs, the cost allocation is
administratively burdensome and time
consuming.
Litigation also has complicated the
application of ONRR’s gas valuation
regulations. Although litigation has
clarified what constitutes marketable
condition, its application is fact specific
and time consuming. See Devon and
cases cited therein.
The proposed index-based option
provides a lessee with an alternative
that is simple, certain, and avoids the
requirements to ‘‘trace’’ production
when there are numerous non-arm’slength sales prior to an arm’s-length sale
and unbundle fees. Under this proposed
paragraph (c), the lessee may choose to
value its gas only in an area that has an
active index pricing point published in
a publication that ONRR approves. The
lessee may elect to value its gas under
this proposed paragraph, and that
election is binding on the lessee for 2
years. ONRR would post a list of
approved publications at www.onrr.gov.
ONRR proposes to use Platts and
Natural Gas Intelligence as ONRRapproved publications but invites
comments on whether these
publications are appropriate, as well as
whether there are other publications
that ONRR should use.
If the lease is in an area with active
index pricing points, the lessee must
determine the applicable index pricing
point or points. We used the language
in proposed paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii)
‘‘If you can only transport to one index
pricing point’’ and ‘‘If you can transport
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gas to more than one index pricing
point,’’ respectively (emphasis added),
because, under the proposed rule, we
intend that for an index pricing point to
be applicable, the lessee must be able to
physically transport its gas by pipeline
to that index pricing point. Further, an
index pricing point would be applicable
as long as the lessee could physically
transport their gas by pipeline to that
index pricing point (emphasis added).
This means that under the proposed
rule, the index pricing point applies
even if the lessee could not transport its
gas to that index pricing point because
the pipeline is constrained (for example
when all available capacity on a
pipeline through which the lessee’s gas
might flow to that index pricing point
was already under contract to other
parties).
For example, assume you have a lease
in the West Delta area of the Gulf of
Mexico and your lease is physically
connected by pipeline to the Mississippi
Canyon Pipeline. In this case, your gas
is physically capable of flowing to the
Toca Plant (through the Southern
Natural Gas Pipeline), the Yscloskey
Plant (through the Tennessee Gas
Pipeline), or the Venice Plant, and you
have multiple index pricing points to
which your gas can physically flow.
Also, assume the highest reported
monthly bid week price among the
multiple index pricing points is the
Tennessee Gas 500 Leg Price at the
tailgate of the Yscloskey Plant. Finally,
assume you cannot flow your gas
through the Tennessee Gas Pipeline (to
the Yscloskey Plant) because all
available capacity on that pipeline is
under contract to other persons, and the
pipeline has no capacity available to
you for the production month—in other
words, it is constrained. In this
example, you would use the highest
reported monthly bid week price at the
tailgate of the Yscloskey Plant as the
value under this paragraph even though
your gas did not flow to that index
pricing point during the production
month.
Under proposed paragraph (c), the
lessee could not use index pricing
points if it could not physically
transport its gas to that index pricing
point because there is not a pipeline or
series of pipelines that physically
connect to the lease and flow from the
lease to the index pricing point. ONRR
would exclude the use of these index
pricing points because they do not
represent points at which the lessee can
sell its gas, and it is difficult to adjust
these prices for location differentials
between the index pricing points and
the lease.
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If the lessee can transport its gas to
only one index pricing point, the value
under proposed paragraph (c)(1)(i) is the
highest reported monthly bid week
price for that index pricing point in the
ONRR-approved publication for the
production month. If the lessee can
transport its gas to more than one index
pricing point, the value under proposed
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) is the highest
reported monthly bid week price for the
index pricing points to which the lessee
could transport its gas, in the ONRRapproved publication for the production
month. However, under paragraph
(c)(1)(iii), if there are sequential index
pricing points on a pipeline, the lessee
would use the first index pricing point
at or after the lessee’s gas enters the
pipeline.
ONRR recognizes that index pricing
points are normally located off the lease,
and frequently at lengthy distances from
the lease. Thus, under proposed
paragraph (c)(1)(iv), ONRR allows a
lessee to reduce the highest reported
monthly bid week price by a set amount
to account for transportation costs a
lessee would incur to move the gas from
the lease to an applicable index pricing
point. ONRR proposes to allow a lessee
to reduce the highest reported monthly
bid week prices by 5 percent for sales
from the OCS Gulf of Mexico and by 10
percent for sales from all other areas,
but not by less than 10 cents per MMBtu
or more than 30 cents per MMBtu.
ONRR proposes these percent
reductions based on the average gas
transportation rates that lessees have
reported to ONRR from 2007 through
2010 for OCS and all other areas.
ONRR proposes to allow a lessee to
choose the index price methodology to
value its gas under this paragraph for
the following reasons: (1) It relies on a
market price at which gas is sold from
the area during the production month;
(2) it recognizes costs that a lessee must
incur to transport gas from the lease to
an index pricing point; and (3) it makes
payment and verification of royalties
paid simple and efficient, thereby
saving both lessees and ONRR
significant administrative costs. Further,
ONRR believes this alternative
methodology provides ONRR with a
reasonable market value for the lessee’s
gas that avoids requiring a lessee and
ONRR to track every resale of the
lessee’s gas during the production
month, especially when those sales can
involve several transactions hundreds of
miles downstream from the lease. As we
state above, it also avoids the
unbundling of transportation and
processing costs.
ONRR proposes to use the highest
reported monthly bid week price with a
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reduction for transportation costs. We
propose this because it generally
represents the gross proceeds net of
transportation allowances accruing to
lessees that ONRR believes are most
likely to choose this option to value
their gas based on information lessees
and others reported on Form ONRR–
2014 for the period from 2007 through
2011.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(v) states
that, after you select an ONRR-approved
publication available at www.onrr.gov,
you may not select a different
publication more often than once every
2 years. ONRR also proposes, under
paragraph (c)(1)(vi), to exclude
individual index prices from this option
if we determine that the index price
does not accurately reflect the value of
production. ONRR plans to disallow the
use of index prices with low liquidity,
such as those classified as Tier 3 in the
Platts publications. ONRR would post a
list of excluded index pricing points at
www.onrr.gov. We would appreciate
comments on this proposal.
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) explains
that you may not take any other
deductions from the value calculated
under this paragraph (c) because you
would already receive a reduction for
transportation under proposed
paragraph (c)(1)(iv).
Proposed paragraph (d)(1) provides
that, if you have no written contract or
no sale of gas subject to this section and
there is an index pricing point for the
gas, then you must value your gas under
the index pricing provisions of
paragraph (c) of this section unless
ONRR values your gas under § 1206.144.
This provision includes, but is not
limited to, when: (1) The lessee sells its
gas to an affiliate and the affiliate uses
the gas in its facility; (2) the lessee sells
its gas to an affiliate and the affiliate
resells the gas to another affiliate of
either the lessee or itself and that
affiliate uses the gas in its facility; (3)
the lessee uses the gas as fuel for its
other leases in the field or area; or (4)
the lessee delivers gas to another person
as payment of an overriding royalty
interest that other person holds.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2) addresses
situations in which you have no
contract for the sale of gas subject to this
section and there is not an index pricing
point for the gas. In these situations,
ONRR will decide the value under
§ 1206.144. However, when this occurs,
under paragraph (d)(2)(i), we require
that you propose to ONRR a method to
determine the value using the
procedures in proposed § 1206.148(a).
Proposed § 1206.148(a) describes the
information you must provide to ONRR
when you request a valuation
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determination. Proposed paragraph
(d)(2)(ii) allows you to use your
proposed method until ONRR issues a
decision. After ONRR issues a
determination, under paragraph
(d)(2)(iii), you will have to make any
adjustment under proposed
§ 1206.143(a)(2). You have to make
adjustments only if ONRR decides you
must use a different methodology than
you propose under paragraph (d)(2)(i).
1206.142 How do I calculate royalty
value for processed gas I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm’s-length or nonarm’s-length contract?
ONRR proposes a new § 1206.142
including a new paragraph (a) that
amends and expands what is processed
gas for royalty valuation purposes.
Currently, when gas is sold under an
arm’s-length contract prior to
processing, and the lessee neither
retains nor exercises any rights to the
gas after processing (in other words, an
outright sale before the plant), such gas
is valued as unprocessed gas. Included
are contracts where the title passes
before processing, but payment is based
on the values of residue gas and gas
plant products after processing.
Percentage-of-Proceeds (POP) contracts
(contracts where the lessee’s arm’slength contract for the sale of that gas
prior to processing provides for the
value to be determined on the basis of
a percentage of the purchaser’s proceeds
resulting from processing the gas) are
the most common of these contracts, but
ONRR has observed a myriad of
variations of such contracts. Because
this gas is valued as unprocessed gas
under the current regulations, there are
no limits on the minimum value of such
gas for royalty purposes, except for gas
sold under arm’s-length POP contracts,
which has a minimum value of 100
percent of the residue gas. No such
limitation applies to contracts that do
not specifically qualify as POP
contracts.
For example, if the sales value is
based on a percentage of an index price
for residue gas and/or NGLs, the current
regulations base value simply on the
gross proceeds the lessee receives under
the contract. In essence, the
unprocessed gas regulations allow such
sales arrangements to reduce the value
of residue gas below the 100-percent
minimum value required under the
processed gas regulations and below the
1-percent minimum value for NGLs
(assuming ONRR approves an exception
under the current rules in excess of 662⁄3
percent of the NGL value) required for
processed gas.
ONRR has seen numerous contract
arrangements that provide payment
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terms based on: (1) A percentage of the
volume or value of residue gas, plant
products, or any combination of the two
actually recovered at the plant; (2) the
full volume and value of residue gas
and/or plant products recovered at the
plant, less a flat fee per MMBtu of wet
gas entering the plant; (3) a combination
of (1) and (2); and (4) the value of a
percentage of the theoretical volumes of
residue gas and/or plant products
contained in the wet gas stream (socalled casing head gas contracts).
Because the many contract variations
base the underlying value on processed
gas values, ONRR believes we should
require a lessee to value gas sold under
such contracts as processed gas for
royalty purposes. This proposal
provides the protection the current
processed gas regulations have against
excessive transportation and processing
allowances and prevents a lessee from
structuring contracts to avoid these
requirements. Such a change also
clarifies if gas is processed gas or
unprocessed gas.
In summary, under proposed
paragraph (a)(1), ONRR will consider
gas you or your affiliate do not sell or
otherwise dispose of under an arm’slength contract before processing
‘‘processed gas.’’ Paragraph (a)(1) also
applies to non-arm’s-length sales of gas
before processing and transfers to a
plant without a contract like the current
regulations.
Proposed paragraph (a)(2) applies to
the situations described above when
payment is based on any constituent
products resulting from processing,
such as residue gas, NGLs, sulfur, or
carbon dioxide. We would value POP
contracts, percentage-of-index contracts,
casing head gas contracts, and contracts
with any such variations of payment
based on volumes or value of those
products as processed gas. With the
exception of POP contracts, this
constitutes a departure from current
practice.
Proposed paragraph (a)(3), while not a
change in current regulatory practice,
explicitly states that the lessee must
value gas processed under a keepwhole
contract as processed gas. Under
proposed § 1206.20, we define a
keepwhole contract as a processing
agreement under which the processor
compensates the lessee by delivering to
the lessee a quantity of residue gas after
processing equivalent to the quantity of
gas the processor received prior to
processing, normally based on heat
content, less gas used as plant fuel and
gas that is unaccounted for and/or lost.
The lessee does not receive NGLs under
these contracts. Over the past several
years, ONRR has witnessed much
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confusion over how to value gas sold
under such contracts for royalty
purposes. This provision makes it clear
that the lessee must value gas processed
under a keepwhole contract as
processed gas. That is, royalty would be
based on 100 percent of the value of
residue gas, 100 percent of the value of
gas plant products, plus the value of any
condensate recovered downstream of
the point of royalty settlement prior to
processing, less applicable
transportation and processing
allowances.
To illustrate how to calculate the
processing allowance in these cases,
assume you deliver 32,000 MMBtu of
natural gas to the gas processing plant.
Also assume 7,000 MMBtu represents
the shrinkage volume (the MMBtu
equivalent of the NGLs recovered), and
the plant recovers and retains 92,000
gallons of NGLs from your gas. Further,
assume the plant returns 7,000 MMBtu
of gas to you at the tailgate of the plant
in addition to the residue gas that
results after processing your gas to
‘‘keep you whole.’’ Finally, assume the
7,000 MMBtu of gas returned to you is
worth $42,000 and the NGLs the plant
retained are worth $63,000. In this
example, the cost you incur to process
the gas is $21,000 ($63,000¥$42,000). If
you incur additional costs, for example
a $0.03 per MMBtu fee times the 32,000
MMBtu you deliver to the plant for
processing, then you add those
additional costs (in this example, $960)
to the $21,000 cost calculated above to
determine your total processing costs (in
this example $21,960).
Proposed paragraph (a)(4) simply
restates current 30 CFR 1206.153(a)(1)
regarding arm’s-length contracts and
reservations of rights to process gas the
lessee or its affiliate exercises.
ONRR also proposes paragraph (b),
which contains the same requirements
as current 30 CFR 1206.153(a)(2), but we
rewrite it in Plain Language, without
substantive change.
Like the valuation of unprocessed gas
under proposed § 1206.141(b), proposed
paragraph (c) provides that the value of
residue gas or any gas plant product
under this section is the gross proceeds
accruing to you or your affiliate under
the first arm’s-length contract. Also, like
proposed § 1206.141(b), this value does
not apply if you exercise the indexbased option we provide in paragraph
(d) of this section or if ONRR decides to
value your residue gas or any gas plant
product under the new default valuation
provision in § 1206.144. Proposed
paragraphs (c)(1), (2), (3), and (4)
explain to which transactions this
paragraph applies. See the discussion of
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plant processing your gas recovers are
made using NGLs prices in an ONRRapproved commercial price bulletin. For
example, in ONRR’s experience, actual
sales of NGLs recovered in plants in
New Mexico commonly reference Mt.
Belvieu prices in Platts, while actual
sales of NGLs recovered in plants in
certain parts of Wyoming reference Mt.
Belvieu or Conway, Kansas prices. If
your gas is processed at one of these
plants with these types of actual sales
arrangements, under this proposed rule,
ONRR will consider you to be selling
NGLs in an area with an ONRRapproved commercial price bulletin. In
that case, you may elect to value your
NGLs using the index price method if
your NGLs meet the requirements for
using that method. ONRR will monitor
actual sales of NGLs and eliminate any
area where an active market using NGLs
prices in an ONRR-approved
commercial price bulletin ceases to
exist.
Under proposed paragraph (d)(2)(ii),
you may reduce the index-based value
you calculate under paragraph (d)(2)(i)
by a specified amount to account for a
theoretical processing allowance and
transportation and fractionation (T&F).
Therefore, the reduction includes two
components we calculated—an
allowance based on processing
allowance information lessees report to
ONRR and T&F based on our review of
gas plant contracts and gas plant
statements.
For the processing allowance
component, ONRR examined processing
allowances that lessees and others
reported from January 2007 through
October 2011. We segregated the data
into 2 subsets—the first being the Gulf
of Mexico (GOM) and the second being
onshore Federal leases and OCS leases
other than those in the GOM. We
segregated the leases geographically
because the GOM is closer to major
market centers at Mt. Belvieu,
Napoleonville, and Geismer/Sorrento
and, generally, has its own processing,
transportation, and fractionation
regimen that is distinct from the rest of
the country. We do not believe it is fair
or accurate to benchmark processing for
the entire country based on the
economics of GOM processing.
We could not segregate non-arm’slength processing allowances because
lessees do not identify processing
allowances as arm’s-length or nonarm’s-length when they report to ONRR.
Rather, we calculated a weighted
average cents per gallon processing
allowance by month for both GOM and
all other Federal leases. Using the
weighted average cents per gallon
processing allowance we calculated, we
determined the average allowance rate
over the 5-year period, along with the
maximum and minimum monthly rates
as follows:
GOM
the identical proposal for proposed
§§ 1206.141(b)(1), (2), (3), and (4) above.
Proposed paragraph (d) contains the
index-based valuation option for
valuation of your residue gas and NGLs.
Under this proposed rule, you may elect
to value either your residue gas or your
NGLs under the index-based option, or
you may elect to value both of them
under this option if your residue gas or
NGLs meet the requirements for using
the optional valuation methodology we
discuss above. Like the current Federal
oil regulations (30 CFR
1206.102(d)(1)(ii)) and proposed
§ 1206.141(c), you cannot change your
election to use this paragraph (d) to
value your gas more often than once
every two years.
Proposed paragraph (d)(1) applies to
residue gas. It has the same index price
option as proposed §§ 1206.141(c)(i)
through (vi) we discuss above using
index pricing points.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2) contains
the index-based pricing option for
NGLs. Under paragraph (d)(2)(i), if you
sell NGLs in an area with one or more
ONRR-approved commercial price
bulletins available at www.onrr.gov, you
may choose one bulletin, and your value
for royalty purposes would be the
monthly average price for that bulletin
for the production month. We consider
you to be selling NGLs in an area with
an ONRR-approved commercial price
bulletin if actual sales of NGLs that the
Other
Average Rate .....................................................
Maximum Rate ..................................................
Minimum Rate ...................................................
17 ¢/gal .............................................................
29 ¢/gal .............................................................
10 ¢/gal .............................................................
22 ¢/gal.
32 ¢/gal.
15 ¢/gal.
Because we intend for this option to
provide a simple method for ONRR to
calculate and provide to lessees, we
used the minimum, rather than the
average rate, for the processing
allowance portion of the deduction. For
both the GOM and all other Federal
leases, the minimum rate is 7 cents less
than the average rate. ONRR believes
that: (1) The minimum allowance best
protects the public interest and (2) a
lessee experiencing higher costs than
this rate does not have to elect to use
this option and the lower cost
allowance. Moreover, ONRR believes
that 7 cents is a reasonable tradeoff
given the simplicity, certainty, and
commensurate administrative savings
this option would provide a lessee.
For the T&F part of the reduction,
ONRR examined contracts that specified
T&F. If contracts did not specify T&F,
we looked at the gas plant statements.
If the statements listed T&F as a line
item, we used that line item as the T&F.
If the statements did not list T&F as a
line item, we calculated the difference
between the price on the plant
statement and an appropriate published
price to approximate the T&F. We then
averaged these T&F costs for GOM, New
Mexico, and other as follows:
GOM
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Average T&F ..................................
New Mexico
5 ¢/gal ...........................................
7 ¢/gal ...........................................
We broke out New Mexico because
the T&F fees for New Mexico plants
were consistently around 7 cents per
gallon and were considerably less than
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for other onshore plants. We then added
the processing allowances we calculated
and the T&F. Based on the 5-years’
worth of data discussed above, we
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12 ¢/gal.
calculated the total NGLs reductions
lessees could use under this option are
as follows:
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GOM
NGLs Deduction ............................
New Mexico
15 ¢/gal .........................................
22 ¢/gal .........................................
Under paragraph (d)(2)(ii), rather than
publish the reductions in the CFR,
ONRR proposes to post the reductions at
www.onrr.gov for the geographic
location of your lease. ONRR proposes
to calculate the reductions using the
methodology explained above. This
process would give ONRR the flexibility
to quickly recalculate and provide
revised reductions to lessees in response
to market changes. This methodology
would be binding on you and ONRR.
Under paragraph (d)(4), ONRR would
update the allowable reductions
periodically using this methodology and
post changes at www.onrr.gov.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(iii)
explains that after you select an ONRRapproved commercial price bulletin
available at www.onrr.gov, you may not
select a different commercial price
bulletin more often than once every two
years. Under proposed paragraph (d)(3),
you may not take any other deductions
from the value you used under this
paragraph (d) because it already
includes reductions for transportation
and processing.
Proposed paragraph (e) mirrors
proposed § 1206.141(d). It explains how
you must value your processed gas if
you have no written contract for the sale
of gas or no sale of the gas subject to this
section.
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1206.143 How will ONRR determine if
my royalty payments are correct?
In this section, ONRR proposes
amendments to the current gross
proceeds provisions, rewriting them in
Plain Language and making them
consistent with our other product
valuation regulations (such as
geothermal resources and Federal oil).
Like those published regulations, rather
than repeating the requirements or
procedures in each applicable section of
this proposed rule, ONRR proposes to
apply this section to this entire subpart.
However, the substantive requirements
of proposed paragraphs (d), (e), and (f)
remain unchanged. Below we discuss
the paragraphs with substantive
changes.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1), like our
current regulations, states ‘‘ONRR may
monitor, review, and audit the royalties
you report, and, if ONRR determines
that your reported value is inconsistent
with the requirements of this subpart,
ONRR will direct you to use a different
measure of royalty value . . . .’’
However, we propose to add paragraph
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(a)(1) that states in addition to directing
you to use a different measure of value,
we also may decide your value under
§ 1206.144 as we discuss below.
Proposed paragraph (b), like our
current regulations, explains ‘‘[w]hen
the provisions in this subpart refer to
gross proceeds, in conducting reviews
and audits, ONRR will examine if your
or your affiliate’s contract reflects the
total consideration actually transferred,
either directly or indirectly, from the
buyer to you or your affiliate for the gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products.’’
However, we propose to add a new
paragraph (b) that if ONRR determines
a contract does not reflect the total
consideration, ONRR may decide your
value under § 1206.144 as we discuss
below.
Proposed paragraph (c) broadly
defines three circumstances when
ONRR will calculate the value of your
gas using the method specified in the
new proposed ‘‘default’’ valuation
§ 1206.144. During its compliance
activities, ONRR encounters a wide
range of situations in which lessees
have inaccurately calculated value. By
broadly defining the circumstances in
which ONRR may calculate value, this
proposed rule ensures ONRR can fulfill
its statutory mandate under FOGRMA to
ensure that lessees accurately calculate,
report, and pay royalties (30 U.S.C. 1701
and 1711).
Proposed paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2)
contain the provisions regarding
misconduct and breach of the duty to
market in current 30 CFR
1206.152(b)(1)(i) and 1206.153(b)(1)(iii).
Under the current regulations, if ONRR
determines there is misconduct between
the parties, or that the lessee has
breached its duty to market, then the
lessee must value its gas under the
current benchmarks for non-arm’slength sales of gas in 30 CFR
1206.152(c)(2) or (c)(3) (unprocessed
gas) and 1206.153(c)(2) or (c)(3)
(processed gas). However, as we discuss
above, ONRR proposes to eliminate the
benchmarks in this rulemaking. We
propose instead that if ONRR
determines there is misconduct between
the parties to a contract or the lessee has
breached its duty to market, we may
decide your value under § 1206.144 as
we discuss below.
As we discuss above in proposed
§ 1206.20, misconduct, for purposes of
proposed paragraph (c)(1), means any
failure to perform a duty owed to the
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Other
27 ¢/gal.
United States under a statute,
regulation, or lease, or unlawful or
improper behavior regardless of the
mental state of the lessee or any
individual employed by, or associated
with, the lessee. Misconduct, in this
subpart, would be different than, and in
addition to, any violations subject to
civil penalties under FOGRMA, 30
U.S.C. 1719, and its implementing
regulations in part 1241 of this chapter.
Behavior that constitutes misconduct,
under this part 1206, would not need to
be willful, knowing, voluntary, or
intentional. This is a valuation
mechanism, not an enforcement tool.
Under this proposed rule, if ONRR
determines that misconduct has
occurred, ONRR will calculate value
under § 1206.144. However, if ONRR
determines the misconduct was
knowing or willful, it also could pursue
civil penalties under part 1241 of this
chapter.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2),
ONRR defines what is a breach of the
duty to market. The proposed rule
specifies that ONRR may determine
value under § 1206.144 if a lessee sells
gas, residue gas, or gas plant products at
an unreasonably low price. The
proposed rule explains what ONRR
could consider an ‘‘unreasonably low’’
price. A lessee has a duty to market gas
for the mutual benefit of the United
States, as lessor, and the lessee. An
unreasonably low price may reflect a
failure of the lessee to perform that
duty. Proposed paragraph (a)(2) defines
a sales price as ‘‘unreasonably low’’ ‘‘if
it is 10 percent less than the lowest
reasonable measures of market price,
including, but not limited to, index
prices and prices reported to ONRR for
like-quality gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products.’’ ONRR’s authority to exercise
this provision is discretionary; ONRR
‘‘may’’ decide your value if it
determines your price is unreasonably
low. In exercising its discretion, ONRR
may consider any information that
shows a price appears unreasonably
low, and, thus, is not an accurate
reflection of fair market value.
ONRR also proposes a new paragraph
(c)(3). Under proposed paragraph (c)(3),
ONRR may value your gas, residue gas,
or gas plant products under § 1206.144
if ONRR cannot determine if you
properly valued your gas, residue gas, or
gas plant products under § 1206.141 or
§ 1206.142 for any reason. This is a
broad ‘‘catch-all’’ provision ONRR may
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use to decide the value of gas, residue
gas, or gas plant products when it
cannot determine if a lessee properly
valued its production. ONRR will
exercise this discretionary authority to
meet its mandate under 30 U.S.C. 1711
to ensure accurate accounting for
Federal oil and gas royalties under the
different circumstances it encounters
during its compliance verification
activities. It is the lessee’s responsibility
to provide ONRR with information
sufficient for us to ensure that royalties
are accurately calculated. Under this
provision, ONRR will still meet its
statutory mandate even when a lessee
fails to provide sufficient information.
However, like proposed paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, this is an ONRR
valuation mechanism that is in addition
to any civil penalty authority ONRR has
under part 1241 of this chapter.
We propose a new paragraph (g)(1)
that requires the lessee or its affiliate to
make all contracts in writing before it
can use the contracts as the basis for the
lessee’s valuation of its gas produced
from Federal leases. This proposed
requirement will apply to any contract
revisions or amendments. Further,
ONRR proposes that all parties to the
contract must sign the contracts,
contract revisions, or amendments
before lessees can use them as the basis
for the lessee’s valuation of its gas under
these regulations.
ONRR believes this proposed
requirement is critical to the proper
application of the valuation regulations.
Lessees should provide to ONRR the
actual, written contracts signed by all
parties because those contracts
document the very transactions on
which the regulations require lessees to
base values and allowances. Without the
applicable sales, transportation, and/or
processing contracts, neither the lessee
nor ONRR can verify that Federal
royalties are properly paid. Because
ONRR would only require a lessee to
provide its actual contractual
arrangements that it uses to conduct its
business, this requirement should place
no burden on a lessee.
ONRR proposes a new paragraph
(g)(2) providing that ONRR may decide
the value of a lessee’s gas if the lessee
or its affiliate fails to make all contracts,
contract revisions, or amendments in
writing. If the lessee cannot produce the
written, signed contracts that would
otherwise serve as the basis of the
lessee’s valuation of its gas under the
regulations, ONRR may decide to
determine the appropriate value of the
lessee’s gas under newly proposed
§ 1206.144 as we discuss below.
Finally, ONRR proposes to add
paragraph (g)(3) to make clear the new
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provision requiring contracts to be in
writing and signed by all parties is in
addition to any other recordkeeping
requirements the lessee must satisfy
under this title, and that this new
requirement supersedes any provision
in this title to the contrary.
1206.144 How will ONRR determine
the value of my gas for royalty
purposes?
ONRR proposes a new ‘‘default’’
valuation § 1206.144 that ONRR may
use to value your gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products for royalty purposes.
Because we propose the same default
provision for federal oil, please refer to
§ 1206.105 above for more information.
1206.145 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty
under this subpart?
1206.146 What are my responsibilities
to place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.147 When is an ONRR audit,
review, reconciliation, monitoring, or
other like process considered final?
1206.148 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
See discussion below.
1206.149 Does ONRR protect
information I provide?
1206.150 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
ONRR proposes to rewrite in Plain
Language the regulations for
recordkeeping, marketable condition
and marketing, audit, confidentiality,
and quantity and quality requirements
and procedures. Also, ONRR proposes
to make these sections consistent with
other product valuation regulations,
such as the geothermal and Federal oil
regulations. In addition, rather than
repeat the requirements or procedures
in each applicable section of this rule,
ONRR proposes to have these sections
apply to this entire subpart. The
substantive requirements remain
unchanged.
1206.148 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
ONRR proposes a new § 1206.148 on
how to request a valuation
determination or guidance. This section
is the same as § 1206.108 applicable to
Federal oil we discuss above, with
several substantive changes. Proposed
§ 1206.148 replaces and expands the
provisions contained in current 30 CFR
1206.152(g) and 1206.153(g). The newly
proposed section provides greater
clarity on the process lessees may use to
request valuation guidance and
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determinations, as well as on the effect
of ONRR’s response to such requests.
Adding proposed § 1206.148 will make
the procedures for gas valuation
requests consistent with the procedures
ONRR proposes for Federal oil and
Federal and Indian coal.
Under proposed paragraph (a), a
lessee may request a valuation
determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any gas produced. Paragraph
(a)(1) through (3) explains that the
lessee’s request must be in writing;
identify all leases involved, all interest
owners in the leases, and the operator(s)
for those leases; and completely explain
all relevant facts. In addition, under
paragraphs (a)(4) through (6), a lessee
must provide all relevant documents, its
analysis of the issue(s), citations to all
relevant precedents, including adverse
precedents, and its proposed valuation
method.
In response to a lessee’s request,
under proposed paragraph (b), ONRR
may (1) decide that it will issue
guidance, (2) inform the lessee in
writing that it will not provide a
determination or guidance, or (3)
request that the Assistant Secretary for
Policy, Management, and Budget issue a
determination. This proposal changes
the current Federal oil regulations under
30 CFR 1206.107(b), which has caused
confusion over whether an ONRRissued determination is a binding
appealable order or non-appealable
guidance. Under this proposed rule,
ONRR clarifies that we only issue nonbinding guidance for valuation of
Federal oil and gas and Federal and
Indian coal. This proposal is consistent
with ONRR’s existing practice of having
only the Assistant Secretary sign
decisions that are binding on the
Department. Also, ONRR proposes to
remove the regulatory language that we
will ‘‘reply to requests expeditiously.’’
Our practice is to reply as quickly as
possible, so we do not make it a
regulatory requirement.
Proposed paragraphs (b)(3)(i) and (ii)
identify situations in which ONRR and
the Assistant Secretary typically do not
provide a determination or guidance,
including, but not limited to, requests
for guidance on hypothetical situations
and matters that are the subject of
pending litigation or administrative
appeals.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(1), a
determination the Assistant Secretary of
Policy, Management and Budget signs
binds both the lessee and ONRR unless
the Assistant Secretary modifies or
rescinds the determination. After the
Assistant Secretary issues a
determination, under proposed
paragraph (c)(2), the lessee must make
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any adjustments to its royalty payments
that follow from the determination. If
the lessee owes additional royalties, it
must pay the additional royalties due
plus late payment interest calculated
under §§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this
chapter. In addition, proposed
paragraph (c)(3) explains that a
determination the Assistant Secretary
signs is the final action of the
Department and is subject to judicial
review under 5 U.S.C. 701–706.
Proposed paragraph (d) explains that,
if ONRR issues guidance, the guidance
is not binding on ONRR, delegated
States, or the lessee with respect to the
specific situation addressed in the
guidance. This is a change from the
current Federal oil regulation at 30 CFR
1206.107(d) that makes a determination
ONRR issues binding on ONRR and
delegated States but not the lessee.
Moreover, guidance, ONRR’s decision
whether to issue guidance, and ONRR’s
decision whether to request a
determination by the Assistant Secretary
would not be appealable decisions or
orders under 30 CFR part 1290. This is
the same as current 30 CFR
1206.107(d)(1). However, as provided
under current 30 CFR 1206.107(d)(2),
under proposed paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, if ONRR issues an order
requiring the lessee to pay royalty on
the same basis as the guidance, the
lessee could appeal the order under 30
CFR part 1290.
Under proposed paragraph (e), ONRR
or the Assistant Secretary may use any
of the applicable criteria in this subpart
to make a determination or provide
guidance. Also, under proposed
paragraph (f), if a statute or regulation
on which ONRR based any
determination or guidance is changed,
the changed statute or regulation takes
precedence over the determination or
guidance after the effective date of the
statute or regulation, regardless of
whether ONRR or the Assistant
Secretary modifies or rescinds the
determination or guidance. Therefore,
under this proposed provision,
determinations and guidance are not
open-ended.
1206.151 How do I perform accounting
for comparison?
ONRR proposes to move the
regulations in current 30 CFR 1206.155
to proposed § 1206.151, but we rewrite
this section in Plain Language. This
section requires a lessee to pay royalties
on the greater of the value of the
unprocessed gas or the value of its
processed gas if the lessee, its affiliate,
a person to whom the lessee transferred
gas under a non-arm’s-length contract,
or a person to whom the lessee
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transferred gas without a contract
processes the lessee’s or its affiliate’s gas
and does not sell the residue gas at
arm’s length. However, ONRR requests
comments on whether we need this
proposed requirement for two reasons.
First, proposed §§ 1206.142 and
1206.143 of this subpart recognize the
real market value of gas today is the
combined value of its constituent
components—residue gas and gas plant
products. And, the proposed regulations
value gas sold on that basis as processed
gas. There appears to be a limited
market for unprocessed gas, unless it is
sold based upon the constituent
products contained therein, hence
accounting for comparison may not be
needed. Second, because the criteria
that triggers dual accounting—a nonarm’s-length sale of residue gas after
processing—is not used to value gas
under this proposed rule, dual
accounting may no longer be
appropriate because the residue gas is
valued based on the first arm’s-length
sale or index-based option.
ONRR also proposes to keep the
requirement in current 30 CFR 1206.155
that lessees must perform dual
accounting if required by lease terms.
ONRR believes this provision is
consistent with proposed
§ 1206.140(c)(4), which specifically
recognizes the primacy of lease terms
over the terms of the regulations when
they are inconsistent.
Before we discuss each section of
proposed §§ 1206.152 through 1206.158
regarding transportation allowances, we
believe it is helpful to discuss some
general changes we make. The proposed
regulations move the current regulations
regarding transportation allowances
from 30 CFR 1206.156 and 1206.157 to
proposed §§ 1206.152 through 1206.158.
The proposed gas transportation
allowance regulations are changed,
primarily in structure, but there also are
a few substantive changes. The structure
of the proposed gas transportation
allowance regulations is modeled after
the current Federal oil transportation
allowance regulations to achieve
consistency between the two. In most
cases, the regulatory requirements do
not change. We reorganize the current
provisions and rewrite them in Plain
Language. Like the current oil
transportation allowance regulations,
this structure provides more regulatory
section headings, better organization,
and greater visibility to locate regulatory
requirements applicable to the lessee’s
particular transportation allowance
situations. Also, we reorganize or
combine many paragraphs that were
embedded within a current section into
a new section for greater visibility. We
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623
propose to segregate individual multiple
requirements within paragraphs into
separate paragraphs to improve
visibility and identification.
1206.152 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
Proposed § 1206.152 retains the
provisions in current § 1206.156
(‘‘Transportation allowances—general’’),
makes Federal gas regulations consistent
with Federal oil regulations, and
consolidates provisions applicable to
both arm’s-length and non-arm’s-length
transportation in the current regulations
rather than repeating those provisions in
the respective sections explaining those
allowances. We also rewrite the current
regulations in Plain Language and only
discuss substantive changes and
additions below.
Proposed paragraph (a) contains the
same requirements as current
§ 1206.156(a) and includes a new
provision that ‘‘[y]ou may not deduct
transportation costs you incur to move
a particular volume of production to
reduce royalties you owe on production
for which you did not incur those
costs.’’ Consistent with current
regulations, this provision prevents the
lessee from claiming transportation
costs incurred for a segment of
transportation when the gas did not
actually flow on that segment. A lessee
could only claim transportation costs
attributable to the actual movement of
the lease production on that
transportation segment.
We also propose new paragraphs
(a)(1) and (a)(2)(i), which are consistent
with the current Federal oil rule
§ 1206.109(a)(2). New paragraph (a)(1)
states you may take a transportation
allowance when you value unprocessed
gas under § 1206.141(b) or residue gas
and gas plant products under
§ 1206.142(b) based on a sale at a point
off the lease, unit, or communitized area
where the gas is produced. New
paragraph (a)(2)(i) states that you may
take a transportation allowance when
the movement to the sales point is not
gathering. Neither change to the current
rule is substantive because both codify
existing practice and case law.
Proposed new paragraph (a)(2)(ii)
states that ‘‘[f]or gas produced on the
OCS, the movement of gas from the
wellhead to the first platform is not
transportation.’’ It is well established
that the movement of oil and gas that
ONRR determines is ‘‘gathering’’ is not
allowable as a transportation allowance.
California Co. v. Udall, 296 F.2d 384
(D.C. Cir. 1961); Kerr-McGee Corp., 147
IBLA 277 (1999). However, on May 20,
1999, the then-Associate Director for the
former MMS’s Royalty Management
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Program issued ‘‘Guidance for
Determining Transportation Allowances
for Production from Leases in Water
Depths Greater Than 200 Meters’’ (Deep
Water Policy). The Deep Water Policy
provides the following guidelines: (1)
Current regulations must be followed;
(2) movement costs are allocated
between royalty and non-royalty bearing
substances; (3) movement prior to a
central accumulation point is
considered gathering, movement beyond
the point is considered transportation;
(4) leases and units are treated similarly;
(5) the movement is to a facility that is
not located on a lease adjacent to the
lease on which the production
originates; and (6) allowances for subsea
completions not located in water deeper
than 200 meters are considered on a
case-by-case basis.
Both the current Federal oil and gas
valuation rules define gathering as ‘‘the
movement of lease production to a
central accumulation or treatment point
on the lease, unit, or communitized
area, or to a central accumulation or
treatment point off the lease, unit, or
communitized area that BLM or BSEE
approves for onshore and offshore
leases, respectively.’’ 30 CFR 1206.101
(Federal oil) and 1206.151 (Federal gas).
Under the Deep Water Policy, ONRR
considered a subsea manifold located on
the OCS in deep water to be a ‘‘central
accumulation point’’ regardless of
whether it was actually a central
accumulation or treatment point as
ONRR’s regulations require. Since
ONRR issued the Deep Water Policy,
lessees have been deducting the costs of
moving bulk production from the subsea
manifold to the platform where the oil
and gas first surface. In addition, lessees
have attempted to expand the Deep
Water Policy to deem subsea wellheads
‘‘central accumulation points’’ and take
transportation allowances from the sea
bed floor to the first platform where the
bulk production surfaces. Thus, lessees
have taken transportation allowances
under the Deep Water Policy, in some
instances, for movement ONRR
considers non-deductible ‘‘gathering’’
under its regulations.
In addition, the Interior Board of Land
Appeals (IBLA) has concluded there are
three definitive attributes of gas
gathering lines: (1) They move lease
production to a central accumulation
point; (2) they connect to gas wells; and
(3) they bring gas by separate and
individual lines to a central point where
it is delivered into a single line. KerrMcGee Corp., 147 IBLA at 282 (citations
omitted). In Kerr-McGee, the IBLA
stated that ‘‘even though production is
moved across lease boundaries, because
it is treated and sold on adjacent leases
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the costs of moving it there are properly
regarded as gathering, not
transportation.’’ Id. at 283 (citations
omitted). Under Kerr-McGee, almost all
of the movement the Deep Water Policy
allows as a transportation allowance is,
in actuality, non-deductible ‘‘gathering’’
under ONRR’s current valuation
regulations.
We have determined that the Deep
Water Policy is inconsistent with our
regulatory definition of gathering and
Departmental decisions interpreting that
term. Therefore, we propose to rescind
the Deep Water Policy in this
rulemaking. We propose to accomplish
this by making two changes. First,
consistent with Kerr-McGee, we propose
to add to the definition of ‘‘gathering’’
that any movement of bulk production
from the wellhead to a platform offshore
is gathering, not allowable
transportation. Second, we propose to
add a new paragraph (a)(2)(ii) to this
section that states ‘‘[f]or gas produced
on the OCS, the movement of gas from
the wellhead to the first platform is not
transportation.’’ We also make this
change to proposed Federal oil
§ 1206.110(a)(2)(ii).
Proposed paragraph (b) of this section
contains and consolidates current
requirements in 30 CFR 1206.156(b) and
1206.157(a)(2) and (b)(3) regarding
allocation of transportations costs based
on your or your affiliate’s cost of
transporting each product if you
transport one or more products in the
gaseous phase in a transportation
system.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1) contains
and consolidates current requirements
in 30 CFR 1206.157(a)(2) and (b)(4)
which all apply to allocation of
transportations costs when you or your
affiliate transport both gaseous and
liquid products in the same
transportation system.
Under proposed paragraph (d), if you
value unprocessed gas under
§ 1206.141(c) or residue gas and gas
plant products under § 1206.142(d)—the
index-based valuation options—you
may not take a transportation allowance.
This is because the index-based
valuation provisions already incorporate
the costs of transportation.
Proposed paragraph (e)(1), eliminates
the current provision allowing lessees to
request transportation allowances in
excess of 50 percent of the sales value
of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, or
NGLs. Currently, ONRR limits
transportation allowances and factors to
50 percent of the sales value of
unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products unless we approve an
exception to the limitation. To ensure a
fair return to the public and to limit
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ONRR’s administrative costs to process
such requests, the proposed regulation
eliminates the exception to the 50percent limit. ONRR believes the
current 50-percent limit on
transportation-related costs is adequate
in the vast majority of transportation
situations. Thus, paragraph (e)(2)
provides that any existing approvals for
the exception to the limitation terminate
on the effective date of the final rule.
We will not grandfather any existing
approval to exceed the 50-percent limit.
Proposed paragraph (f) continues the
current requirement under 30 CFR
1206.157(a)(4), applicable to arm’slength transportation, that lessees must
express transportation allowances for
residue gas, gas plant products, or
unprocessed gas in a dollar-value
equivalent. We propose to also apply
this requirement to non-arm’s-length
transportation consistent with existing
practice. We further propose that if your
or your affiliate’s payments for
transportation under a contract are not
in dollars-per-unit, you must convert
the consideration you or your affiliate
paid to its dollar-value equivalent.
Like the default provision for
valuation we discuss above under
§ 1206.143(c), proposed paragraphs
(g)(1), (2), and (3) provide that ONRR
may determine your transportation
allowance under § 1206.144, if: (1)
There is misconduct by or between the
contracting parties; (2) the total
consideration the lessee or its affiliate
pays under an arm’s-length contract
does not reflect the reasonable cost of
transportation because the lessee
breached its duty to market the
unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products for the mutual benefit of
the lessee and the lessor by transporting
such products at a cost that is
unreasonably high; or (3) ONRR cannot
determine if the lessee properly
calculated a transportation allowance
under § 1206.153 or § 1206.154, for any
reason. Under proposed paragraph
(g)(2), ONRR may consider an allowance
to be unreasonably high if it is 10percent higher than the highest
reasonable measures of transportation
costs, including, but not limited to,
transportation allowances lessees and
others report to ONRR and tariffs for
gas, residue gas, or gas plant products
transported through the same system.
Finally, we propose a new provision
under paragraph (h) to make clear that
you do not need ONRR’s approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs that you incur. This
provision is in the current regulations
that apply to arm’s-length transportation
at 30 CFR 1206.157(a), but we propose
to apply it to non-arm’s-length
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transportation as well. This is consistent
with existing practice.
1206.153 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract?
Proposed § 1206.153 explains how
lessees must determine a transportation
allowance under arm’s-length
transportation contracts. As we discuss
above, we propose to restructure this
section for consistency with the Federal
oil transportation allowance regulations.
In addition, we move the requirements
for non-arm’s-length transportation
allowances to a separate § 1206.154.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1) states that
this section applies to both the lessee
and its affiliate if the lessee chooses to
use the affiliate’s arm’s-length sales
contract for valuation and if that affiliate
incurs transportation costs under an
arm’s-length transportation contract to
move the lease production to the sales
point. However, ONRR will determine
your transportation allowance under
§ 1206.152(g) if ONRR determines there
is misconduct, the arm’s-length
transportation cost is unreasonably
high, or ONRR cannot determine if your
transportation allowance is proper. This
provision gives ONRR greater discretion
and flexibility to determine
transportation allowances (for example,
when arm’s-length transportation
service providers charge bundled fees).
See the discussion of bundled fees in
proposed § 1206.141 above.
ONRR proposes to eliminate the
provision in current 30 CFR
1206.157(a)(5) that allows lessees to
report transportation costs, in certain
circumstances, as a transportation
factor. Rather, we propose that a lessee
must report separately all transportation
costs under both arm’s-length and nonarm’s-length sales contracts as a
transportation allowance on Form
ONRR–2014. ONRR believes that
requiring lessees to report all
deductions for transportation costs
separately as allowances on Form
ONRR–2014 is more transparent,
supports ONRR’s increased data mining
efforts to promote accuracy, and assists
State and Federal auditors with their
compliance work. We propose this same
change for oil produced from Federal
lands.
Proposed paragraph (b) allows a
lessee to include the same costs we
allow under current 30 CFR 1206.157(f)
in its transportation allowance. Under
new paragraph (b)(11), we also propose
that a lessee may include in its
transportation allowance hurricane
surcharges the lessee or its affiliate pay.
This proposal is consistent with existing
practice.
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Under proposed paragraph (c), we
specify transportation costs we would
not allow a lessee to include in its
transportation allowance. These nonallowable costs remain mostly the same
as those we currently disallow under 30
CFR 1206.157(g). We believe it is
already clear the cost of boosting gas
(e.g. recompressing residue gas at the
plant after processing) is not a
deductible cost of transportation under
current 30 CFR 1202.151(b) and the
Assistant Secretary’s decision at issue in
Devon. Nevertheless, proposed
paragraph (c)(8) specifically states that
the costs of boosting residue gas are not
allowable as a cost of transportation.
Finally, we propose a new paragraph
(d) that applies if you have no written
contract for the arm’s-length
transportation of gas. In that case, ONRR
determines your transportation
allowance under proposed § 1206.144.
Under this proposal, you have to
propose to ONRR a method to determine
the allowance using the procedures in
§ 1206.148(a) and could use that method
until ONRR issues its determination.
This paragraph only applies when there
is no contract for arm’s-length
transportation. Thus, it would not apply
if lessees perform their own
transportation. Rather, § 1206.154
regarding non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances applies.
1206.154 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a
non-arm’s-length transportation
contract?
We propose § 1206.154 as a separate
section explaining how to calculate
transportation allowances under a nonarm’s-length contract, such as where the
lessee ships its production through its
own pipeline or through a pipeline its
affiliate owns. Under proposed
paragraph (a), ONRR continues the
provision in current 30 CFR 1206.157(b)
that does not recognize contracts
between the lessee and its affiliate or
any other person without opposing
economic interests regarding that
contract. Like the current regulations,
you will determine non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances based on your
actual costs or the actual costs of the
affiliated pipeline owner.
Proposed paragraph (b) generally
explains costs you may include in your
transportation allowance. Paragraph
(b)(1) explains the lessee’s or its
affiliate’s actual costs include capital
costs and operating and maintenance
expenses under paragraphs (e), (f), and
(g) of this section. Proposed paragraph
(b)(2) explains you also could include
overhead under paragraph (h) of this
section. Under proposed paragraph
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(b)(3), we revise the current regulation
to clarify the methodology for the two
options to calculate depreciation. Under
this proposed rulemaking, we allow
lessees to choose between depreciation
and a return on undepreciated capital
investment under paragraph (i)(1) of this
section, or a cost equal to a return on the
initial depreciable capital investment in
the transportation system under
paragraph (i)(2) of this section. Finally,
paragraph (b)(4) allows the lessee to
continue to claim a rate of return on the
reasonable salvage value of the
transportation system after it is fully
depreciated. For example, if the
pipeline had a salvage value of 5
percent, the lessee may claim a rate of
return on 5 percent of the system value,
even though we would allow no further
depreciation. See the discussion of
reasonable salvage value in proposed
§ 1206.112(i)(1)(iii).
We also propose to remove the
provisions of current § 1206.175(b)(5)
that allow a lessee with a non-arm’slength contract to use FERC or Stateregulatory-agency approved tariffs as an
exception from the requirement to
calculate actual costs. We remove this
provision to make it consistent with the
current Federal oil valuation
regulations. Under the proposed rule,
lessees must compute their actual costs
to determine transportation allowances
under non-arm’s-length contracts even
when a regulatory agency has approved
a tariff.
Proposed paragraph (c) further
explains the transportation costs you
may and may not include in a
transportation allowance. Proposed
paragraph (c)(1) states that, to the extent
that you have not already included in
your transportation allowances the
allowable costs under paragraphs (e)
through (g) of this section, you may
include in your allowance the actual
transportation costs we list under
§ 1206.153(b)(2), (5), and (6) of this
subpart (Gas supply realignment (GSR)
costs, Gas Research Institute (GRI) fees,
and Annual Charge Adjustment (ACA)
fees that FERC imposes). ONRR
proposes to disallow the remaining
costs we allow a lessee to include in
arm’s-length transportation allowances
under § 1206.153(b) because the lessee
would not or should not ordinarily
incur the costs as a pipeline owner or
be charged for those costs by its affiliate.
However, there may be instances when
specific costs integral to transportation
could be included in the pipeline
owner’s operating and maintenance
costs. ONRR invites comments on what
types of costs, other than those
identified in § 1206.153(b)(2), (5), and
(6), may be actual costs of transportation
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under non-arm’s-length transportation
arrangements.
ONRR also proposes to eliminate the
current provision allowing lessees to
deduct the costs of pipeline losses, both
actual and theoretical, under non-arm’slength transportation situations. These
regulations prohibited actual or
theoretical pipeline losses prior to the
1997 gas transportation allowance
revisions that incorporated new costs
resulting from FERC Order No. 636. The
advent of Order No. 636 should not
have had any bearing on such nonarm’s-length costs. Therefore, ONRR
proposes to remove this provision.
ONRR recognizes that pipeline losses
are distinct from transportation fuel that
is used on a pipeline to power
compressors used for actual
transportation. Under the proposal,
ONRR continues to permit lessees to
claim an allowance for actual fuel used
for qualifying transportation purposes.
In addition, we continue to disallow
fuel for non-approved off-lease
compressors and off-lease fuel for other
processes necessary to place lease
production in marketable condition.
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) explains
that we do not allow a lessee to include
in its non-arm’s-length transportation
allowances the same costs we do not
allow to be included in arm’s-length
transportation allowances under
proposed § 1206.153(c).
Like the arm’s-length provision,
proposed paragraph (d) states that for
non-arm’s-length transportation
allowances, the lessee may not
duplicate allowable transportation costs
when it calculates an allowance. For
example, if the lessee includes GRI costs
in its operating costs under paragraph
(b), it may not also include those costs
under paragraph (c).
Proposed paragraphs (e) through (h)
contain the same requirements as
current 30 CFR 1206.157(b)(2)(i), (ii),
and (iii), but we rewrite the provisions
in Plain Language and make them
consistent with the current Federal oil
regulations.
Proposed paragraph (i) retains the
requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.157(b)(2)(iv) regarding
depreciation, but we rewrite those
provisions in Plain Language and make
them consistent with the Federal oil
regulations. ONRR proposes to
eliminate the reference to transportation
facilities first placed in service after
March 1, 1988. When ONRR published
its Federal gas valuation regulations on
January 15, 1988, it changed the
requirements necessary to receive
transportation and processing
allowances. In recognition that certain
transportation and processing facilities
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had been given approval prior to those
regulations’ effective date (March 15,
1988), ONRR made the new
requirements apply only to facilities
that were placed in service on or after
the effective date of those regulations.
Now more than twenty years later,
ONRR believes that none of the facilities
placed in service before March 15, 1988,
are still eligible for depreciation under
the requirements in effect prior to
March 15, 1988. Therefore, we propose
to remove this outdated language from
the proposed regulations.
Under paragraph (i)(3), ONRR
proposes to revise the rate of return
from 1.3 times the Standard & Poor’s
BBB bond rate in current 30 CFR
1206.157(b)(2)(v) to the rate without a
multiplier, in other words 1 times the
BBB bond rate. We make the same
change to Federal oil, so please refer to
our discussion of proposed
§ 1206.112(i)(3).
1206.155 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
This section would contain
essentially the same provisions as
current 30 CFR 1206.157(c)(1).
However, ONRR proposes to add the
term ‘‘affiliate’’ to paragraph (b). Under
the new proposed valuation provisions,
which use an affiliate’s arm’s-length
sales contract, ONRR allows a
transportation allowance to the arm’slength sales point and, therefore, needs
the associated transportation contracts.
In addition, ONRR proposes to
eliminate the reference to allowances in
effect prior to March 1, 1988, under
current 30 CFR 1206.157(c)(1)(iii). As
stated above, ONRR believes that none
of facilities predating the 1988 rule
change are still eligible for depreciation
under the requirements in effect prior to
March 15, 1988. Therefore, we are
removing this language from the
proposed regulations.
1206.156 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
This section contains essentially the
same provisions as current 30 CFR
1206.157(c)(2). In this proposed rule,
ONRR eliminates the reference in
current 30 CFR 1206.157(c)(2)(v) to
allowances in effect prior to March 1,
1988.
1206.157 What interest or penalties
apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
Under proposed § 1206.157, ONRR
consolidates the penalty and interest
provisions for improper allowances.
Currently, such provisions are
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contained under both the general
transportation and determination of
transportation allowances sections of
the regulations. Proposed paragraph
(a)(1) slightly modifies current 30 CFR
1206.156(d) by using the term
‘‘unauthorized’’ in the context of ‘‘If
ONRR determines that you took an
unauthorized transportation allowance,
then you must pay any additional
royalties due. . . .’’ However, this
change would not alter the meaning of
the current provisions. Examples of
unauthorized transportation allowances
include, but are not limited to,
exceeding the 50-percent limitation,
including costs necessary to place the
gas into marketable condition, or
including other costs that are not
integral to the transportation of lease
production. Proposed paragraph (a)(2)
states that a lessee may be entitled to a
credit with interest if it understated its
transportation allowance. This
provision amends current 30 CFR
1206.157(e) to comply with RSFA’s
provision that entitles lessees to interest
on overpayments (30 U.S.C. 1721(h)).
Proposed paragraph (b) states that, if
the lessee deducts a transportation
allowance that exceeds 50 percent of the
value of the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products transported, the lessee must
pay late payment interest on the excess
allowance amount taken from the date
that amount is taken until the date it
paid the additional royalties due. This
changes the current requirement that
interest is calculated from the date the
allowance is taken until the lessee files
a request for an exception. This change
results from ONRR proposing to
eliminate allowance exceptions.
Proposed paragraph (c) restates
current 30 CFR 1206.156(d).
1206.158 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation
allowances?
Section 1206.158 restates the
requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.157(e), except we rewrite the
provisions in Plain Language.
1206.159 What general processing
allowances requirements apply to me?
Like the amendments to
transportation allowances discussed
above, ONRR proposes to rewrite the
current processing allowance
regulations at 30 CFR 1206.158 in Plain
Language, make them consistent with
Federal oil, and reorganize them for
clarity and visibility. We are not
planning to make any substantive
changes in proposed paragraph (a)(1)
and paragraph (b); they will contain the
same provisions as current 30 CFR
1206.158 (a) and (b). However, we
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propose to add a new provision under
paragraph (a)(2) to make clear that you
do not need ONRR’s approval before
reporting a processing allowance for
costs that you incur for arm’s-length or
non-arm’s-length allowances. This is
consistent with existing practice.
Proposed paragraph (c) continues the
requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.158(c), with two substantive
changes and one clarification to current
30 CFR 1206.158(c)(1). Current
paragraph 1206.158 (c)(1) states that
‘‘Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)
of this section, the processing allowance
shall not be applied against the value of
the residue gas. Where there is no
residue gas ONRR may designate an
appropriate gas plant product against
which no allowance may be applied.’’
We are removing the second sentence
because we do not believe ONRR ever
used this provision.
ONRR proposes to eliminate the
exception under current 30 CFR
1206.158 (c)(3) allowing a lessee to
request ONRR approval of a processing
allowance that exceeds 662⁄3 percent of
the value of the plant products. We also
propose to eliminate the provision
allowing a lessee to request an
extraordinary processing cost allowance
under current 30 CFR 1206.158(d)(2).
ONRR also proposes to terminate any
approvals for the exception under
proposed paragraph (c)(3) and the
extraordinary cost processing allowance
under proposed paragraph (c)(4) as of
the effective date of the rule. Thus, we
propose not to grandfather previously
approved exceptions or extraordinary
allowances. ONRR proposes these
changes because, as with transportation
allowances, ONRR believes the current
662⁄3 percent limit on processing-related
costs is adequate in the vast majority of
situations. To date, we only have
approved two extraordinary processing
cost allowances. Given the age of the
plants and improvements in technology,
ONRR believes such extraordinary cost
allowances no longer reflect current
conditions. Furthermore, ONRR believes
the current 662⁄3 percent limitation on
gas plant products ensures a fair return
to the public.
Proposed paragraph (d) explains and
clarifies that we continue to disallow
deductions for costs necessary to place
gas into marketable condition. ONRR
proposes to retain the existing
requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.158(d)(1) but proposes to recodify
them as § 1206.159(d)(1), (2), (3), and
(4). Also, the proposed rule makes clear
that any cost a lessee incurs for
stabilizing condensate or recovering gas
vapors from condensate or oil is
disallowed. The methods industry
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employs to perform these services are
not within the proper definition of
‘‘processing’’ under these regulations
and are, in fact, costs incurred to place
the condensate or oil into marketable
condition. Likewise, we currently
analyze whether hydrocarbon dew point
controls are actually functions that fall
within the definition of ‘‘processing’’
under the regulations before qualifying
for a processing allowance against the
value of the liquids recovered. In
conjunction with these efforts to clarify
the costs that qualify as a processing
allowance, ONRR proposes to add JouleThomson Units (JT Units) used to
recover NGLs from gas to the definition
of ‘‘processing’’ under proposed
§ 1206.20, regardless of the location of
the JT Unit.
1206.160 How do I determine a
processing allowance, if I have an
arm’s-length processing contract?
ONRR proposes this new section,
which is essentially the same as current
30 CFR 1206.159(a), with no material
modifications, except we add a new
paragraph (c) we discuss below. Like
transportation allowances, we are
moving the requirements for non-arm’slength processing allowances to a
separate § 1206.161. Because the
requirements for determining processing
allowances under an arm’s-length
contract are essentially the same as
those for determining transportation
allowances under an arm’s-length
contract, we make the same changes to
processing allowances in this section as
those we propose for arm’s-length
transportation allowances. Refer to the
preamble discussion of § 1206.153 for
an explanation of the changes.
We propose a new paragraph (c) that
applies if you have no written contract
for arm’s-length processing of gas. In
that case, ONRR will determine your
processing allowance under § 1206.144.
You will have to propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.148(a)
and may use that method until ONRR
issues a determination. This proposed
paragraph only applies if there is no
contract for arm’s-length processing. It
does not apply if a lessee performs its
own processing. In that case, § 1206.161
applies.
ONRR also proposes new § 1206.161
through § 1206.165 to subpart D to
codify and enhance current Federal gas
valuation practices.
1206.161 How do I determine a
processing allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length processing contract?
This section contains the same
requirements as current 30 CFR
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1206.159(b). Because the requirements
for determining processing allowances
under a non-arm’s-length contract are
essentially the same as those for
determining transportation allowances
under a non-arm’s-length contract, we
make the same changes to processing
allowances in this section as those we
propose for non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances. Refer to the
preamble discussion of § 1206.154 for
an explanation of the changes.
ONRR proposes one material change
to the current regulatory requirements.
Under proposed paragraph (b)(4), we
allow the lessee to continue claiming a
rate of return on the reasonable salvage
value of a processing plant after it is
fully depreciated. For example, if the
plant had a salvage value of 5 percent,
the lessee could claim a rate of return
on 5 percent of the plant value, even
though we would allow no further
depreciation. See the discussion of
reasonable salvage value in proposed
§ 1206.112(i)(1)(iii).
1206.162 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
processing contract?
1206.163 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
processing contract?
1206.164 What interest or penalties
apply if I improperly report a processing
allowance?
1206.165 What reporting adjustments
must I make for processing allowances?
These four proposed sections are the
same as the reporting-related
requirements in current 30 CFR
1206.159(c), (d), and (e). Also, they are
the same changes as those discussed
above for transportation allowances
under §§ 1206.155 through 1206.158.
Subpart F—Federal Coal
1206.250 What is the purpose and
scope of this subpart?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.250, but we rewrite
the current section in Plain Language
and make it consistent with the other
product valuation regulations. The
substantive requirements remain
unchanged.
1206.251 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.254, 1206.255, and
1206.260, but we rewrite the sections in
Plain Language and combine multiple
sections into this proposed section. We
do not propose any substantive change.
However, under proposed paragraph (e),
we clarify the calculation you will have
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to perform to allocate washed coal
under current 30 CFR 1206.260 by
attributing the washed coal to the leases
from which it was extracted. Thus,
proposed new paragraph (e) reads as set
forth in the regulatory text.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1206.252 How do I calculate royalty
value for coal I or my affiliate sell(s)
under an arm’s-length or non-arm’slength contract?
Current 30 CFR 1206.256 contains
valuation standards for Federal coal
leases having cents-per-ton royalty rates.
The regulation we propose eliminates
any reference to the valuation of coal
from these leases because there are no
longer any Federal cents-per-ton coal
leases. Therefore, this proposed
§ 1206.252, and the rest of the proposed
regulations, provide lessees with
instructions for valuing coal from ad
valorem Federal coal leases.
Consistent with the current Federal
coal valuation regulations, under the
proposed regulations, a lessee generally
values Federal coal based on the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee from the
first arm’s-length sale. However, like the
proposed amendments to the Federal
gas rule we discuss above, we propose
to eliminate the benchmarks for
valuation of non-arm’s-length sales. We
also propose to add the same ‘‘default’’
mechanism under § 1206.254 discussed
above. Please refer to proposed
§§ 1206.141, 1206.142, and 1206.144
above for an explanation of the
proposed changes.
The benchmarks applicable to value
coal in non-arm’s-length or no-sale
situations have proven difficult to use in
practice. In addition, the first
benchmark does not allow the use of
comparable arm’s-length sales by the
lessee or its affiliates, exacerbating the
challenging process of obtaining and
comparing relevant arm’s-length sales
contracts to value non-arm’s-length
sales. Furthermore, disputes arise over
which sales are comparable, particularly
because of the inherent ambiguity in
applying the comparability factors.
ONRR is soliciting comments on how
to simplify and improve the valuation of
coal disposed of in non-arm’s-length
transactions and no-sale situations. We
seek input on the merits of eliminating
the benchmarks for valuation of nonarm’s-length sales and comments on the
following questions:
• Should the royalty value of coal
initially sold under non-arm’s-length
conditions be based on the gross
proceeds received from the first arm’slength sale of that coal in situations
where there is a subsequent arm’slength sale?
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• If you are a coal lessee, will
adoption of this methodology
substantively impact your current
calculation and payment of royalties on
coal and how?
• What other methodologies might
ONRR use to determine the royalty
value of coal not sold at arm’s length
that we may not have considered?
Under proposed paragraph (a), if the
lessee sells coal to an affiliate or another
person under a non-arm’s-length sales
contract, and the coal purchaser sells
the coal under an arm’s-length contract,
the lessee must value the coal based on
the first arm’s-length contract, less
applicable allowances, unless ONRR
decides to value the coal under
§ 1206.254 (the new ‘‘default’’
provision). Please refer to proposed
§ 1206.141(b) above for an explanation
of the proposed change.
A lessee that is part of a corporation
with affiliates that produce coal and
affiliates that consume the coal in an
electrical generation plant may have
transactions to transfer coal without a
sale. If the affiliate consumes the coal to
generate electricity, paragraph (a) of this
proposed section would not provide a
valuation methodology. Therefore,
ONRR proposes paragraph (b) to explain
how a lessee must value the coal in this
circumstance.
Under proposed paragraph (b)(1), if a
lessee or its affiliate sells electricity at
arm’s length, the royalty value is the
sales value of the electricity, less
applicable allowances. In proposed
paragraph (b)(2), if a lessee or its
affiliate did not sell electricity at arm’s
length, ONRR will determine the royalty
value of the coal under the new
‘‘default’’ valuation provision in
§ 1206.254. In this situation, a lessee
must propose a valuation method to
ONRR and may use that method until
we issue a determination on the lessee’s
proposal.
We also propose a new paragraph (c)
to explain how to value coal that a coal
cooperative sells. Please refer to
§ 1206.20 for the definition of a coal
cooperative. A coal cooperative
generally operates as a corporation, with
members and owners associated for the
purpose of obtaining a long-term, secure
source of coal. This proposed rule will
treat a coal cooperative and its
members/owners as affiliated because
they operate without opposing
economic interests. Their collective
need is to have a source of coal available
to generate electric power and to be able
to purchase that coal at reasonable
prices, and, if possible, below-market
prices. The coal cooperative’s members
are commonly electric power generation
companies, or electric utility,
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generation, or transmission
cooperatives. The coal cooperative may
operate as a coal lessee, operator, or
payor of these and may or may not be
organized to make a profit. Coal
cooperatives exist to avoid the vagaries
and potentially higher prices of the free
market.
One mechanism that some members
of coal cooperatives use to maintain the
lowest possible price for the coal mined
and sold to other members is to refrain
from making a profit on such
transactions among members. A coal
cooperative can underprice coal even
when sales are arm’s length, all other
costs being equal. Thus, the proposed
regulations include a new paragraph (c)
to value coal sold in these
circumstances.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(1), for
sales of coal between the coal
cooperative and coal cooperative
members, if the coal is then sold at
arm’s-length, we require the lessee to
value the coal under paragraph (a) of
this section, regardless of the number of
sales between the coal cooperative
members or the coal cooperative and its
members. For example, assume a coal
cooperative sold its Federal coal to a
coal cooperative member, and that coal
cooperative member sold its coal to
another coal cooperative member who
then sold the coal at arm’s-length. In
that case, under the proposed rule, the
coal would be valued under paragraph
(a) of this section based on the first
arm’s-length sale.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2), for
sales of coal between the coal
cooperative and coal cooperative
members where the coal is consumed in
a power generation plant to generate
electricity owned by the coal
cooperative or a coal cooperative
member, we require a lessee to value the
coal under proposed paragraph (b) of
this section, regardless of the number of
sales between coal cooperative members
or between the coal cooperative and its
members. For example, assume a coal
cooperative sold its Federal coal to a
coal cooperative member, and that coal
cooperative member sold its coal to
another coal cooperative member who
then consumed the coal in its power
generation plant and sold the electricity
it generated. In that case, under the
proposed rule, the coal would be valued
under paragraph (b) of this section
based on the sales of the electricity, less
any allowable deductions.
ONRR believes all sales between
cooperative members are non-arm’slength because they do not have
opposing economic interests. However,
we treat sales to non-members of the
cooperative like any other arm’s-length
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sale under paragraph (a) or paragraph
(b) of this section. ONRR seeks
comments on this valuation proposal.
Proposed paragraph (d) states that if
you are entitled to take a washing
allowance and transportation allowance
for royalty purposes under this section,
the sum of the washing and
transportation allowances may never
reduce the royalty value of the coal to
zero. This is the same as current 30 CFR
1206.258(a) and 1206.261(b), but we
rewrite these sections in Plain
Language. Unlike the Federal oil and gas
rules, ONRR is not proposing to limit
Federal and Indian coal washing and
transportation allowances to 50 percent
of the value of the coal. We specifically
request comments as to whether we
should limit coal allowances to 50
percent of the value of the coal.
1206.253 How will ONRR determine if
my royalty payments are correct?
1206.254 How will ONRR determine
the value of my coal for royalty
purposes?
1206.255 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty
under this subpart?
1206.256 What are my responsibilities
to place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.257 When is an ONRR audit,
review, reconciliation, monitoring, or
other like process considered final?
1206.258 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
1206.259 Does ONRR protect
information I provide?
ONRR proposes the same changes to
§§ 1206.253 through 1206.259 as those
we propose for Federal gas valuation
regulations under §§ 1206.143 through
1206.149. Please refer to those proposed
sections for an explanation of changes.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1206.260 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
Proposed § 1206.260 retains the
provisions in current 30 CFR 1206.261
and makes the Federal coal regulations
consistent with the Federal oil and gas
regulations in this proposed rule. This
section also consolidates provisions
applicable to both arm’s-length and nonarm’s-length transportation in the
current regulations, rather than
repeating those provisions in the
respective sections for those allowances.
We also rewrite the current regulations
in Plain Language and discuss only
substantive changes or additions to this
section below.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1) contains
the same provision as current 30 CFR
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1206.261(a) allowing you to take a
deduction for the reasonable, actual
costs to transport coal from the lease to
a point off the lease or mine determined
under §§ 1206.261 or 1206.262, as
applicable. We propose a new provision
under paragraph (a)(2) to make clear
that you do not need our approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs that you incur for
arm’s-length and non-arm’s-length
transportation. This proposal is
consistent with existing practice.
Proposed paragraph (b) would contain
the remaining current requirements in
30 CFR 1206.261(a) regarding when you
may take an allowance.
Proposed paragraph (c) explains when
you cannot take an allowance. A new
provision in paragraph (c)(1) states that
you cannot take an allowance for
transporting lease production that is not
royalty bearing. This new provision is
consistent with the existing and
proposed Federal oil and gas
regulations. Proposed paragraph (c)(2)
contains the current requirement in 30
CFR 1206.261(a)(2) that you cannot take
an allowance for in-mine movement of
your coal. We also propose a new
provision in paragraph (c)(3) that would
state you may not deduct transportation
costs to move a particular tonnage of
production for which you did not incur
those costs. This codifies our existing
practice of only granting a
transportation allowance if you actually
move coal and pay for that movement.
Proposed paragraph (d) is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.261(c)(3) and
permits you to claim a transportation
allowance only when you sell the coal
and pay royalties.
We propose to add paragraph (e) to
contain and consolidate current
requirements in 30 CFR 1206.261(c)(1),
1206.261(c)(2), and 1206.261(e) about
allocation of transportations costs. This
paragraph requires lessees to report
their transportation costs on Form
ONRR–4430 as a cost per ton of clean
coal transported. We also explain how
to calculate the cost per ton of clean
coal transported.
In addition, we propose to add
paragraph (f) to contain the requirement
in current § 1206.262(a)(4) that you
must express arm’s-length coal
transportation allowances as a dollarvalue equivalent per ton of coal
transported. We also make the provision
applicable to non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances, consistent
with existing practice. Under the
proposed regulations, we further
explain that if you do not base your or
your affiliate’s payments for
transportation under a transportation
contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
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629
must convert the consideration you or
your affiliate paid to a dollar-value
equivalent.
We propose to add paragraph (g),
containing the same default provision as
that for the Federal oil and gas
transportation regulations discussed
above under §§ 1206.110(f) and
1206.152(g), respectively. This proposal
includes moving the requirements of
current paragraphs 1206.262(a)(2) and
1206.262(a)(3) regarding additional
consideration, misconduct, and breach
of the duty to market to this new
paragraph (g). We also propose to move
the requirements for non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances to a separate
§ 1206.262.
1206.261 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract or
no written arm’s-length contract?
Proposed section 1206.261 explains
how lessees must determine
transportation allowances under arm’slength transportation contracts. These
requirements are in current 30 CFR
1206.262(a)(1). However, we rewrite this
section in Plain Language and
restructure it for consistency with the
Federal gas transportation allowance
regulations we discuss above in
§ 1206.153.
We propose to add a new paragraph
(c) that would apply if you have no
written contract for the arm’s-length
transportation of coal. In that case,
ONRR will determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.254. You must propose to ONRR
a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.258(a).
You may use that method to determine
your allowance until ONRR issues a
determination. This paragraph does not
apply if a lessee performs its own
transportation. Rather, proposed
§ 1206.262, regarding non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances, applies.
1206.262 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a
non-arm’s-length transportation
contract?
ONRR proposes to revise § 1206.262
to explain how lessees must determine
transportation allowances under nonarm’s-length transportation contracts
using paragraphs (a) through (k) of this
section. These requirements are in
current 30 CFR 1206.262(b). We rewrite
the current requirements in Plain
Language and restructure and amend
this section for consistency with the
Federal gas transportation allowance
regulations we discuss above in
§ 1206.154. We also make several
substantive changes discussed below.
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The current coal rule at 30 CFR
1206.262(b)(3) provides that a lessee
may request an exception from having
to calculate actual costs for non-arm’slength or no-contract transportation
allowances. The lessee may use the
exception if there are Federal- or Stateapproved transportation rates. We
propose to eliminate the exception for
the following reasons: (1) No lessee has
ever applied to use the exception; (2)
the Federal Government no longer sets
or approves rail transportation rates for
coal; and (3) the administrative burden
on ONRR to determine approved rates
for every State in which coal is
produced is too great.
The current coal rule at 30 CFR
1206.262(b)(2)(iv)(A) permits a return
on undepreciated capital investment in
the transportation system as one of the
allowable costs a lessee may include in
non-arm’s-length or no-contract
transportation allowances. However,
under the current regulation, the return
on investment ends after the capital
costs are depreciated to (or below) a
reasonable salvage value. In proposed
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, we
allow a lessee to continue to take a
return on the reasonable salvage value
under paragraph (i) of this section.
Under proposed paragraph (i)(2), after
you depreciated a transportation system
to its reasonable salvage value, you may
continue to include in the allowance
calculation a cost equal to the
reasonable salvage value, multiplied by
the Standard & Poor’s BBB rate of return
allowed under paragraph (k) of this
section. We propose this change to make
coal valuation regulations consistent
with the Federal oil valuation
amendments in proposed
§ 1206.112(b)(3)(ii) and the Federal gas
valuation amendments in proposed
§ 1206.154(i)(1)(iii) (current Federal gas
valuation regulation at § 1206.157(g)).
1206.263 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.264 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1206.265 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
1206.266 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation
allowances?
ONRR proposes the same revisions to
§§ 1206.263 through 1206.265 as those
we propose for Federal gas valuation
regulations under §§ 1206.155 through
1206.157, with two exceptions. ONRR
also proposes to add § 1206.266 to
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correspond with § 1206.158. Please refer
to those sections for an explanation of
the proposed changes.
The first exception is that these
sections keep the same reporting
requirements as current 30 CFR
1206.262(c), 1206.262(d), and
1206.262(e). In addition, proposed
§ 1206.265 (b)(1) replaces current 30
CFR 1206.262(d)(1) regarding
assessments if you improperly net a
transportation allowance against the
sales value of the coal instead of
reporting the allowance as a separate
entry on Form ONRR–4430. Under this
proposed regulation, ONRR eliminates
assessments because ONRR is now
authorized to assess civil penalties for
solid mineral leases under FOGRMA, 30
U.S.C. 1719 and 30 U.S.C. 1720a.
Penalties are a more effective
enforcement mechanism to ensure
lessee compliance with reporting
requirements because ONRR can assess
civil penalties that are significantly
higher than the maximum assessment
the current regulation authorizes.
1206.267 What general washing
allowance requirements apply to me?
ONRR proposes to add this section to
contain the requirements of current 30
CFR 1206.258. This proposal makes the
Federal coal valuation regulations
consistent with Federal oil and gas
valuations regulations, and consolidates
provisions applicable to both arm’slength and non-arm’s-length washing in
the current valuation regulations, rather
than repeating those provisions in the
respective sections explaining those
allowances. We also rewrite the current
valuation regulations in Plain Language.
We only discuss any substantive
changes or additions to this section
below.
Proposed paragraph (a) contains the
same information as current 30 CFR
1206.258(a) allowing you to deduct the
reasonable, actual costs to wash coal if
you determine the value of your coal
under proposed § 1206.252. We also
propose a new provision under
paragraph (a)(2) to make clear you do
not need ONRR’s approval before
reporting a washing allowance for costs
that you incur consistent with existing
practice.
Proposed paragraph (b) states what
you cannot claim when you take a
washing allowance. Paragraph (b)(1) of
this section states that you cannot take
an allowance for washing lease
production that is not royalty-bearing.
This new provision is consistent with
the current and proposed Federal oil
and gas valuation regulations and
existing practices for coal valuation.
Paragraph (b)(2) contains the current
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prohibition in 30 CFR 1206.258(c) that
you cannot disproportionately allocate
washing costs to Federal leases. New
paragraph (b)(2) contains the allocation
of washing allowance requirements
under current 30 CFR 1206.260.
However, new paragraph (b)(2) clarifies
how to allocate washing costs by stating
that you must allocate washing costs to
washed coal attributable to each Federal
lease by multiplying the input ratio,
which you determine under proposed
§ 1206.251(e)(2)(i), by the total
allowable costs.
Proposed paragraph (c) contains the
requirement of current 30 CFR
1206.259(a)(4) that you must express
arm’s-length coal washing allowances as
a dollar-value equivalent per ton of coal
washed. We also apply that provision to
non-arm’s-length washing allowances
and make the section consistent with
existing practices. In addition, under
this proposed paragraph, we state that,
if you do not base your or your affiliate’s
payments for washing under an arm’slength contract on a dollar-per-unit
basis, you have to convert the
consideration you or your affiliate pay
to a dollar-value equivalent.
We propose to add a new paragraph
(d) containing the same default
provision as that for the Federal oil, gas,
and coal transportation regulations we
discuss above under proposed
§§ 1206.110(f), 1206.152(g), and
§ 1206.260(g), respectively.
Proposed new paragraph (e) would
contain the same provision as current 30
CFR 1206.258(e) that you may only
claim a washing allowance when you
sell the washed coal and report and pay
royalties.
1206.268 How do I determine washing
allowances if I have an arm’s-length
washing contract or no written arm’slength contract?
ONRR proposes to add this section to
contain the requirements under current
30 CFR 1206.259(a)(1), but we rewrite
this section in Plain Language and
restructure this section for consistency
with the proposed Federal gas
transportation allowance regulations we
discussed above in § 1206.153. This
proposal includes moving the
requirements of current
§§ 1206.259(a)(2) and 1206.259(a)(3)
regarding additional consideration,
misconduct, and breach of the duty to
market to the proposed § 1206.267(d) we
discussed above. We would move the
requirements for non-arm’s-length
washing allowances to § 1206.269.
We propose to add a new paragraph
(c) that applies if you have no written
contract for the arm’s-length washing of
coal. In that case, ONRR may determine
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your washing allowance under
§ 1206.254. You must propose to ONRR
a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.258(a).
You may use that method to determine
your allowance until ONRR issues a
determination. This paragraph would
not apply if a lessee performs its own
washing. Rather, § 1206.269 regarding
non-arm’s-length washing allowances
applies.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1206.269 How do I determine washing
allowances if I have a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
ONRR proposes to add new
§ 1206.269 to explain how lessees must
determine a washing allowance under a
non-arm’s-length transportation contract
using paragraphs (a) through (k) of this
section. These requirements are in
current 30 CFR 1206.259(b). We rewrite
the current requirements in Plain
Language and restructure, add, and
amend this section for consistency with
the Federal gas and coal transportation
allowance regulations proposed above
in §§ 1206.154 and 1206.262. We also
propose to make several substantive
changes we discuss below.
The current coal rule at 30 CFR
1206.259(b)(2)(iv)(A) permits a return
on undepreciated capital investment in
the wash plant as one of the allowable
costs a lessee may include in non-arm’slength or no-contract transportation
allowances. However, under the current
regulation, the return on investment
ends after the capital costs are
depreciated to (or below) a reasonable
salvage value. In proposed paragraph
(b)(4) of this section, we allow lessees to
continue to take a return on the
reasonable salvage value under
paragraph (i) of this section. Under
proposed paragraph (i)(2), after you
depreciated a wash plant to its
reasonable salvage value, you may
continue to include in the allowance
calculation a cost equal to the
reasonable salvage value multiplied by
the Standard & Poor’s BBB rate of return
allowed under paragraph (k) of this
section. We propose this change in
order to make coal valuation regulations
consistent with the Federal oil valuation
amendments in proposed
§ 1206.112(b)(3)(ii) the Federal gas
valuation amendments in proposed
§ 1206.154(i)(1)(iii) (current Federal gas
valuation regulation at 30 CFR
1206.157(g)), and the Federal coal
valuation regulation amendments
proposed in § 1206.262 (b)(4) and in
paragraph (i)(2) of this section.
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1206.270 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.271 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.452 How do I calculate royalty
value for coal I or my affiliate sell(s)
under an arm’s-length or non-arm’slength contract?
1206.453 How will ONRR determine if
my royalty payments are correct?
1206.272 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a washing
allowance?
1206.273 What reporting adjustments
must I make for washing allowances?
ONRR proposes to add §§ 1206.270
through 1206.273, which are the same
as we propose for Federal gas valuation
regulations under §§ 1206.155 through
1206.158, with two exceptions. These
two exceptions are the same as we
propose in §§ 1206.263 through
1206.266. Please refer to those sections
for an explanation of the proposed
changes.
Subpart J—Indian Coal
1206.450 What is the purpose and
scope of this subpart?
This section would be the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.450. We rewrite
the current section in Plain Language
and make this section consistent with
the other product valuation regulations.
As we explained above in § 1206.20, we
replace the term ‘‘Indian allottee’’ with
‘‘individual Indian mineral owner.’’
However, the substantive requirements
remain unchanged.
1206.451 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
This proposed section is the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.453, 1206.454, and
1206.459, except that we rewrite the
sections in Plain Language and combine
multiple current sections into this
proposed section. We are not proposing
any substantive change.
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1206.454 How will ONRR determine
the value of my coal for royalty
purposes?
1206.455 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty
under this subpart?
1206.456 What are my responsibilities
to place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.457 When is an ONRR audit,
review, reconciliation, monitoring, or
other like process considered final?
1206.458 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
1206.459 Does ONRR protect
information I provide?
ONRR proposes the same changes to
§§ 1206.452 through 1206.459 as those
we proposed for Federal coal valuation
regulations under §§ 1206.252 through
1206.259. Please refer to those proposed
sections for an explanation of the
changes.
1206.460 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
We propose the same changes to this
section as those we propose for Federal
coal under § 1206.260, with two
exceptions. Please refer to that section
for an explanation of the proposed
changes.
For Indian coal under current 30 CFR
1206.461(a)(1), a lessee must submit
Form ONRR–4293, Coal Transportation
Allowance Report, prior to taking an
allowance. This provision is not in
either the current or proposed Federal
coal valuation regulations. However,
ONRR proposes to retain this
requirement for coal produced from
Indian leases as part of our trust
responsibility. This form submittal
ensures that we continue the oversight
and controls necessary on Indian leases.
The current Indian coal regulation at
30 CFR 1206.461(a)(1) also provide that
a lessee who does not timely file Form
ONRR–4293 may claim a transportation
allowance retroactively for a period of
not more than 3 months prior to the first
day of the month that ONRR receives
the lessee’s Form ONRR–4293 ‘‘unless
ONRR approves a longer period upon a
showing of good cause by the lessee.’’
We propose to remove the good cause
exception. We have found this
exception is difficult to administer and
is not applicable. See Alexander Energy
Corp., 153 IBLA 238 (2000), Union Oil
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Company of California, 167 IBLA 263
(2005).
In addition, current 30 CFR
1206.461(c)(1)(vi) provides that ONRR
will allow non-arm’s-length contract or
no written arm’s-length contract-based
transportation allowances in effect at
the time these regulations become
effective, to continue until such
allowances terminate. ONRR eliminated
this provision for Federal coal leases in
its 1996 Federal coal amendments but
left this intact for Indian leases (61 FR
5481 (1996)). To be consistent, we
propose to remove this provision. ONRR
also eliminated this provision for
Federal gas leases (70 FR 11869).
Therefore, we propose to add a new
paragraph (a)(3) stating ‘‘You may not
use a transportation allowance that was
in effect before the effective date of the
final rule. You must use the provisions
of this subpart to determine your
transportation allowance.’’
1206.461 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract or
no written arm’s-length contract?
ONRR proposes the same changes to
this section as we propose for Federal
coal under § 1206.261. Please refer to
that section for an explanation of the
proposed changes.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
1206.462 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a
non-arm’s-length transportation
contract?
We propose the same changes to this
section as we propose for Federal coal
under § 1206.262, with one exception
discussed below. Please refer to
§ 1206.262 for an explanation of the
proposed changes.
For Federal coal under proposed
§ 1206.262, we allow a lessee to take a
return on the reasonable salvage value
of a transportation system. We are not
proposing to make this change to Indian
coal because we believe it would reduce
the return to the Indian lessor while not
providing a benefit to them. It would
therefore not be in the best interest of
the Indian lessor and be inconsistent
with our trust responsibility.
1206.463 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
We propose to make the same changes
to this section as we propose for Federal
coal under § 1206.263 with one
exception. Please refer to § 1206.263 for
an explanation of the proposed changes.
We also propose substantive changes to
current 30 CFR 1206.461(c) regarding
reporting arm’s-length transportation
allowances.
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Unlike the Federal coal regulation,
this proposed Indian coal regulation
would retain the requirement for a
lessee to submit Form ONRR–4293 prior
to taking a transportation allowance.
These same provisions are in current 30
CFR 1206.458(c). Form submittal is not
a requirement for Federal leases, but the
form submittal ensures we continue the
oversight and controls necessary on
Indian leases.
In addition to the changes we make to
the reporting requirements under this
section, consistent with the Federal coal
valuation regulations, we propose to
eliminate three provisions in the current
Indian coal regulations. First, under the
current 30 CFR 1206.461(c)(1)(iii), a
lessee may request special reporting
procedures in unique circumstances.
ONRR eliminated this provision for
Federal coal leases in its 1996 Federal
coal amendments but left it intact for
Indian leases. We do not believe any
lessee has ever used this provision.
Therefore, we propose to remove this
provision.
Second, the current coal regulation
under 30 CFR 1206.461(c)(1)(vi) states
ONRR may establish coal transportation
allowance reporting requirements for
individual leases different from those
specified in this subpart to provide
more effective administration. ONRR
eliminated this provision for Federal
coal leases in its 1996 Federal coal
amendments but left it intact for Indian
leases. We do not believe ONRR has
ever used this provision. Therefore, we
propose to remove this provision.
Finally, current 30 CFR
1206.461(c)(1)(vi) provides that ONRR
will allow non-arm’s-length contract or
no arm’s-length contract-based
transportation allowances that are in
effect at the time these regulations
become effective to continue until such
allowances terminate. We propose to
eliminate this provision and to replace
it with a new § 1206.460(a)(3) we
discuss above.
1206.464 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section as those we
propose for section §§ 1206.264 and
1206.463. Please refer to those proposed
sections for an explanation of changes.
1206.465 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section as those we
propose for § 1206.265. Proposed
paragraph (b) of this section prohibits
the netting of transportation costs from
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gross proceeds received for a particular
sale. When eligible to take a
transportation allowance, a lessee must
report gross proceeds without a
deduction for transportation costs, and
may simultaneously claim a
transportation allowance for the cost of
transporting the royalty fraction of
Indian coal sold. Current Indian coal
valuation regulations do not contain this
provision. ONRR considers the change
to be an enhancement to the Indian coal
regulations that is already in the current
Federal coal valuation regulations at 30
CFR 1206.262(d).
1206.466 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation
allowances?
We propose the same amendments to
this section we propose for § 1206.266.
Please refer to the proposed section for
an explanation of the changes.
1206.467 What general washing
allowance requirements apply to me?
We propose the same amendments to
this section we propose for §§ 1206.267
and 1206.460. However, we propose to
maintain the current requirement that a
lessee must submit Form ONRR–4292,
Coal Washing Allowance Report, prior
to taking a washing allowance. Please
refer to §§ 1206.267 and 1206.460 for an
explanation of the changes.
1206.468 How do I determine a
washing allowance if I have an arm’slength washing contract or no written
arm’s length contract?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section we propose
for §§ 1206.268 and 1206.461. Please
refer to §§ 1206.268 and 1206.461 for an
explanation of the changes.
1206.469 How do I determine a
washing allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length washing contract?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section we propose
for §§ 1206.269 and 1206.462, with one
exception we discuss below. Please refer
to §§ 1206.269 and 1206.462 for an
explanation of the changes.
For Federal coal under proposed
§ 1206.269, we propose to allow a lessee
to continually take a return on the
reasonable salvage value of a wash
plant. We do not propose to make this
change to Indian coal because we
believe it would reduce the return to the
Indian lessor while not providing a
benefit to them. It would therefore not
be in the best interest of the Indian
lessor and be inconsistent with our trust
responsibility.
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refer to §§ 1206.272 and 1206.465 for an
explanation of changes.
1206.470 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
washing contract?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section we propose
for §§ 1206.270 and 1206.463. Please
refer to §§ 1206.270 and 1206.463 for an
explanation of the changes.
1206.471 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.473 What reporting adjustments
must I make for washing allowances?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section we propose
for §§ 1206.273 and 1206.466. Please
refer to §§ 1206.273 and 1206.466 for an
explanation of changes.
III. Procedural Matters
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section we propose
for §§ 1206.271 and 1206.464. Please
refer to §§ 1206.271 and 1206.464 for an
explanation of changes.
1206.472 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a washing
allowance?
We propose to make the same
amendments to this section we propose
for §§ 1206.272 and 1206.465. Please
1. Summary Cost and Royalty Impact
Data
We have summarized estimated costs
and benefits the proposed rule may have
on potentially affected groups: Industry,
the Federal Government, Indian lessors,
and State and local governments. All of
the proposed amendments that have
cost impacts would result in increased
royalty collections. The sum of the
proposed amendments that have cost
benefits are due to administrative cost
savings to industry, not a decrease in
royalties due. The net impact of the
proposed amendments is an estimated
annual increase in royalty collections of
between $72.9 million and $87.3
million. This net impact represents a
slight increase of between 0.8 percent
and 1.0 percent of the total Federal oil,
gas, and coal royalties ONRR collected
in 2010. We also estimate that industry
would experience reduced annual
administrative costs of $3.61 million.
Please note that, unless otherwise
indicated, numbers in the following
tables are rounded to three significant
digits.
A. Industry
The table below lists ONRR’s low,
mid-range, and high estimates of the
costs, by component, industry would
incur in the first year. Industry would
incur these costs in the same amount
each year thereafter.
SUMMARY OF ROYALTY IMPACTS TO INDUSTRY
Rule provision
Low
Mid
High
Gas—replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale ....................................................................................................
Index ...................................................................................................................
NGLs—replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale ....................................................................................................
Index ...................................................................................................................
Gas transportation limited to 50% .............................................................................
Processing allowance limited to 662⁄3% ....................................................................
POP contracts limited to 662⁄3% processing allowance ............................................
Extraordinary processing allowance ..........................................................................
BBB bond rate change for gas transportation ...........................................................
Eliminate deepwater gathering ..................................................................................
Oil Transportation limited to 50% ..............................................................................
Oil and gas line losses ..............................................................................................
Oil line fill ...................................................................................................................
BBB bond rate change for oil transportation .............................................................
Coal—non-arm’s length netback & coop sales .........................................................
$0
11,300,000
$2,010,000
11,300,000
$4,030,000
11,300,000
0
1,200,000
4,170,000
5,440,000
0
18,500,000
1,640,000
17,400,000
6,430,000
4,570,000
978,000
2,380,000
(1,060,000)
256,000
1,200,000
4,170,000
5,440,000
0
18,500,000
1,640,000
20,500,000
6,430,000
4,570,000
1,710,000
2,380,000
0
510,000
1,200,000
4,170,000
5,440,000
0
18,500,000
1,640,000
23,600,000
6,430,000
4,570,000
2,450,000
2,380,000
1,060,000
Total ....................................................................................................................
72,900,000
80,100,000
87,300,000
Note: Totals from this table and others in this analysis may not add due to rounding.
first arm’s-length sale to value gas for
royalty purposes. The lessee also would
have the option to elect to pay royalties
Cost—All Rule Provisions
($80,100,000) based on a value using the monthly high
Benefit—Administrative
index price, less a standard deduction
Savings .......................
3,610,000
for transportation.
Net Cost or Benefit to InRule provision
Benefit
To perform this economic analysis,
dustry ..........................
(76,500,000)
ONRR first extracted royalty data that
Replace benchmarks—
we collected on residue gas,
Gas & NGLs ................
$247,000 Cost—Using First Arm’s-Length Sale To
unprocessed gas, and coalbed methane
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Eliminate deepwater
(product codes 03, 04, 39, respectively)
gathering .....................
3,360,000 Federal Unprocessed Gas, Residue Gas,
for calendar year 2010. We chose
and Coalbed Methane
calendar year 2010 because the RoyaltyTotal .........................
3,610,000
As discussed above, we propose
in-Kind (RIK) volumes were minimal
replacing the current benchmarks in 30
due to the 2010 termination of the RIK
The table below lists the overall
CFR 1206.152(c) (unprocessed gas) and
program. In previous years, RIK
economic impact to industry from the
1206.152(c) (processed gas) with a
volumes were substantial. Data from
proposed changes, based on the midmethodology that uses the gross
RIK production is not representative of
range estimate of costs:
proceeds under the lessee’s affiliate’s
industry sales, so we excluded any
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
ONRR identified two proposed rule
changes that would benefit industry by
reducing their administrative costs. The
benefits industry would realize for each
of these components are as follows:
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remaining RIK volumes from our
analysis. We excluded calendar year
2011 because lessees are still adjusting
reports for that year and the data
reported is still going through ONRR’s
edits.
We then extracted gas royalty data for
non-arm’s-length transactions reported
with a sales type code of NARM. We
also extracted gas royalty data for sales
type code POOL, because royalty
reporters may also use this code to
report non-arm’s-length transactions.
Based on ONRR’s experience auditing
transactions that use sales type code
POOL, we know that only a relatively
small portion of them are non-arm’s
length. Therefore, we used only 10
percent of the POOL volumes in our
economic analysis of the volumes of gas
sold non-arm’s length.
Based on ONRR’s experience auditing
production sold under non-arm’s-length
contracts, we believe industry would
incur a royalty increase in the range of
0 to 5 cents per MMBtu under our
proposal to use the affiliate’s first arm’slength resale to value gas production for
royalty purposes. ONRR created a range
of potential royalty increases by
assuming no royalty increase for the low
estimate, 2.5 cents per MMBtu for the
mid-range estimate, and 5 cents per
MMBtu for the high estimate. We then
multiplied the NARM volume and 10
percent of the POOL volume reported to
ONRR in 2010 by the potential royalty
increases.
The results provided below are an
estimated cost to industry due to an
annual royalty increase of between zero
and approximately $8 million. We
reduced this estimate by one-half to
$4.03 million, assuming 50 percent of
the non-arm’s-length lessees would
choose this option.
Royalty increase ($)
2010 MMBtu
(non-rounded)
Low
(0 cents)
Mid
(2.5 cents)
High
(5 cents)
NAL Volume .................................................................................................
10% of POOL Volume .................................................................................
149,348,561
11,606,523
$0
0
$3,730,000
290,000
$7,470,000
580,000
Total ......................................................................................................
160,955,084
0
4,020,000
8,050,000
0
2,010,000
4,030,000
50% of lessees choose this option
Cost—Using Index Price Option To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Federal Unprocessed Gas, Residue Gas,
and Coalbed Methane
To estimate the royalty impact of the
index-based option, we calculated a
monthly weighted average price net of
transportation using NARM and 10
percent of the POOL gas royalty data
from six major geographic areas with
active index prices—the Green River
Basin, San Juan Basin, Piceance and
Uinta Basins, Powder River and Wind
River Basins, Permian Basin, and
Offshore Gulf of Mexico (GOM). These
six areas account for approximately 95
percent of all Federal gas produced. To
calculate the estimated impact, we
performed the following steps:
(1) Identified the Platts Inside FERC
highest reported monthly price for the
index price applicable to each area—
Northwest Pipeline Rockies for Green
River, El Paso San Juan for San Juan,
Northwest Pipeline Rockies for Piceance
and Uinta, Colorado Interstate Gas for
Powder River and Wind River, El Paso
Permian for Permian, and Henry Hub for
GOM.
(2) Subtracted the transportation
deduction we specified in the proposed
rule from the highest index price that
we identified in step (1).
(3) Subtracted the average monthly
net royalty price reported to us for
unprocessed gas from the highest index
price for the same month we calculated
in step (2).
(4) Multiplied the royalty volume by
the monthly difference that we
calculated in step (3) to calculate a
monthly royalty difference for each
region.
(5) Totaled the difference we
calculated in step (4) for the regions.
Although the index-based
methodology resulted in an annual
increase in royalties due, the current
2010 Index analysis
GOM gas
Current Royalties (rounded to the nearest dollar) ...........................................................
Royalty under Index Option .............................................................................................
Difference .........................................................................................................................
Per Unit Uplift ($/MMBtu) ................................................................................................
% change .........................................................................................................................
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
average royalty prices reported to us
were higher than the index-based option
for 3 months in 2010.
ONRR estimates the cost to industry
due to this change would be an increase
in royalty collections of approximately
$11.3 million annually. This estimate
represents a small average increase of
approximately 3.6 percent or 14 cents
per MMBtu, based on an annual royalty
volume of 160,955,084 MMBtu (for
NARM and 10 percent POOL reported
sales type codes). Because this is the
first time we have offered this option,
we don’t know how many payors will
choose it. For purposes of this analysis,
we are assuming that 50 percent of
lessees with non-arm’s-length sales
would choose this option and, therefore,
have reduced this estimate by one-half.
We would like to know from
commenters if this 50-percent
assumption is reasonable.
Other gas
$167,291,148
180,000,000
12,700,000
0.297
7.06
$435,222,354
445,000,000
9,780,000
0.083
2.20
50% of lessees choose this option
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Total
$602,513,502
625,000,000
22,500,000
0.140
3.60
$11,300,000
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Cost—Using First Arm’s-Length Sale To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Federal NGLs
Like the valuation changes we
discussed above, for Federal
unprocessed, residue, and coalbed
methane gas valuation changes, the
proposed rule would value processed
Federal NGLs based on the first arm’slength sale rather than the current
benchmarks. The lessee would also have
the option to pay royalties using an
index price value derived from an NGL
commercial price bulletin less a
theoretical processing allowance that
includes transportation and
fractionation of the NGLs. We again
used the 2010 NARM and POOL NGL
data reported to ONRR for this analysis.
We performed the same analysis for
valuation using the first arm’s-length
sale for Federal unprocessed, residue,
and coalbed methane gas, as we
discussed above. We identified the nonarm’s-length volumes that would qualify
for this option (for NARM and 10
percent POOL reported sales type codes)
and estimated a cents-per-gallon royalty
increase. Based on our experience, we
2010 Gallons
(rounded to the
nearest gallon)
635
believe that the NGLs resale margin is,
similar to gas, relatively small, ranging
from zero to 3 cents per gallon. Thus,
our estimated royalty increase is zero for
the low, 1.5 cents per gallon for the midrange, and 3 cents per gallon for the
high range. The results provided below
show a mid-range royalty increase of
$256,000 using these assumptions, and,
again, we reduced them by one-half
under the assumption that 50 percent of
the lessees would choose this option.
Again, we would ask for comments on
the reasonableness of this 50-percent
assumption.
Royalty increase ($)
Low
(0 cents)
Mid
(1.5 cents)
High
(3 cents)
NAL Volume .....................................................................................
10% of POOL Volume .....................................................................
6,170,341
27,913,486
$0
0
$92,600
419,000
$185,000
837,000
Total ..........................................................................................
34,083,827
0
512,000
1,020,000
0
256,000
510,000
50% of lessees choose this option
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Cost—Using Index Price Option To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Federal NGLs
Like the Federal unprocessed,
residue, and coalbed methane gas
changes we discuss above, lessees also
would have the option to pay royalties
on Federal NGLs using an index-based
value less a theoretical processing
allowance that includes transportation
and fractionation. We used the same
2010 NARM and POOL transaction data
for NGLs for this analysis. We were
unable to compare NGLs prices reported
on the Form ONRR–2014 to those in
commercial price bulletins because
prices lessees report on the Form
ONRR–2014 are one rolled-up price for
all NGLs, but the bulletins price each
NGLs product (such as ethane and
propane) separately. Therefore, we base
our analysis on the royalty changes that
would result from the theoretical
processing allowance proscribed under
this new option.
We chose a conservative number as a
proxy for the processing allowance
deduction that we would allow for this
index option. To determine the cost of
this option for NGLs, we calculated the
difference between the average
processing allowance reported on the
Form ONRR–2014 and the proxy
allowance we would allow under this
option. That difference equaled an
increase in value of approximately 7
cents per gallon. We then multiplied the
total NAL volume of 34,083,827 gallons
reported to us by the 7 cents per gallon,
for an estimated royalty increase of $2.4
million. We reduced this number by
one-half under the assumption that 50
percent of lessees would choose this
option, resulting in a total cost to
industry of $1.2 million. Again, we
would ask for comments on the
reasonableness of this 50-percent
assumption.
Benefit—Using Index Price Option To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Federal
Unprocessed Gas, Residue Gas,
Coalbed Methane, and NGLs
ONRR expects that industry would
benefit by realizing administrative
savings if they choose to use the indexbased option to value non-arm’s-length
sales of Federal unprocessed gas,
residue gas, coalbed methane, and
NGLs. Lessees would know the price to
use to value their production, saving the
time it currently takes to calculate the
correct price based on the current
benchmarks. They would also save time
using the ONRR-specified transportation
rate for gas and the ONRR-specified
processing allowance for NGLs, rather
than having to calculate those values
themselves.
Of the lessees that we estimate would
use this option, we estimate the indexbased option would shorten the time
burden per line reported by 50 percent
to 1.5 minutes for lines industry
electronically submits and 3.5 minutes
for lines they manually submit. We used
tables from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (www.bls.gov/oes132011.htm)
to estimate the hourly cost for industry
accountants in a metropolitan area. We
added a multiplier of 1.4 for industry
benefits. The industry labor cost factor
for accountants would be approximately
$50.53 per hour = $36.09 [mean hourly
wage] × 1.4 [benefits cost factor]. Using
a labor cost factor of $50.53 per hour,
we estimate the annual administrative
benefit to industry would be
approximately $247,000.
Estimated lines
reported using
index option
(50%)
Time burden per
line reported
Annual burden
hours
Electronic Reporting (99%) ..............................................................................................
Manual Reporting (1%) ....................................................................................................
1.5 min
3.5 min
190,872
1,928
4,772
112
Industry Labor Cost/hour .................................................................................................
............................
............................
$50.53
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Time burden per
line reported
Total Benefit to Industry ...........................................................................................
Cost—Elimination of Transportation
Allowances in Excess of 50 Percent of
the Value of Federal Gas
The current Federal gas valuation
regulations limit lessees’ transportation
allowances to 50 percent of the value of
the gas unless they request and receive
approval to exceed that limit. The
proposed rule would eliminate the
lessees’ ability to exceed that limit. To
estimate the costs associated with this
change, we first identified all calendar
year 2010 reported gas transportation
allowances rates that exceeded the 50percent limit. We then adjusted those
allowances down to the 50-percent limit
and totaled that value to estimate the
economic impact of this provision. The
result was an annual estimated cost to
industry of $4.17 million in additional
royalties.
Cost—Elimination of Transportation
Allowances in Excess of 50 Percent of
the Value of Federal Oil
The current Federal oil valuation
regulations limit lessees’ transportation
allowances to 50 percent of the value of
the oil unless they request and receive
approval to exceed that limit. The
proposed rule would eliminate the
lessees’ ability to exceed that limit. To
estimate the costs associated with this
change, we first identified all calendar
year 2010 reported oil transportation
allowance rates that exceeded the 50percent limit. We then adjusted those
allowances down to the 50-percent limit
and totaled that value to estimate the
economic impact of this provision. The
result was an annual estimated cost to
industry of $6.43 million in additional
royalties.
Estimated lines
reported using
index option
(50%)
............................
............................
Cost—Elimination of Processing
Allowances in Excess of 662⁄3 Percent of
the Value of the NGLs for Federal Gas
The current Federal gas valuation
regulations limit lessees’ processing
allowances to 662⁄3 percent of the value
of the NGLs unless they request and
receive approval to exceed that limit.
The proposed rule would eliminate the
lessees’ ability to exceed that limit. To
estimate the cost to industry associated
with this change, we first identified all
calendar year 2010 reported processing
allowances greater than 662⁄3 percent.
We then adjusted those allowances
down to the 662⁄3-percent limit and
totaled that value to estimate the
economic impact of this provision. The
result was an annual estimated cost to
industry of $5.44 million in additional
royalties.
Cost—POP Contracts now Subject to the
662⁄3 Percent Processing Allowance
Limit for Federal Gas
Lessees with POP contracts currently
pay royalties based on their gross
proceeds as long as they pay a minimum
value equal to 100 percent of the residue
gas. Under the proposed rule, we also
would not allow lessees with POP
contracts to deduct more than the 662⁄3
percent of the value of the NGLs. For
example, a lessee with a 70-percent POP
contract receives 70 percent of the value
of the residue gas and 70 percent of the
value of the NGLs. The 30 percent of
each product the lessee gives up to the
processing plant in the past could not,
when combined, exceed an equivalent
value of 100 percent of the NGLs’ value.
Under the proposed rule, the combined
value of each product the lessee gives
up to the processing plant cannot
exceed two-thirds of the NGLs’ value.
Annual burden
hours
$247,000
Lessees report POP contracts to ONRR
using sales type code APOP for arm’slength POP contracts and NPOP for nonarm’s-length POP contracts. Because
lessees report APOP sales as
unprocessed gas, there are no reported
processing allowances for us to analyze
and we cannot determine the breakout
between residue gas and NGLs. Lessees
do report residue gas and NGLs
separately for NPOPs. However, NPOP
volumes constitute only 0.02 percent of
all the natural gas royalty volumes
reported to ONRR. We deemed the
NPOP volume to be too low to
adequately assess the impact of this
provision on both APOP and NPOP
contracts.
Therefore, we decided to examine all
reported calendar year 2010 onshore
residue gas and NGLs royalty data and
assumed it was processed and that
lessees paid royalties as if they sold the
residue gas and NGLs under a POP
contract. We restricted our analysis to
residue gas and NGLs volumes
produced onshore because we are not
aware of any offshore POP contracts. We
first totaled the residue gas and NGLs’
royalty value for calendar year 2010 for
all onshore royalties. We then assumed
that these royalties were subject to a 70percent POP contract. Based on our
experience, a 70/30 split is typical for
POP contracts. We calculated 30 percent
of both the value of residue gas and
NGLs to approximate a theoretical 30percent processing deduction. We then
compared the 30-percent total of residue
gas and NGLs values to 662⁄3 percent of
the NGLs value (the maximum
allowance under the proposed rule).
The table below summarizes these
calculations which we rounded to the
nearest dollar:
2010
Royalty value
70%
30%
$602,194,031
506,818,440
$421,535,822
354,772,908
$180,658,209
152,045,532
Total ..........................................................................................................................
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Residue Gas ....................................................................................................................
NGLs ................................................................................................................................
1,109,012,471
776,308,730
332,703,741
66.67% Limit ....................................................................................................................
337,878,960
Our analysis shows that the
theoretical processing deduction for 30
percent of the value of residue gas and
NGLs ($333 million) under our assumed
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onshore POP contract allowance would
not exceed the 662⁄3 cap ($338 million)
under the proposed rule and, thus, we
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(506,818,440 × 2⁄3)
estimate that this change would be
revenue neutral.
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Cost—Termination of Policy Allowing
Transportation Allowances for
Deepwater Gathering Systems for
Federal Oil and Gas
The Deep Water Policy we discuss
above allows companies to deduct
certain expenses for subsea gathering
from their royalty payments, even
though those costs do not meet ONRR’s
definition of transportation. The
proposed rule would rescind and
supersede the Deep Water Policy, and
lessees would have to pay royalties
under our proposed valuation
regulations applicable to Federal oil and
gas transportation allowances
prospectively. To analyze the cost
impact to industry of rescinding this
policy, we used data from BSEE’s Arc
GIS TIMS (Technical Information
Management System) database to
estimate that 113 subsea pipeline
segments serving 108 leases currently
qualify for an allowance under the
policy. We assumed all segments were
the same—in other words, we did not
take into account the size, length, or
type of pipeline. We also considered
only pipeline segments that were in
active status and leases in producing
status for our analysis. To determine a
range (shown in the tables below as low,
mid, and high estimates) for the cost to
industry, ONRR estimated a 15-percent
error rate in our identification of the 113
eligible pipeline segments, resulting in
a range of 96 to 130 eligible pipeline
segments.
Historical ONRR audit data is
available for 13 subsea gathering
segments serving 15 leases covering
time periods from 1999 through 2010.
We used this data to determine an
average initial capital investment in
pipeline segments. We used the initial
capital investment amount to calculate
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment (ROI)
for the eligible pipeline segments. We
calculated depreciation using a straightline depreciation schedule based on a
20-year useful life of the pipeline. We
calculated ROI using 1.0 times the
average BBB Bond rate for January 2012,
which was the most recent full month
of data when we performed this
analysis. We based the calculations for
depreciation and ROI on the first year a
pipeline was in service.
From the same audit data, we
calculated an average annual operating
and maintenance (O&M) cost. We
increased the O&M cost by 12 percent
to account for overhead expenses. Based
on experience and audit data, we
assumed 12 percent is a reasonable
increase for overhead. We then
decreased the total annual O&M cost per
pipeline segment by 9 percent because
an average of 9 percent of offshore
wellhead oil and gas production is
water, which is not royalty bearing.
Finally, we used an average royalty rate
of 14 percent, which is the volume
weighted average royalty rate for all
non-Section 6 leases in the GOM. Based
on these calculations, the average
annual allowance per pipeline segment
is approximately $226,000. This
represents the estimated amount per
pipeline segment ONRR will no longer
allow a lessee to take as a transportation
allowance based on our rescission of the
Deep Water Policy in this proposed
rulemaking.
The total cost to industry would be
the $226,000 annual allowance per
pipeline segment that we would
disallow under this proposed
rulemaking times the number of eligible
segments. To calculate a range for the
total cost, we multiplied the average
annual allowance by the low (96), mid
(113), and high (130) number of eligible
segments. The low, mid, and high
annual allowance estimates we would
disallow are $21.8 million, $25.6
million, and $29.5 million, respectively.
Of currently eligible leases, 42 out of
108, or about 40 percent, qualify for
deep water royalty relief. However, due
to varying lease terms, royalty relief
programs, price thresholds, volume
thresholds, and other factors, ONRR
estimated that only half of the 42 leases
eligible for royalty relief (20 percent)
actually received royalty relief.
Therefore, we decreased the low, mid,
and high estimated annual cost to
industry by 20 percent. The table below
shows the estimated royalty impact of
this section of the proposed rule based
on the allowances we would no longer
allow under this proposed rule.
Low
Estimated Royalty Impact ................................................................................................
Benefit—Termination of Policy
Allowing Transportation Allowances
for Deepwater Gathering Systems for
Offshore Federal Oil and Gas
ONRR estimates the elimination of
transportation allowances for deepwater
gathering systems would provide
industry with an administrative benefit
because they would no longer have to
perform this calculation. We believe the
Mid
High
$17,400,000
$20,500,000
$23,600,000
cost to perform this calculation is
significant because industry has often
hired outside consultants to calculate
their subsea transportation allowances.
Using this information, we estimated
each company with leases eligible for
transportation allowances for deepwater
gathering systems would allocate one
full-time FTE annually to perform this
calculation, if they use consultants or
perform the calculation in-house. We
used the Bureau of Labor Statistics to
estimate the hourly cost for industry
accountants in a metropolitan area
[$36.09 mean hourly wage] with a
multiplier of 1.4 for industry benefits to
equal approximately $50.53 per hour
[$36.09 × 1.4]. Using this labor cost per
hour, we estimate the annual
administrative benefit to industry would
be approximately $3,360,000.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Annual burden
hours per
company
Industry labor
cost/hour
Companies reporting eligible
leases
Estimated
benefit to industry
2,080
$50.53
32
$3,360,000
Deepwater Gathering .......................................................................................
Cost—Elimination of Extraordinary
Cost Gas Processing Allowances for
Federal Gas
As we discuss above, we are
proposing to eliminate the provision in
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our current regulations that allow a
lessee to request an extraordinary
processing cost allowance and to
terminate any extraordinary cost
processing allowances we previously
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granted. We have granted two such
approvals in the past, so we know the
lease universe that is claiming this
allowance and were able to retrieve the
processing allowance data lessees
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deducted from the value of residue gas
produced from the leases. We then
calculated the annual total processing
allowance lessees have claimed for 2007
through 2010 for the leases at issue. We
then averaged the yearly totals for those
4 years to estimate an annual cost to
industry of $18.5 million in increased
royalties.
Cost—Decrease Rate of Return Used to
Calculate Non-Arm’s Length
Transportation Allowances from 1.3 to
1 Times the Standard and Poor’s BBB
Bond for Federal Oil and Gas
For Federal oil transportation, ONRR
does not maintain or request data
identifying if transportation allowances
are arm’s length or non-arm’s length.
However, based on our experience, we
believe that a large portion of GOM oil
is transported through lessee-owned
pipelines. In addition, many onshore
transportation allowances include costs
of trucking and rail and, most likely,
this change would not impact those.
Therefore, to calculate the costs
associated with this change, we
assumed that 50 percent of the GOM
transportation allowances are non-arm’s
length and 10 percent of transportation
allowances everywhere else (onshore
and offshore other than the GOM) are
non-arm’s length. We also assumed that,
over the life of the pipeline, allowance
rates are made up of one-third rate of
return on undepreciated capital
investment, one-third depreciation
expenses, and one-third operation,
maintenance, and overhead expenses.
These are the same assumptions we
made when analyzing changes to both
the Federal oil and Federal gas
valuation rules in 2004.
In 2010, the total oil transportation
allowances Federal lessees deducted
were approximately $60 million from
the GOM and $11 million from
everywhere else. Based on these totals
and our assumptions about the
allowance components, the portion of
the non-arm’s-length allowances
attributable to the rate of return would
be approximately $10,000,000 for the
GOM ($60,000,000 x 1⁄3 × 50%) and
$367,000 ($11,000,000 × 1⁄3 × 10%) for
the rest of the country. Therefore, we
estimate that decreasing the basis for the
rate of return by 23 percent could result
in decreased yearly oil transportation
allowance deductions of approximately
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$2,380,000 ($10,367,000 × 0.23). Thus,
we estimate the net cost to industry as
a result of this change would be an
approximately $2,380,000 increase in
royalties due.
With respect to Federal gas, like oil,
ONRR does not maintain or request
information on whether gas
transportation allowances are arm’s
length or non-arm’s length. However,
unlike oil, we believe that it is not
common for GOM gas to be transported
through lessee-owned pipelines.
Therefore, we assumed that only 10
percent of all gas transportation
allowances are non-arm’s length and
made no distinction between the GOM
and everywhere else. All other
assumptions for natural gas are the same
as those we made for oil above.
In 2010, the total gas transportation
allowances Federal lessees deducted
were approximately $214 million. Based
on that total and our assumptions
regarding the makeup of the allowance
components, the portion of the nonarm’s-length allowances attributable to
the rate of return would be
approximately $7.13 million
($214,000,000 × 1⁄3 × 10%). Therefore,
we estimate that decreasing the basis for
the rate of return by 23 percent could
result in decreased yearly gas
transportation allowance deductions of
approximately $1.64 million ($7.13
million × 0.23). That is, the net
increased cost to industry, based on this
change, would be approximately
$1,640,000 in additional royalties.
Cost—Allow a Rate of Return on
Reasonable Salvage Value for Federal
Oil, Gas, and Coal
For Federal oil and gas, after a
transportation system or a processing
plant has been depreciated to its
reasonable salvage value, we propose to
allow a lessee a return on that
reasonable salvage value of the
transportation system or processing
plant as long as the lessee uses that
system or plant for its Federal oil or gas
production. We estimate the economic
impact on industry would be small
because we would continue the
requirements of the current regulations
that a lessee must base depreciation of
a system or plant upon the useful life of
the equipment or the expected life of the
reserves served by the system or plant.
Thus, when properly established, the
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depreciation schedule should reflect the
useful life of the system or plant, and
ONRR would not expect a lessee to
continue to use a system or plant for
periods significantly longer than the
period reflected by the depreciation
schedule the lessee established for
royalty purposes. This assumption is
true especially if the lessee did not
make additional capital expenditures
that extended the life of the system or
plant. In that case, the lessee should
have extended the depreciation
schedule to reflect the extended life of
the system or plant, and, possibly, the
salvage value, itself. In other words, we
believe the vast majority of systems
would not be depreciated to salvage
value while royalty is being paid
because the system still has a useful life
while production occurs. Thus, we do
not believe there would be any costs to
industry associated with this change.
With respect to Federal coal, we
believe that the royalty impact for coal
would be equally small for the same
reasons we mention above.
Cost—Disallow Line Loss as a
Component of Arm’s-Length and NonArm’s-Length Oil and Gas
Transportation
ONRR also proposes to eliminate the
current regulatory provision allowing a
lessee to deduct costs of pipeline losses,
both actual and theoretical, when
calculating non-arm’s-length
transportation allowances. For this
analysis, we assumed that pipeline
losses are 0.2 percent of the volume
transported through the pipeline, based
on a survey of pipeline tariff. This 0.2
percent of the volume transported also
equates to 0.2 percent of the value of the
Federal royalty volume of oil and gas
production transported.
For Federal oil produced in calendar
year 2010, the total value of the Federal
royalty volume subject to transportation
allowances was $3,796,827,823 in the
GOM and $1,204,177,633 everywhere
else. Using our previous assumption
that 50 percent of GOM and 10 percent
of everywhere else’s transportation
allowances are non-arm’s length, we
estimated that the value of the line loss
would be $4.04 million, as we detailed
in the table below. Therefore, the annual
cost to industry would be approximately
$4.04 million in additional royalties.
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OIL LINE LOSS ROYALTY IMPACT
Line loss (%)
50% of GOM royalty value ........................................................................................
10% of everywhere else royalty value ......................................................................
Total ....................................................................................................................
For Federal gas produced in calendar
year 2010, the royalty value of the
Federal gas royalty volume subject to
transportation allowances was
Royalty increase
$1,898,413,912
120,417,763
0.2
0.2
$3,800,000
241,000
..............................
..............................
4,040,000
$2,656,843,158. Using our previous
assumption that 10 percent of Federal
gas transportation allowances are nonarm’s length, we estimated the value of
the line loss would be $530,000.
Therefore, the annual cost to industry
would be approximately $530,000 in
increased royalties.
GAS LINE LOSS ROYALTY IMPACT
Line loss (%)
10% of royalty value ..................................................................................................
The total estimated royalty increase
for both oil and gas due to this change
would be $4.57 million [$4,040,000 (oil)
plus $531,000 (gas) = $4,570,000].
Cost—Disallow Line Fill as a
Component of Non-Arm’s-Length Oil
Transportation Allowances
We estimated that oil line fill costs
ranged from a low $0.02 to a high of
Royalty increase
0.2
$531,000
$265,684,316
$0.05 per barrel, with a mid-range of
$0.035. These are the same estimates we
made in our 2004 oil valuation rule
when we made a change to allow this
component as a cost of oil
transportation, and we believe these
cost estimates are still valid. We
restricted our analysis to only oil
production from the GOM because we
believe that including line fill as a
component of transportation allowances
is uncommon everywhere else. We then
applied these estimates to the total 2010
GOM Federal oil royalty volume of
48,910,000 barrels to estimate the range
of reduced transportation costs included
in allowance calculations, as we detail
in the table below.
LINE FILL ROYALTY IMPACT ESTIMATE
Low
Mid
High
($0.02 per barrel)
($0.035 per barrel)
($0.05 per barrel)
$978,000
$1,710,000
$2,450,000
2010 Federal GOM Royalty Oil Volume (barrels)
48,910,000 .................................................................................................................
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In other words, based on this analysis,
the proposed rule would not allow
lessees to include the amounts in the
table above as a component of their
transportation allowance.
Cost—Depreciating Oil Pipeline Assets
Only Once
ONRR proposes to allow depreciation
of oil pipeline assets only one time.
Under our current valuation regulations
for Federal oil, if an oil pipeline is sold,
ONRR allows the purchasing company
to include the purchase price to
establish a new depreciation schedule
and, in essence, depreciate the same
piece of pipe twice or more if it is sold
again. Under this proposed rulemaking,
we would allow depreciation only once.
In theory, this change could result in
additional royalties. However, based on
our experience monitoring the oil
markets, we believe that the sale of oil
pipeline assets is rare, and we are not
aware of any such sales in the last 5
calendar years. We are also not aware of
any planned future sales of oil pipelines
that this proposed rule change would
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impact. Therefore, although ONRR
believes that there will be a cost to
industry under this proposal, we cannot
quantify the cost at this time.
Cost—Using First Arm’s-Length Sale To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Federal Coal and Sales of Federal Coal
Between Coal Cooperatives and Coal
Cooperative Members and Between
Coal Cooperative Members
We discuss this cost in the next
section.
Cost—Using Sales of Electricity To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Federal Coal and Sales of Federal Coal
Between Coal Cooperatives and Coal
Cooperative Members and Between
Coal Cooperative Members
In ONRR’s experience, non-arm’slength sales of Federal coal that is then
resold at arm’s length are rare. Under
the current valuation regulations, such
sales result in royalty values equivalent
to values that result under the proposed
regulation at § 1206.252(a) based on
arm’s-length resale prices. Thus, ONRR
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estimates that there will be no royalty
effect for these types of sales. In other
words, there is no cost to lessees who
produce Federal coal due to this
valuation change in the proposed rule.
The remaining non-arm’s-length
dispositions of Federal coal (including
lessees, their affiliates, coal
cooperatives, and members of coal
cooperatives) are when the lessee, its
affiliate, coal cooperatives, or members
of coal cooperatives consume(s) the
Federal coal produced to generate
electricity. These dispositions typically
constitute from about one to two percent
of royalties paid on Federal coal
produced.
Under the proposed rule, a lessee, its
affiliates, a coal cooperative, and a
member of a coal cooperative generally
would base the royalty value of such
sales on the sales value of the
electricity, less costs to generate and, in
some cases, transmit the electricity to
the buyers, and less applicable coal
washing and transportation costs. ONRR
has limited experience determining
lease product royalty values using the
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methodology under proposed
§ 1206.252(b)(1). Therefore, to perform
an economic analysis, ONRR first
determined the average royalties paid to
ONRR in calendar years 2009 through
2011 for these Federal coal dispositions.
Based on our experience with other
dispositions of Federal coal, ONRR
estimated that, at most, royalty values
under the proposed rule would increase
or decrease by 10 percent, compared to
royalty values we determined under
current regulations. Using these
assumptions, ONRR estimated the
annual average royalty impact and, thus,
the cost or benefit to industry from the
proposed rule.
Our methodology is the same for
estimating the royalty impact of using
sales of electricity to value non-arm’slength sales of Federal coal, sales of
Federal coal between coal cooperatives
and coal cooperative members, and
sales between coal cooperative
members. Therefore, the estimated
royalty impact would be a combined
figure covering all such valuation of
Federal coal under the proposed rule.
Accordingly, ONRR estimates the
combined average annual royalty
impacts for these coal dispositions
would range from a royalty decrease of
$1.06 million (benefit) to a royalty
increase of $1.06 million (cost).
ONRR requests comments on its
estimates of the cost regarding valuation
of these dispositions of Federal coal
under the proposed rule. In particular,
we seek information on the costs of
electric power generation and
transmission and whether the proposed
rule would result in royalty increases or
decreases.
Cost—Using Default Provision To Value
Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of Federal
Coal in Lieu of Sales of Electricity
If ONRR were unable to establish
royalty values of Federal coal using the
sales value of electricity generated from
coal produced, royalty value would be
based on a method the lessee proposes
under § 1206.252(b)(2)(i), which ONRR
approves, or on a method that ONRR
determines under § 1206.254. In either
case, ONRR would accept or would
assign a royalty value that would
approximate the market value of the
coal. Whether valuing under
§§ 1206.252(b)(2)(i) or 1206.254, the
lessee and ONRR would employ a
valuation method that uses or
approximates market value. Current coal
valuation regulations also attempt to
provide royalty values that would
approximate the market value of this
coal. Thus, given the low percentage of
non-arm’s-length dispositions of Federal
coal and the use of market-based
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methods to determine royalty value
under the current regulations and the
proposed rule, if valuation does not
follow § 1206.252(a) or § 1206.252(b)(1),
ONRR estimates that the royalty effect of
the proposed rule on lessees of Federal
coal would be nominal.
Cost—Using First Arm’s-Length Sale To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Indian Coal
Currently, lessees of Indian coal sell
their entire production at arm’s-length
so this proposed change would have no
cost impact on lessees of Indian coal.
Cost—Using Sales of Electricity To
Value Non-Arm’s-Length Sales of
Indian Coal
Currently, lessees of Indian coal sell
their entire production at arm’s-length
so this proposed change would have no
cost impact on lessees of Indian coal.
Cost—Using First Arm’s-Length Sale To
Value Sales of Indian Coal Between
Coal Cooperative Members
Currently, no coal cooperatives are
lessees of Indian coal, so we do not
expect there to be any royalty impact as
a result of the proposed rule change.
Cost—DOI Use of Default Provision To
Value Federal Oil, Gas, or Coal and
Indian Coal
As we discussed above, we propose to
add a ‘‘default provision’’ that addresses
valuation when the Secretary cannot
determine the value of production
because of a variety of factors, or the
Secretary determined the value is wrong
for a multitude of reasons (for example,
misconduct). In those cases, the
Secretary would exercise his/her
authority, and considerable discretion,
to establish the reasonable value of
production using a variety of
discretionary factors and any other
information the Secretary believes is
appropriate. This default provision
covers all products (Federal oil, gas and
coal, and Indian coal) and all pertinent
valuation factors (sales, transportation,
processing, and washing).
Based on our experience, ONRR
believes it would rarely use the default
option. We also believe that assigning a
royalty impact figure to any of the
default provisions is speculative
because (1) each instance would be
case-specific, (2) we cannot anticipate
when we would use the option, and (3)
we cannot anticipate the value we
would require companies to pay.
Additionally, we believe the royalty
impact would be relatively small
because the default provisions would
always establish a reasonable value of
production using market-based
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transaction data, which has always been
the basis for our royalty valuation rules
in the first instance.
B. State and Local Governments
This proposed rule would not impose
any additional burden on local
governments. ONRR estimates that the
States this rule impacts would receive
an overall increase in royalties as
follows:
States receiving revenues for offshore
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
Section 8(g) leases would share in a
portion of the increased royalties
resulting from this proposed rule, as
would States receiving revenues from
onshore Federal lands. Based on the
ratio of Federal revenues disbursed to
States for section 8(g) leases and
onshore States we detail in the table
below, ONRR assumed the same
proportion of revenue increases for each
proposal that would impact those State
revenues for most of the provisions.
ROYALTY DISTRIBUTIONS BY LEASE
TYPE
Onshore
(%)
Fed ..................
State ...............
State (8g) ........
Offshore
(%)
8(g)
(%)
50
50
0
100
0
0
73
0
27
Some provisions, such as deepwater
gathering allowances, affect only
Federal revenues, while others, such as
the extraordinary processing allowance,
affect only onshore States and Federal
revenues. The table summarizing the
State and local government royalty
increases we provide in section E details
these differences.
The State distribution for offshore
royalties would increase at some point
in time because of the provisions of the
Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act of
2006 (GOMESA) (Pub. Law No. 109–
432, 120 Stat. 2922). Section 105 of
GOMESA provides Outer Continental
Shelf (OCS) oil and gas revenue sharing
provisions for the four Gulf producing
States (Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Texas) and their eligible coastal
political subdivisions. Through fiscal
year 2016, the only shareable qualified
revenues originate from leases issued
within two small geographic areas.
Beginning in fiscal year 2017, qualified
revenues originating from leases issued
since the passing of GOMESA located
within the balance of the GOM acreage
will also become shareable. The
majority of these leases are not yet
producing. The time necessary to start
production operations and to produce
royalty-bearing quantities varies from
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lease to lease, and these factors directly
influence how the distribution of
offshore royalties will change over time.
None of the leases in these frontier areas
have begun producing, and we believe
it is speculative to anticipate when they
will begin producing royalty-bearing
quantities and impact the distribution of
revenues to States.
C. Indian Lessors
ONRR estimates that the proposed
changes to the coal regulations that
apply to Indian lessors would have no
impact on their royalties.
D. Federal Government
The impact to the Federal
Government, like the States, would be a
net overall increase in royalties as a
result of these proposed changes. In fact,
the royalty increase anticipated by the
Federal Government would be the
difference between the total royalty
increase from industry and the royalty
increase affecting the States. The net
yearly impact on the Federal
Government would be approximately
$61.8 million we detail in section E.
Rule provision
Industry
Gas—replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale ..........................................................................................
Index .........................................................................................................
NGLs—replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale ..........................................................................................
Index .........................................................................................................
Gas transportation limited to 50% ...................................................................
Processing allowance limited to 662⁄3 % .........................................................
POP contracts limited to 662⁄3 % .....................................................................
Extraordinary processing allowance ................................................................
BBB bond rate change for gas transportation .................................................
Eliminate deepwater gathering ........................................................................
Oil Transportation limited to 50% ....................................................................
Oil and gas line losses ....................................................................................
Oil line fill .........................................................................................................
BBB bond rate change for oil transportation ...................................................
Coal—non-arm’s length netback & coop sales ...............................................
Total ..........................................................................................................
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
2. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O.
12866)
This document is a significant rule,
and the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) has reviewed this
proposed rule under Executive Order
12866. We made the assessments that
E.O. 12866 requires, and we provide the
results below.
a. This proposed rule would not have
an effect of $100 million or more on the
economy. It would not adversely affect
in a material way the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
state, local, or tribal governments or
communities. The Summary of Royalty
Impacts table, in item 1 above,
demonstrates that the economic impact
on industry, State and local
governments, and the Federal
Government would be well below the
$100 million threshold the Federal
Government uses to define a rule as
having a significant impact on the
economy.
b. This proposed rule would not
create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action
another agency has taken or planned.
ONRR is the only agency that
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($2,010,000)
(11,300,000)
$1,390,000
7,820,000
$605,000
3,400,000
$13,500
75,700
(256,000)
(1,200,000)
(4,170,000)
(5,440,000)
0
(18,500,000)
(1,640,000)
(20,500,000)
(6,430,000)
(4,570,000)
(1,710,000)
(2,380,000)
0
191,000
896,000
2,890,000
4,060,000
0
9,250,000
1,140,000
20,500,000
5,810,000
4,130,000
1,540,000
2,150,000
0
63,000
295,000
1,260,000
1,340,000
0
9,250,000
494,000
0
594,000
422,000
158,000
220,000
0
1,850
8,650
27,900
39,200
0
0
11,000
0
27,100
19,200
7,190
10,000
0
(80,100,000)
61,800,000
18,100,000
241,000
4. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
This proposed rule is not a major rule
under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act. This proposed rule:
Fmt 4701
In the table below, the negative values
in the Industry column represent their
estimated royalty increases, while the
positive values in the other columns
represent the increase in royalty receipts
by each affected group. For purposes of
this summary table, we assumed that
the average for royalty increases is the
midpoint of our range.
State
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Interior
certifies that this proposed rule would
not have a significant economic effect
on a substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.); see item 1 above for
analysis.
Frm 00035
E. Summary of Royalty Impacts and
Costs to Industry, State and Local
Governments, Indian Lessors, and the
Federal Government.
Federal
promulgates rules for royalty valuation
on Federal oil and gas leases and
Federal and Indian coal leases.
c. This proposed rule would not alter
the budgetary effects of entitlements,
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights or obligations of their recipients.
The scope of this proposed rule does not
have a material impact in any of these
areas.
d. This proposed rule would raise
novel legal or policy issues but would
simplify the valuation regulations, thus
reducing the possibility of impacts as a
result of any novel legal and policy
issues.
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4702
State 8(g)
a. Would not have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more.
We estimate the maximum effect would
be $87,300,000. See item 1 above.
b. Would not cause a major increase
in costs or prices for consumers,
individual industries, Federal, State, or
local government agencies, or
geographic regions. See item 1 above.
c. Would not have significant adverse
effects on competition, employment,
investment, productivity, innovation, or
the ability of U.S.-based enterprises to
compete with foreign-based enterprises.
This proposed rule would be to the
benefit of U.S.-based enterprises and
would be a result of suggestions made
through the Royalty Policy Committee
made up, in part, of industry
representatives.
5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This proposed rule would not impose
an unfunded mandate on state, local, or
tribal governments, or the private sector
of more than $100 million per year. This
proposed rule would not have a
significant or unique effect on State,
local, or tribal governments, or the
private sector. Therefore, we are not
providing a statement containing the
information that the Unfunded
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Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et
seq.) requires. See item 1 above.
6. Takings Implication Assessment (E.O.
12630)
Under the criteria in E.O. 12630, this
proposed rule would not have
significant takings implications. This
proposed rule would apply to Federal
oil, Federal gas, Federal coal, and Indian
coal leases only. This proposed rule
would not be a governmental action
capable of interference with
constitutionally protected property
rights. This proposed rule does not
require a Takings Implication
Assessment.
7. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13132, this
proposed rule would not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
The management of Federal oil leases,
Federal gas leases, and Federal and
Indian coal leases is the responsibility
of the Secretary of the Interior. This
proposed rule would not impose
administrative costs on States or local
governments. Therefore, this proposed
rule would not require a Federalism
Assessment.
8. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This proposed rule would comply
with the requirements of E.O. 12988, for
the reasons we outline in the following
paragraphs.
The proposed rule would meet the
criteria of section 3(a), which requires
that we write and review all regulations
to eliminate errors and ambiguity in
order to minimize litigation.
The proposed rule would meet the
criteria of section 3(b)(2), which
requires that we write all regulations in
clear language with clear legal
standards.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
9. Consultation with Indian Tribes (E.O.
13175)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13175, we
evaluated this proposed rule and
determined it would have potential
effects on federally recognized Indian
tribes. Specifically, this rule would
change the valuation methodology for
coal produced from Indian leases as
discussed above. Accordingly:
(a) We consulted with the affected
tribes on a government-to-government
basis.
(b) We will fully consider tribal views
in the final rule.
10. Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule also refers to, but
does not change, the information
collection requirements that OMB
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already approved under OMB Control
Numbers 1012–0004, 1012–0005, and
1012–0010. Since the proposed rule is
reorganizing our current regulations,
please refer to the Derivations Table in
Section III for specifics. The
corresponding information collection
burden tables will be updated during
their normal renewal cycle. See 5 CFR
1320.4(a)(2).
11. National Environmental Policy Act
This proposed rule would not
constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment. A detailed
statement under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) is not required because this rule
is categorically excluded under: ‘‘(i)
Policies, directives, regulations, and
guidelines: that are of an administrative,
financial, legal, technical, or procedural
nature.’’ See 43 CFR 46.210(i) and the
DOI Departmental Manual, part 516,
section 15.4.D. We also have determined
that this rule is not involved in any of
the extraordinary circumstances listed
in 43 CFR 46.215 that would require
further analysis under NEPA. The
procedural changes resulting from these
amendments would have no
consequences with respect to the
physical environment. This proposed
rule would not alter in any material way
natural resource exploration,
production, or transportation.
12. Data Quality Act
In developing this proposed rule, we
did not conduct or use a study,
experiment, or survey requiring peer
review under the Data Quality Act (Pub.
L. 106–554), also known as the
Information Quality Act. The
Department of the Interior has issued
guidance regarding the quality of
information that it relies on for
regulatory decisions. This guidance is
available on DOI’s Web site at
www.doi.gov/ocio/iq.html.
13. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O.
13211)
This proposed rule would not be a
significant energy action under the
definition in E.O. 13211, and, therefore,
would not require a Statement of Energy
Effects.
14. Clarity of this Regulation
Executive Orders 12866 and 12988
and the Presidential Memorandum of
June 1, 1998, require us to write all rules
in Plain Language. This means that each
rule that we publish must: (a) Have
logical organization; (b) use the active
voice to address readers directly; (c) use
clear language rather than jargon; (d) use
PO 00000
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short sections and sentences; and (e) use
lists and tables wherever possible.
If you feel that we have not met these
requirements, send your comments to
armand.southall@onrr.gov. To better
help us revise the rule, make your
comments as specific as possible. For
example, you should tell us the
numbers of the sections or paragraphs
that you think we wrote unclearly,
which sections or sentences are too
long, the sections where you feel lists or
tables would be useful, etc.
15. Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us, in your comment,
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public view, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
List of Subjects in 30 CFR Parts 1202
and 1206
Coal, Continental shelf, Government
contracts, Indian lands, Mineral
royalties, Natural gas, Petroleum, Public
lands—mineral resources, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: December 18, 2014.
Kris Sarri,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Policy, Management and Budget.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Office of Natural
Resources Revenue proposes to amend
30 CFR parts 1202 and 1206 as set forth
below:
PART 1202—ROYALTIES
1. The authority citation for part 1202
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 et seq., 25 U.S.C.
396 et seq., 396a et seq., 2101 et seq.; 30
U.S.C. 181 et seq., 351 et seq., 1001 et
seq.,1701 et seq.; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C.
1301 et seq.,1331 et seq., and 1801 et seq.
Subpart B—Oil, Gas, and OCS Sulfur,
General
2. In § 1202.51,revise paragraph (b) to
read as follows:
■
§ 1202.51
Scope and definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
´
(b) The definitions in § 1206.20 of this
chapter are applicable to subparts B, C,
D, and J of this part.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 / Proposed Rules
Subpart F—Coal
3. Add § 1202.251 to subpart F to read
as follows:
■
§ 1202.251
royalties?
What coal is subject to
(a) All coal (except coal unavoidably
lost as determined by BLM under 43
CFR part 3400) from a Federal or Indian
lease is subject to royalty. This includes
coal used, sold, or otherwise disposed of
by you on or off the lease.
(b) If you receive compensation for
unavoidably lost coal through insurance
coverage or other arrangements, you
must pay royalties at the rate specified
in the lease on the amount of
compensation you receive for the coal.
No royalty is due on insurance
compensation you received for other
losses.
(c) If you rework waste piles or slurry
ponds to recover coal, you must pay
royalty at the rate specified in the lease
at the time you use, sell, or otherwise
finally dispose of the recovered coal.
(1) The applicable royalty rate
depends on the production method you
used to initially mine the coal contained
in the waste pile or slurry pond (i.e.,
underground mining method or surface
mining method).
(2) You must allocate coal in waste
pits or slurry ponds you initially mined
from Federal or Indian leases to those
Federal or Indian leases regardless of
whether it is stored on Federal or Indian
lands.
(3)You must maintain accurate
records demonstrating how to allocate
the coal in the waste pit or slurry pond
to each individual Federal or Indian
coal lease.
PART 1206—PRODUCT VALUATION
4. The authority citation for part 1206
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 et seq., 25 U.S.C.
396 et seq., 396a et seq., 2101 et seq.; 30
U.S.C. 181 et seq., 351 et seq., 1001 et seq.,
1701 et seq.; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C. 1301
et seq., 1331 et seq., and 1801 et seq.
■
5. Revise subpart A to read as follows:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
Subpart A—General Provisions and
Definitions
Sec.
1206.10 Has the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approved the information
collection requirements in this part?
1206.20 What definitions apply to this part?
Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 1206.10 Has the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) approved the
information collection requirements in this
part?
OMB has approved the information
collection requirement contained in this
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part under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. See 30
CFR part 1210 for details concerning the
estimated reporting burden and how to
comment on the accuracy of the burden
estimate.
§ 1206.20
part?
What definitions apply to this
Ad valorem lease means a lease where
the royalty due to the lessor is based
upon a percentage of the amount or
value of the coal.
Affiliate means a person who
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another person.
For purposes of this subpart:
(1) Ownership or common ownership
of more than 50 percent of the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership,
or other forms of ownership, of another
person constitutes control. Ownership
of less than 10 percent constitutes a
presumption of noncontrol that ONRR
may rebut.
(2) If there is ownership or common
ownership of 10 through 50 percent of
the voting securities or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership,
of another person, ONRR will consider
the following factors to determine if
there is control under the circumstances
of a particular case:
(i) The extent to which there are
common officers or directors;
(ii) With respect to the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership,
or other forms of ownership: the
percentage of ownership or common
ownership, the relative percentage of
ownership or common ownership
compared to the percentage(s) of
ownership by other persons, if a person
is the greatest single owner, or if there
is an opposing voting bloc of greater
ownership;
(iii) Operation of a lease, plant,
pipeline, or other facility;
(iv) The extent of participation by
other owners in operations and day-today management of a lease, plant, or
other facility; and
(v) Other evidence of power to
exercise control over or common control
with another person.
(3) Regardless of any percentage of
ownership or common ownership,
relatives, either by blood or marriage,
are affiliates.
ANS means Alaska North Slope
(ANS).
Area means a geographic region at
least as large as the limits of an oil and/
or gas field, in which oil and/or gas
lease products have similar quality and
economic characteristics. Area
boundaries are not officially designated
and the areas are not necessarily named.
Arm’s-length contract means a
contract or agreement between
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643
independent persons who are not
affiliates and who have opposing
economic interests regarding that
contract. To be considered arm’s length
for any production month, a contract
must satisfy this definition for that
month, as well as when the contract was
executed.
Audit means an examination,
conducted under the generally accepted
Governmental Auditing Standards, of
royalty reporting and payment
compliance activities of lessees,
designees or other persons who pay
royalties, rents, or bonuses on Federal
leases or Indian leases.
BIA means the Bureau of Indian
Affairs, Department of the Interior.
BLM means the Bureau of Land
Management, Department of the
Interior.
BOEM means the Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Department of the
Interior.
BSEE means the Bureau of Safety and
Environmental Enforcement,
Department of the Interior.
Coal means coal of all ranks from
lignite through anthracite.
Coal cooperative means an entity
organized to provide coal or coal-related
services to the entity’s members (who
may also be owners of the entity),
partners, and others. The entity’s
members are commonly electric power
generation companies, electric utilities,
and electric generation and transmission
cooperatives. The entity may operate as
a coal lessee, operator, payor, or affiliate
of these, and may or may not be
organized to make a profit.
Coal washing means any treatment to
remove impurities from coal. Coal
washing may include, but is not limited
to, operations such as flotation, air,
water, or heavy media separation;
drying; and related handling (or
combination thereof).
Compression means the process of
raising the pressure of gas.
Condensate means liquid
hydrocarbons (normally exceeding 40
degrees of API gravity) recovered at the
surface without processing. Condensate
is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons
resulting from condensation of
petroleum hydrocarbons existing
initially in a gaseous phase in an
underground reservoir.
Constraint means a reduction in, or
elimination of, gas flow, deliveries or
sales required by the delivery system.
Contract means any oral or written
agreement, including amendments or
revisions, between two or more persons,
that is enforceable by law and that with
due consideration creates an obligation.
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Designee means the person the lessee
designates to report and pay the lessee’s
royalties for a lease.
Exchange agreement means an
agreement where one person agrees to
deliver oil to another person at a
specified location in exchange for oil
deliveries at another location. Exchange
agreements may or may not specify
prices for the oil involved. They
frequently specify dollar amounts
reflecting location, quality, or other
differentials. Exchange agreements
include buy/sell agreements, which
specify prices to be paid at each
exchange point and may appear to be
two separate sales within the same
agreement. Examples of other types of
exchange agreements include, but are
not limited to, exchanges of produced
oil for specific types of crude oil (e.g.,
West Texas Intermediate); exchanges of
produced oil for other crude oil at other
locations (Location Trades); exchanges
of produced oil for other grades of oil
(Grade Trades); and multi-party
exchanges.
FERC means Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission.
Field means a geographic region
situated over one or more subsurface oil
and gas reservoirs and encompassing at
least the outermost boundaries of all oil
and gas accumulations known within
those reservoirs, vertically projected to
the land surface. State oil and gas
regulatory agencies usually name
onshore fields and designate their
official boundaries. BOEM names and
designates boundaries of OCS fields.
Gas means any fluid, either
combustible or noncombustible,
hydrocarbon or nonhydrocarbon, which
is extracted from a reservoir and which
has neither independent shape nor
volume, but tends to expand
indefinitely. It is a substance that exists
in a gaseous or rarefied state under
standard temperature and pressure
conditions.
Gas plant products means separate
marketable elements, compounds, or
mixtures, whether in liquid, gaseous, or
solid form, resulting from processing
gas, excluding residue gas.
Gathering means the movement of
lease production to a central
accumulation or treatment point on the
lease, unit, or communitized area, or to
a central accumulation or treatment
point off the lease, unit, or
communitized area that BLM or BSEE
approves for onshore and offshore
leases, respectively, including any
movement of bulk production from the
wellhead to a platform offshore.
Geographic region means, for Federal
gas, an area at least as large as the
defined limits of an oil and or gas field
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in which oil and/or gas lease products
have similar quality and economic
characteristics.
Gross proceeds means the total
monies and other consideration
accruing for the disposition of any of the
following:
(1) Oil. Gross proceeds also include,
but are not limited to, the following
examples:
(i) Payments for services such as
dehydration, marketing, measurement,
or gathering which the lessee must
perform at no cost to the Federal
Government;
(ii) The value of services, such as salt
water disposal, that the producer
normally performs but that the buyer
performs on the producer’s behalf;
(iii) Reimbursements for harboring or
terminalling fees, royalties, and any
other reimbursements;
(iv) Tax reimbursements, even though
the Federal royalty interest may be
exempt from taxation;
(v) Payments made to reduce or buy
down the purchase price of oil
produced in later periods, by allocating
such payments over the production
whose price the payment reduces and
including the allocated amounts as
proceeds for the production as it occurs;
and
(vi) Monies and all other
consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled but does
not seek to collect through reasonable
efforts;
(2) Gas, residue gas, and gas plant
products. Gross proceeds also include,
but are not limited to, the following
examples:
(i) Payments for services such as
dehydration, marketing, measurement,
or gathering that the lessee must
perform at no cost to the Federal
Government;
(ii) Reimbursements for royalties, fees,
and any other reimbursements;
(iii) Tax reimbursements, even though
the Federal royalty interest may be
exempt from taxation; and
(iv) Monies and all other
consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled, but
does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts; or
(3) Coal. Gross proceeds also include,
but are not limited to, the following
examples:
(i) Payments for services such as
crushing, sizing, screening, storing,
mixing, loading, treatment with
substances including chemicals or oil,
and other preparation of the coal that
the lessee must perform at no cost to the
Federal Government or Indian lessor;
(ii) Reimbursements for royalties, fees,
and any other reimbursements;
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(iii) Tax reimbursements even though
the Federal or Indian royalty interest
may be exempt from taxation; and
(iv) Monies and all other
consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled, but
does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts.
Index means:
(1) For gas, the calculated composite
price ($/MMBtu) of spot market sales a
publication that meets ONRRestablished criteria for acceptability at
the index pricing point publishes; or
(2) For oil, the calculated composite
price ($/barrel) of spot market sales a
publication that meets ONRRestablished criteria for acceptability at
the index pricing point publishes.
Index pricing point means any point
on a pipeline for which there is an
index, which ONRR-approved
publications may refer to as a trading
location.
Index zone means a field or an area
with an active spot market and
published indices applicable to that
field or an area that is acceptable to
ONRR under § 1206.141(d)(1).
Indian Tribe means any Indian Tribe,
band, nation, pueblo, community,
rancheria, colony, or other group of
Indians for which any minerals or
interest in minerals is held in trust by
the United States or that is subject to
Federal restriction against alienation.
Individual Indian mineral owner
means any Indian for whom minerals or
an interest in minerals is held in trust
by the United States or who holds title
subject to Federal restriction against
alienation.
Keepwhole contract means a
processing agreement under which the
processor delivers to the lessee a
quantity of gas after processing
equivalent to the quantity of gas the
processor received from the lessee prior
to processing, normally based on heat
content, less gas used as plant fuel and
gas unaccounted for and/or lost. This
includes but is not limited to
agreements under which the processor
retains all NGLs it recovered from the
lessee’s gas.
Lease means any contract, profitsharing arrangement, joint venture, or
other agreement issued or approved by
the United States under any mineral
leasing law, including the Indian
Mineral Development Act, 25 U.S.C.
2101–2108, that authorizes exploration
for, extraction of, or removal of lease
products, or the geographical area
covered by that authorization,
whichever is required by the context.
Lease products mean any leased
minerals, attributable to, originating
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from, or allocated to a lease or produced
in association with a lease.
Lessee means any person to whom the
United States, an Indian tribe, and/or
individual Indian mineral owner issues
a lease, and any person who has been
assigned all or a part of record title,
operating rights, or an obligation to
make royalty or other payments
required by the lease. This includes:
(1) Any person who has an interest in
a lease; and
(2) In the case of leases for Indian coal
or Federal coal, an operator, payor, or
other person with no lease interest who
makes royalty payments on the lessee’s
behalf.
Like quality means similar chemical
and physical characteristics.
Location differential means an
amount paid or received (whether in
money or in barrels of oil) under an
exchange agreement that results from
differences in location between oil
delivered in exchange and oil received
in the exchange. A location differential
may represent all or part of the
difference between the price received
for oil delivered and the price paid for
oil received under a buy/sell exchange
agreement.
Market center means a major point
ONRR recognizes for oil sales, refining,
or transshipment. Market centers
generally are locations where ONRRapproved publications publish oil spot
prices.
Marketable condition means lease
products which are sufficiently free
from impurities and otherwise in a
condition that they will be accepted by
a purchaser under a sales contract
typical for the field or area for Federal
oil and gas, and region for Federal and
Indian coal.
Mine means an underground or
surface excavation or series of
excavations and the surface or
underground support facilities that
contribute directly or indirectly to
mining, production, preparation, and
handling of lease products.
Misconduct means any failure to
perform a duty owed to the United
States under a statute, regulation, or
lease, or unlawful or improper behavior,
regardless of the mental state of the
lessee or any individual employed by or
associated with the lessee.
Net output means the quantity of:
(1) Residue gas and each gas plant
product that a processing plant
produces; or
(2) The quantity of washed coal that
a coal wash plant produces.
Netting means reducing the reported
sales value to account for an allowance
instead of reporting the allowance as a
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separate entry on Form ONRR–2014 or
Form ONRR–4430.
NGLs means natural gas liquids.
NYMEX price means the average of
the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX) settlement prices for light
sweet crude oil delivered at Cushing,
Oklahoma, calculated as follows:
(1) Sum the prices published for each
day during the calendar month of
production (excluding weekends and
holidays) for oil to be delivered in the
prompt month corresponding to each
such day; and
(2) Divide the sum by the number of
days on which those prices are
published (excluding weekends and
holidays).
Oil means a mixture of hydrocarbons
that existed in the liquid phase in
natural underground reservoirs, remains
liquid at atmospheric pressure after
passing through surface separating
facilities, and is marketed or used as a
liquid. Condensate recovered in lease
separators or field facilities is oil.
ONRR means the Office of Natural
Resources Revenue, Department of the
Interior.
ONRR-approved commercial price
bulletin means a publication ONRR
approves for determining NGLs prices.
ONRR-approved publication means:
(1) For oil, a publication ONRR
approves for determining ANS spot
prices or WTI differentials; or
(2) For gas, a publication ONRR
approves for determining index pricing
points.
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means
all submerged lands lying seaward and
outside of the area of lands beneath
navigable waters as defined in Section
2 of the Submerged Lands Act (43
U.S.C. 1301) and of which the subsoil
and seabed appertain to the United
States and are subject to its jurisdiction
and control.
Payor means any person who reports
and pays royalties under a lease,
regardless of whether that person also is
a lessee.
Person means any individual, firm,
corporation, association, partnership,
consortium, or joint venture (when
established as a separate entity).
Processing means any process
designed to remove elements or
compounds (hydrocarbon and
nonhydrocarbon) from gas, including
absorption, adsorption, or refrigeration.
Field processes which normally take
place on or near the lease, such as
natural pressure reduction, mechanical
separation, heating, cooling,
dehydration, and compression, are not
considered processing. The changing of
pressures and/or temperatures in a
reservoir is not considered processing.
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The use of a Joules-Thompson (JT) unit
to remove NGLs from gas is considered
processing regardless of where the JT
unit is located provided that you market
the NGLs as NGLs.
Processing allowance means a
deduction in determining royalty value
for the reasonable, actual costs the
lessee incurs for processing gas.
Prompt month means the nearest
month of delivery for which NYMEX
futures prices are published during the
trading month.
Quality differential means an amount
paid or received under an exchange
agreement (whether in money or in
barrels of oil) that results from
differences in API gravity, sulfur
content, viscosity, metals content, and
other quality factors between oil
delivered and oil received in the
exchange. A quality differential may
represent all or part of the difference
between the price received for oil
delivered and the price paid for oil
received under a buy/sell agreement.
Region for coal means the eight
Federal coal production regions, which
the Bureau of Land Management
designates as follows: Denver-Raton
Mesa Region, Fort Union Region, Green
River-Hams Fork Region, Powder River
Region, San Juan River Region,
Southern Appalachian Region, UintaSouthwestern Utah Region, and Western
Interior Region. See 44 FR 65197 (1979).
Residue gas means that hydrocarbon
gas consisting principally of methane
resulting from processing gas.
Rocky Mountain Region means the
States of Colorado, Montana, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming, except for those portions of
the San Juan Basin and other oilproducing fields in the ‘‘Four Corners’’
area that lie within Colorado and Utah.
Roll means an adjustment to the
NYMEX price that is calculated as
follows: Roll = .6667 × (P0¥P1) + .3333
× (P0¥P2), where: P0 = the average of the
daily NYMEX settlement prices for
deliveries during the prompt month that
is the same as the month of production,
as published for each day during the
trading month for which the month of
production is the prompt month; P1 =
the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during
the month following the month of
production, published for each day
during the trading month for which the
month of production is the prompt
month; and P2 = the average of the daily
NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries
during the second month following the
month of production, as published for
each day during the trading month for
which the month of production is the
prompt month. Calculate the average of
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the daily NYMEX settlement prices
using only the days on which such
prices are published (excluding
weekends and holidays).
(1) Example 1. Prices in Out Months are
Lower Going Forward: The month of
production for which you must determine
royalty value is December. December was the
prompt month (for year 2011) from October
21 through November 18. January was the
first month following the month of
production, and February was the second
month following the month of production. P0
therefore is the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during
December published for each business day
between October 21 and November 18. P1 is
the average of the daily NYMEX settlement
prices for deliveries during January
published for each business day between
October 21 and November 18. P2 is the
average of the daily NYMEX settlement
prices for deliveries during February
published for each business day between
October 21 and November 18. In this
example, assume that P0 = $95.08 per bbl, P1
= $95.03 per bbl, and P2 = $94.93 per bbl. In
this example (a declining market), Roll =
.6667 × ($95.08¥$95.03) + .3333 ×
($95.08¥$94.93) = $0.03 + $0.05 = $0.08.
You add this number to the NYMEX price.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
(2) Example 2. Prices in Out Months are
Higher Going Forward: The month of
production for which you must determine
royalty value is November. November was
the prompt month (for year 2012) from
September 21 through October 22. December
was the first month following the month of
production, and January was the second
month following the month of production. P0
therefore is the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during
November published for each business day
between September 21 and October 22. P1 is
the average of the daily NYMEX settlement
prices for deliveries during December
published for each business day between
September 21 and October 22. P2 is the
average of the daily NYMEX settlement
prices for deliveries during January
published for each business day between
September 21 and October 22. In this
example, assume that P0 = $91.28 per bbl, P1
= $91.65 per bbl, and P2 = $92.10 per bbl. In
this example (a rising market), Roll = .6667
× ($91.28¥$91.65) + .3333 ×
($91.28¥$92.10) = (¥$0.25) + (¥$0.27) =
(¥$0.52). You add this negative number to
the NYMEX price (effectively a subtraction
from the NYMEX price).
Sale means a contract between two
persons where:
(1) The seller unconditionally
transfers title to the oil, gas, gas plant
product, or coal to the buyer and does
not retain any related rights such as the
right to buy back similar quantities of
oil, gas, gas plant product, or coal from
the buyer elsewhere;
(2) The buyer pays money or other
consideration for the oil, gas, gas plant
product, or coal; and
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(3) The parties’ intent is for a sale of
the oil, gas, gas plant product, or coal
to occur.
Section 6 lease means an OCS lease
subject to section 6 of the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act, as
amended, 43 U.S.C. 1335.
Short tons means 2000 pounds.
Spot price means the price under a
spot sales contract where:
(1) A seller agrees to sell to a buyer
a specified amount of oil at a specified
price over a specified period of short
duration;
(2) No cancellation notice is required
to terminate the sales agreement; and
(3) There is no obligation or implied
intent to continue to sell in subsequent
periods.
Tonnage means tons of coal measured
in short tons.
Trading month means the period
extending from the second business day
before the 25th day of the second
calendar month preceding the delivery
month (or, if the 25th day of that month
is a non-business day, the second
business day before the last business
day preceding the 25th day of that
month) through the third business day
before the 25th day of the calendar
month preceding the delivery month
(or, if the 25th day of that month is a
non-business day, the third business
day before the last business day
preceding the 25th day of that month),
unless the NYMEX publishes a different
definition or different dates on its
official Web site, www.nymex.com, in
which case the NYMEX definition will
apply.
Transportation allowance means a
deduction in determining royalty value
for the reasonable, actual costs the
lessee incurs for moving:
(1) Oil to a point of sale or delivery
off the lease, unit area, or communitized
area. The transportation allowance does
not include gathering costs; or
(2) Unprocessed gas, residue gas, or
gas plant products to a point of sale or
delivery off the lease, unit area, or
communitized area, or away from a
processing plant. The transportation
allowance does not include gathering
costs; or
(3) Coal to a point of sale remote from
both the lease and mine or wash plant.
Washing allowance means a
deduction in determining royalty value
for the reasonable, actual costs the
lessee incurs for coal washing.
WTI differential means the average of
the daily mean differentials for location
and quality between a grade of crude oil
at a market center and West Texas
Intermediate (WTI) crude oil at Cushing
published for each day for which price
publications perform surveys for
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deliveries during the production month,
calculated over the number of days on
which those differentials are published
(excluding weekends and holidays).
Calculate the daily mean differentials by
averaging the daily high and low
differentials for the month in the
selected publication. Use only the days
and corresponding differentials for
which such differentials are published.
■ 6. Revise subpart C to read as follows:
Subpart C—Federal Oil
Sec.
1206.100 What is the purpose of this
subpart?
1206.101 How do I calculate royalty value
for oil I or my affiliate sell(s) under an
arm’s-length contract?
1206.102 How do I value oil that is not sold
under an arm’s-length contract?
1206.103 What publications does ONRR
approve?
1206.104 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
1206.105 How will ONRR determine the
value of my oil for royalty purposes?
1206.106 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of value under
this subpart?
1206.107 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.108 How do I request a value
determination?
1206.109 Does ONRR protect information I
provide?
1206.110 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
1206.111 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract?
1206.112 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I do not have
an arm’s-length transportation contract?
1206.113 What adjustments and
transportation allowances apply when I
value oil production from my lease using
NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices?
1206.114 How will ONRR identify market
centers?
1206.115 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.116 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.117 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
1206.118 What reporting adjustments must
I make for transportation allowances?
1206.119 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
Subpart C—Federal Oil
§ 1206.100
subpart?
What is the purpose of this
(a) This subpart applies to all oil
produced from Federal oil and gas
leases onshore and on the OCS. It
explains how you as a lessee must
calculate the value of production for
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royalty purposes consistent with
mineral leasing laws, other applicable
laws, and lease terms.
(b) If you are a designee and if you
dispose of production on behalf of a
lessee, the terms ‘‘you’’ and ‘‘your’’ in
this subpart refer to you and not to the
lessee. In this circumstance, you must
determine and report royalty value for
the lessee’s oil by applying the rules in
this subpart to your disposition of the
lessee’s oil.
(c) If you are a designee and only
report for a lessee and do not dispose of
the lessee’s production, references to
‘‘you’’ and ‘‘your’’ in this subpart refer
to the lessee and not the designee. In
this circumstance, you as a designee
must determine and report royalty value
for the lessee’s oil by applying the rules
in this subpart to the lessee’s
disposition of its oil.
(d) If the regulations in this subpart
are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute;
(2) A settlement agreement between
the United States and a lessee resulting
from administrative or judicial
litigation;
(3) A written agreement between the
lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the
value of production from any lease that
ONRR expects at least would
approximate the value established
under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of an oil and
gas lease subject to this subpart, then
the statute, settlement agreement,
written agreement, or lease provision
will govern to the extent of the
inconsistency.
(e) ONRR may audit, monitor, or
review and adjust all royalty payments.
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§ 1206.101 How do I calculate royalty value
for oil I or my affiliate sell(s) under an
arm’s-length contract?
(a) The value of oil under this section
for royalty purposes is the gross
proceeds accruing to you or your
affiliate under the arm’s-length contract
less applicable allowances determined
under § 1206.111 or § 1206.112. This
value does not apply if you exercise an
option to use a different value provided
in paragraph (c)(1) or (c)(2)(i) of this
section or if ONRR decides to value
your oil under § 1206.105. You must use
this paragraph (a) to value oil when:
(1) You sell under an arm’s-length
sales contract; or
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate
or another person under a non-arm’slength contract and that affiliate or
person, or another affiliate of either of
them, then sells the oil under an arm’slength contract, unless you exercise the
option provided in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of
this section.
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(b) If you have multiple arm’s-length
contracts to sell oil produced from a
lease that is valued under paragraph (a)
of this section, the value of the oil is the
volume-weighted average of the values
established under this section for each
contract for the sale of oil produced
from that lease.
(c)(1) If you enter into an arm’s-length
exchange agreement, or multiple
sequential arm’s-length exchange
agreements, and following the
exchange(s) you or your affiliate sell(s)
the oil received in the exchange(s)
under an arm’s-length contract, then
you may use either § 1206.101(a) or
§ 1206.102 to value your production for
royalty purposes. If you fail to make the
election required under this paragraph,
you may not make a retroactive election
and ONRR may decide your value under
§ 1206.105.
(i) If you use § 1206.101(a), your gross
proceeds are the gross proceeds under
your or your affiliate’s arm’s-length
sales contract after the exchange(s)
occur(s). You must adjust your gross
proceeds for any location or quality
differential, or other adjustments, you
received or paid under the arm’s-length
exchange agreement(s). If ONRR
determines that any arm’s-length
exchange agreement does not reflect
reasonable location or quality
differentials, ONRR may decide your
value under § 1206.105. You may not
otherwise use the price or differential
specified in an arm’s-length exchange
agreement to value your production.
(ii) When you elect under
§ 1206.101(c)(1) to use § 1206.101(a) or
§ 1206.102, you must make the same
election for all of your production from
the same unit, communitization
agreement, or lease (if the lease is not
part of a unit or communitization
agreement) sold under arm’s-length
contracts following arm’s-length
exchange agreements. You may not
change your election more often than
once every 2 years.
(2)(i) If you sell or transfer your oil
production to your affiliate and that
affiliate or another affiliate then sells the
oil under an arm’s-length contract, you
may use either § 1206.101(a) or
§ 1206.102 to value your production for
royalty purposes.
(ii) When you elect under
§ 1206.101(c)(2)(i) to use § 1206.101(a)
or § 1206.102, you must make the same
election for all of your production from
the same unit, communitization
agreement, or lease (if the lease is not
part of a unit or communitization
agreement) that your affiliates resell at
arm’s-length. You may not change your
election more often than once every 2
years.
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647
§ 1206.102 How do I value oil not sold
under an arm’s-length contract?
This section explains how to value oil
that you may not value under
§ 1206.101 or that you elect under
§ 1206.101(c)(1) to value under this
section, unless ONRR decides to value
your oil under 1206.105. First,
determine if paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of
this section applies to production from
your lease, or if you may apply
paragraph (d) or (e) with ONRR
approval.
(a) Production from leases in
California or Alaska. Value is the
average of the daily mean ANS spot
prices published in any ONRR-approved
publication during the trading month
most concurrent with the production
month. For example, if the production
month is June, calculate the average of
the daily mean prices using the daily
ANS spot prices published in the
ONRR-approved publication for all the
business days in June.
(1) To calculate the daily mean spot
price, you must average the daily high
and low prices for the month in the
selected publication.
(2) You must use only the days and
corresponding spot prices for which
such prices are published.
(3) You must adjust the value for
applicable location and quality
differentials, and you may adjust it for
transportation costs, under § 1206.111.
(4) After you select an ONRRapproved publication, you may not
select a different publication more often
than once every 2 years, unless the
publication you use is no longer
published or ONRR revokes its approval
of the publication. If you must change
publications, you must begin a new 2year period.
(b) Production from leases in the
Rocky Mountain Region. This paragraph
provides methods and options for
valuing your production under different
factual situations. You must
consistently apply paragraph (b)(2) or
(3) of this section to value all of your
production from the same unit,
communitization agreement, or lease (if
the lease or a portion of the lease is not
part of a unit or communitization
agreement) that you cannot value under
§ 1206.101 or that you elect under
§ 1206.101(c)(1) to value under this
section.
(1) You may elect to value your oil
under either paragraph (b)(2) or (3) of
this section. After you select either
paragraph (b)(2) or (3) of this section,
you may not change to the other method
more often than once every 2 years,
unless the method you have been using
is no longer applicable and you must
apply the other paragraph. If you change
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methods, you must begin a new 2-year
period.
(2) Value is the volume-weighted
average of the gross proceeds accruing
to the seller under your or your
affiliate’s arm’s-length contracts for the
purchase or sale of production from the
field or area during the production
month.
(i) The total volume purchased or sold
under those contracts must exceed 50
percent of your and your affiliate’s
production from both Federal and nonFederal leases in the same field or area
during that month.
(ii) Before calculating the volumeweighted average, you must normalize
the quality of the oil in your or your
affiliate’s arm’s-length purchases or
sales to the same gravity as that of the
oil produced from the lease.
(3) Value is the NYMEX price
(without the roll), adjusted for
applicable location and quality
differentials and transportation costs
under § 1206.113.
(4) If you demonstrate to ONRR’s
satisfaction that paragraphs (b)(2)
through (3) of this section result in an
unreasonable value for your production
as a result of circumstances regarding
that production, the ONRR Director may
establish an alternative valuation
method.
(c) Production from leases not located
in California, Alaska, or the Rocky
Mountain Region. (1) Value is the
NYMEX price, plus the roll, adjusted for
applicable location and quality
differentials and transportation costs
under § 1206.113.
(2) If the ONRR Director determines
that use of the roll no longer reflects
prevailing industry practice in crude oil
sales contracts or that the most common
formula used by industry to calculate
the roll changes, ONRR may terminate
or modify use of the roll under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section at the
end of each 2-year period [EFFECTIVE
DATE OF THE FINAL RULE], through
notice published in the Federal Register
not later than 60 days before the end of
the 2-year period. ONRR will explain
the rationale for terminating or
modifying the use of the roll in this
notice.
(d) Unreasonable value. If ONRR
determines that the NYMEX price or
ANS spot price does not represent a
reasonable royalty value in any
particular case, ONRR may decide to
value your oil under § 1206.105.
(e) Production delivered to your
refinery and the NYMEX price or ANS
spot price is an unreasonable value. If
ONRR determines that the NYMEX
price or ANS spot price does not
represent a reasonable royalty value in
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any particular case, ONRR may decide
to value under § 1206.105.
§ 1206.103
approve?
What publications does ONRR
(a) ONRR periodically will publish to
www.onrr.gov a list of ONRR-approved
publications for the NYMEX price and
ANS spot price based on certain criteria
including, but not limited to:
(1) Publications buyers and sellers
frequently use;
(2) Publications frequently mentioned
in purchase or sales contracts;
(3) Publications that use adequate
survey techniques, including
development of estimates based on daily
surveys of buyers and sellers of crude
oil, and, for ANS spot prices, buyers and
sellers of ANS crude oil; and
(4) Publications independent from
ONRR, other lessors, and lessees.
(b) Any publication may petition
ONRR to be added to the list of
acceptable publications.
(c) ONRR will specify the tables you
must use in the acceptable publications.
(d) ONRR may revoke its approval of
a particular publication if it determines
that the prices or differentials published
in the publication do not accurately
represent NYMEX prices or differentials
or ANS spot market prices or
differentials.
§ 1206.104 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and
audit the royalties you report, and, if
ONRR determines that your reported
value is inconsistent with the
requirements of this subpart, ONRR may
direct you to use a different measure of
royalty value or decide your value
under § 1206.105.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a
different royalty value, you must either
pay any additional royalties due, plus
late payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter)
or report a credit for, or request a refund
of, any overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this
subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR
will examine if your or your affiliate’s
contract reflects the total consideration
actually transferred, either directly or
indirectly, from the buyer to you or your
affiliate for the oil. If ONRR determines
that a contract does not reflect the total
consideration, ONRR may decide your
value under § 1206.105.
(c) ONRR may decide your value
under § 1206.105 if ONRR determines
that the gross proceeds accruing to you
or your affiliate under a contract do not
reflect reasonable consideration
because:
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(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) You have breached your duty to
market the oil for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor by selling your
oil at a value that is unreasonably low.
ONRR may consider a sales price to be
unreasonably low if it is 10 percent less
than the lowest reasonable measures of
market price, including but not limited
to, index prices and prices reported to
ONRR for like quality oil; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly valued your oil under
§ 1206.101 or § 1206.102 for any reason,
including but not limited to, you or your
affiliate’s failure to provide documents
ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart B.
(d) You have the burden of
demonstrating that your or your
affiliate’s contract is arm’s-length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify
that the provisions in your or your
affiliate’s contract include all of the
consideration the buyer paid you or
your affiliate, either directly or
indirectly, for the oil.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or
amendment, if you or your affiliate
fail(s) to take proper or timely action to
receive prices or benefits to which you
or your affiliate are entitled, you must
pay royalty based upon that obtainable
price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely
application for a price increase or
benefit allowed under your or your
affiliate’s contract but the purchaser
refuses and you or your affiliate take
reasonable documented measures to
force purchaser compliance, you will
not owe additional royalties unless or
until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration
resulting from the price increase. You
may not construe this paragraph to
permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where
a purchaser fails to pay, in whole or in
part, or timely, for a quantity of oil.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make
all contracts, contract revisions, or
amendments in writing and all parties
to the contract must sign the contract,
contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to
comply with paragraph (g)(1) of this
section, ONRR may determine your
value under § 1206.105.
(3) This provision applies
notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
§ 1206.105 How will ONRR determine the
value of my oil for royalty purposes?
If ONRR decides that it will value
your oil for royalty purposes under
§ 1206.104, or any other provision in
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this subpart, then ONRR will determine
value, for royalty purposes, by
considering any information we deem
relevant, which may include, but is not
limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality oil in the
same field or nearby fields or areas;
(b) The value of like-quality oil from
the refinery or area;
(c) Public sources of price or market
information that ONRR deems reliable;
(d) Information available and reported
to ONRR, including but not limited to,
on Form ONRR–2014 and Form ONRR–
4054;
(e) Costs of transportation or
processing if ONRR determines they are
applicable; or
(f) Any information ONRR deems
relevant regarding the particular lease
operation or the salability of the oil.
§ 1206.106 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of value under this
subpart?
If you determine the value of your oil
under this subpart, you must retain all
data relevant to the determination of
royalty value.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the value you
reported, including all adjustments for
location, quality, and transportation;
and
(2) How you complied with these
rules.
(b) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
(c) ONRR may review and audit your
data, and ONRR will direct you to use
a different value if it determines that the
reported value is inconsistent with the
requirements of this subpart.
§ 1206.107 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable condition
and to market production?
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
(a) You must place oil in marketable
condition and market the oil for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the
lessor at no cost to the Federal
Government.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an
arm’s-length contract in determining
value, you must increase those gross
proceeds to the extent that the
purchaser, or any other person, provides
certain services that the seller normally
would be responsible to perform to
place the oil in marketable condition or
to market the oil.
§ 1206.108 How do I request a value
determination?
(a) You may request a value
determination from ONRR regarding any
oil produced. Your request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases
involved, all interest owners of those
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leases, the designee(s), and the
operator(s) for those leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant
facts. You must inform ONRR of any
changes to relevant facts that occur
before we respond to your request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant
documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the
issue(s), including citations to all
relevant precedents (including adverse
precedents); and
(6) Suggest your proposed valuation
method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR
may:
(1) Request that the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a valuation determination;
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue
guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR
will not provide a determination or
guidance. Situations in which ONRR
typically will not provide any
determination or guidance include, but
are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on
hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of
pending litigation or administrative
appeals.
(c)(1) A value determination the
Assistant Secretary for Policy,
Management and Budget signs is
binding on both you and ONRR until
the Assistant Secretary modifies or
rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues
a value determination, you must make
any adjustments to royalty payments
that follow from the determination and,
if you owe additional royalties, you
must pay the additional royalties due,
plus late payment interest calculated
under §§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this
chapter.
(3) A value determination the
Assistant Secretary signs is the final
action of the Department and is subject
to judicial review under 5 U.S.C. 701–
706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not
binding on ONRR, delegated States, or
you with respect to the specific
situation addressed in the guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR’s decision
whether or not to issue guidance or
request an Assistant Secretary
determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not
appealable decisions or orders under 30
CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring
you to pay royalty on the same basis as
the guidance, you may appeal that order
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary
may use any of the applicable valuation
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criteria in this subpart to provide
guidance or make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute
or regulation on which ONRR or the
Assistant Secretary based any
determination or guidance takes
precedence over the determination or
guidance, regardless of whether ONRR
or the Assistant Secretary modifies or
rescinds the determination or guidance.
(g) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary
generally will not retroactively modify
or rescind a value determination issued
under paragraph (d) of this section,
unless:
(1) There was a misstatement or
omission of material facts; or
(2) The facts subsequently developed
are materially different from the facts on
which the guidance was based.
(h) ONRR may make requests and
replies under this section available to
the public, subject to the confidentiality
requirements under § 1206.109.
§ 1206.109
I provide?
Does ONRR protect information
(a) Certain information you or your
affiliate submit(s) to ONRR regarding
valuation of oil, including
transportation allowances, may be
exempt from disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and
regulations permit, ONRR will keep
confidential any data you or your
affiliate submit(s) that is privileged,
confidential, or otherwise exempt from
disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all
requests for information under the
Freedom of Information Act regulations
of the Department of the Interior at 43
CFR part 2.
§ 1206.110 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
(a) ONRR will allow a deduction for
the reasonable, actual costs to transport
oil from the lease to the point off the
lease under § 1206.110, § 1206.111, or
§ 1206.112, as applicable. You may not
deduct transportation costs you incur to
move a particular volume of production
to reduce royalties you owe on
production for which you did not incur
those costs. This paragraph applies
when:
(1) You value oil under § 1206.101
based on a sale at a point off the lease,
unit, or communitized area where the
oil is produced;
(2)(i) The movement to the sales point
is not gathering.
(ii) For oil produced on the OCS, the
movement of oil from the wellhead to
the first platform is not transportation;
and
(3) You do not value your oil under
§ 1206.102(a)(3) or (b)(3).
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(b) You must calculate the deduction
for transportation costs based on your or
your affiliate’s cost of transporting each
product through each individual
transportation system. If your or your
affiliate’s transportation contract
includes more than one liquid product,
you must allocate costs consistently and
equitably to each of the liquid products
transported. Your allocation must use
the same proportion as the ratio of the
volume of each liquid product
(excluding waste products with no
value) to the volume of all liquid
products (excluding waste products
with no value).
(1) You may not take an allowance for
transporting lease production that is not
royalty-bearing.
(2) You may propose to ONRR a
prospective cost allocation method
based on the values of the liquid
products transported. ONRR will
approve the method if it is consistent
with the purposes of the regulations in
this subpart.
(3) You may use your proposed
procedure to calculate a transportation
allowance beginning with the
production month following the month
ONRR received your proposed
procedure until ONRR accepts or rejects
your cost allocation. If ONRR rejects
your cost allocation, you must amend
your Form ONRR–2014 for the months
that you used the rejected method and
pay any additional royalty due, plus late
payment interest.
(c)(1) Where you or your affiliate
transport(s) both gaseous and liquid
products through the same
transportation system, you must
propose a cost allocation procedure to
ONRR.
(2) You may use your proposed
procedure to calculate a transportation
allowance until ONRR accepts or rejects
your cost allocation. If ONRR rejects
your cost allocation, you must amend
your Form ONRR–2014 for the months
that you used the rejected method and
pay any additional royalty and interest
due.
(3) You must submit your initial
proposal, including all available data,
within 3 months after you first claim the
allocated deductions on Form ONRR–
2014.
(d)(1) Your transportation allowance
may not exceed 50 percent of the value
of the oil as determined under
§ 1206.101 of this subpart.
(2) If ONRR approved your request to
take a transportation allowance in
excess of the 50-percent limitation
under former § 1206.109(c), that
approval is terminated as of [effective
date of final rule].
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(e) You must express transportation
allowances for oil as a dollar-value
equivalent. If your or your affiliate’s
payments for transportation under a
contract are not on a dollar-per-unit
basis, you must convert whatever
consideration you or your affiliate are
paid to a dollar-value equivalent.
(f) ONRR may determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.105 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length transportation
contract does not reflect the reasonable
cost of the transportation because you
breached your duty to market the oil for
the mutual benefit of yourself and the
lessor by transporting your oil at a cost
that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance to
be unreasonably high if it is 10 percent
higher than the highest reasonable
measures of transportation costs,
including but not limited to,
transportation allowances reported to
ONRR and tariffs for gas, residue gas, or
gas plant product transported through
the same system; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly calculated a transportation
allowance under § 1206.111 or
§ 1206.112 for any reason, including,
but not limited to, your or your
affiliate’s failure to provide documents
ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart B.
(g) You do not need ONRR approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance.
§ 1206.111 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an arm’slength transportation contract?
(a)(1) If you or your affiliate incur
transportation costs under an arm’slength transportation contract, you may
claim a transportation allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred as
more fully explained in paragraph (b) of
this section, except as provided in
§ 1206.110(f) and subject to the
limitation in § 1206.110(d).
(2) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is at
arm’s-length.
(3) You do not need ONRR approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs incurred under an
arm’s-length transportation contract.
(b) Subject to the requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section, you may
include, but are not limited to the
following costs to determine your
transportation allowance under
paragraph (a) of this section. You may
not use any cost as a deduction that
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duplicates all or part of any other cost
that you use under this section.
(1) The amount that you pay under
your arm’s-length transportation
contract or tariff.
(2) Fees paid (either in volume or in
value) for actual or theoretical line
losses.
(3) Fees paid for administration of a
quality bank.
(4) Fees paid to a terminal operator for
loading and unloading of crude oil into
or from a vessel, vehicle, pipeline, or
other conveyance.
(5) Fees paid for short-term storage
(30 days or less) incidental to
transportation as required by a
transporter.
(6) Fees paid to pump oil to another
carrier’s system or vehicles as required
under a tariff.
(7) Transfer fees paid to a hub
operator associated with physical
movement of crude oil through the hub
when you do not sell the oil at the hub.
These fees do not include title transfer
fees.
(8) Payments for a volumetric
deduction to cover shrinkage when
high-gravity petroleum (generally in
excess of 51 degrees API) is mixed with
lower gravity crude oil for
transportation.
(9) Costs of securing a letter of credit,
or other surety, that the pipeline
requires you as a shipper to maintain.
(10) Hurricane surcharges you or your
affiliate actually pay(s).
(c) You may not include the following
costs to determine your transportation
allowance under paragraph (a) of this
section:
(1) Fees paid for long-term storage
(more than 30 days);
(2) Administrative, handling, and
accounting fees associated with
terminalling;
(3) Title and terminal transfer fees;
(4) Fees paid to track and match
receipts and deliveries at a market
center or to avoid paying title transfer
fees;
(5) Fees paid to brokers;
(6) Fees paid to a scheduling service
provider;
(7) Internal costs, including salaries
and related costs, rent/space costs,
office equipment costs, legal fees, and
other costs to schedule, nominate, and
account for sale or movement of
production;
(8) Gauging fees; and
(9) The cost of carrying on your books
as inventory a volume of oil that you or
your affiliate, as the pipeline operator,
maintain(s) in the line as line fill.
(d) If you have no written contract for
the arm’s-length transportation of oil,
then ONRR will determine your
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transportation allowance under
§ 1206.105. You may not use this
paragraph (d) if you or your affiliate
perform(s) your own transportation.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.108(a).
(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues its determination.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.112 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I do not have an
arm’s-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
transportation contract, including
situations where you or your affiliate
provide your own transportation
services. You must calculate your
transportation allowance based on your
or your affiliate’s reasonable, actual
costs for transportation during the
reporting period using the procedures
prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate’s actual costs
may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(e), (f), and (g) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (h) of
this section; and
(3)(i) Depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment under
paragraph (i)(1) of this section, or you
may elect to use a cost equal to a return
on the initial depreciable capital
investment in the transportation system
under paragraph (i)(2) of this section.
After you have elected to use either
method for a transportation system, you
may not later elect to change to the
other alternative without ONRR
approval. If ONRR accepts your request
to change methods, you may use your
changed method beginning with the
production month following the month
ONRR received your change request;
and
(ii) A return on the reasonable salvage
value under paragraph (i)(1)(iii) of this
section, after you have depreciated the
transportation system to its reasonable
salvage value.
(c) To the extent not included in costs
identified in paragraphs (e) through (h)
of this section;
(1) If you or your affiliate incur(s) the
following actual costs under your or
your affiliate’s non-arm’s-length
contract, you may include these costs in
your calculations under this section.
(i) Fees paid to a non-affiliated
terminal operator for loading and
unloading of crude oil into or from a
vessel, vehicle, pipeline, or other
conveyance.
(ii) Transfer fees paid to a hub
operator associated with physical
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movement of crude oil through the hub
when you do not sell the oil at the hub.
These fees do not include title transfer
fees.
(iii) A volumetric deduction to cover
shrinkage when high-gravity petroleum
(generally in excess of 51 degrees API)
is mixed with lower gravity crude oil for
transportation.
(iv) Fees paid to a non-affiliated
quality bank administrator for
administration of a quality bank.
(2) You may not include in your
transportation allowance:
(i) Any of the costs identified under
§ 1206.111(c); and
(ii) Fees paid (either in volume or in
value) for actual or theoretical line
losses.
(d) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
any other cost that you use under this
section.
(e) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment) that
are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(f) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(i) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(ii) Operations labor;
(iii) Fuel;
(iv) Utilities;
(v) Materials;
(vi) Ad valorem property taxes;
(vii) Rent;
(viii) Supplies; and
(ix) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense that you
can document.
(g) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(1) Maintenance of the transportation
system;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(h) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation
system, is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance
taxes and other fees, including royalties,
are not allowable expenses.
(i)(1) To calculate depreciation and a
return on undepreciated capital
investment, you may elect to use either
a straight-line depreciation method
(based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves that the
transportation system services) or a unit
of production method. After you make
an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If
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651
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request.
(i) A change in ownership of a
transportation system will not alter the
depreciation schedule the original
transporter/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(ii) You may depreciate a
transportation system, with or without a
change in ownership, only once.
(iii)(A) To calculate the return on
undepreciated capital investment, you
may use an amount equal to the
undepreciated capital investment in the
transportation system multiplied by the
rate of return you determine under
paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(B) After you have depreciated a
transportation system to the reasonable
salvage value, you may continue to
include in the allowance calculation a
cost equal to the reasonable salvage
value multiplied by a rate of return
under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(2) As an alternative to using
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as
provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, you may use as a cost an
amount equal to the allowable initial
capital investment in the transportation
system multiplied by the rate of return
determined under paragraph (i)(3) of
this section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(3) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(i) You must use the monthly average
BBB rate that Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
(ii) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
§ 1206.113 What adjustments and
transportation allowances apply when I
value oil production from my lease using
NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices?
This section applies when you use
NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices to
calculate the value of production under
§ 1206.102. As specified in this section,
you must adjust the NYMEX price to
reflect the difference in value between
your lease and Cushing, Oklahoma, or
adjust the ANS spot price to reflect the
difference in value between your lease
and the appropriate ONRR-recognized
market center at which the ANS spot
price is published (for example, Long
Beach, California, or San Francisco,
California). Paragraph (a) of this section
explains how you adjust the value
between the lease and the market center,
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and paragraph (b) of this section
explains how you adjust the value
between the market center and Cushing
when you use NYMEX prices. Paragraph
(c) of this section explains how
adjustments may be made for quality
differentials that are not accounted for
through exchange agreements.
Paragraph (d) of this section gives some
examples. References in this section to
‘‘you’’ include your affiliates as
applicable.
(a) To adjust the value between the
lease and the market center:
(1)(i) For oil that you exchange at
arm’s-length between your lease and the
market center (or between any
intermediate points between those
locations), you must calculate a lease-tomarket center differential by the
applicable location and quality
differentials derived from your arm’slength exchange agreement applicable to
production during the production
month.
(ii) For oil that you exchange between
your lease and the market center (or
between any intermediate points
between those locations) under an
exchange agreement that is not at arm’slength, you must obtain approval from
ONRR for a location and quality
differential. Until you obtain such
approval, you may use the location and
quality differential derived from that
exchange agreement applicable to
production during the production
month. If ONRR prescribes a different
differential, you must apply ONRR’s
differential to all periods for which you
used your proposed differential. You
must pay any additional royalties due
resulting from using ONRR’s
differential, plus late payment interest
from the original royalty due date, or
you may report a credit for any overpaid
royalties, plus interest, under 30 U.S.C.
1721(h).
(2) For oil that you transport between
your lease and the market center (or
between any intermediate points
between those locations), you may take
an allowance for the cost of transporting
that oil between the relevant points as
determined under § 1206.111 or
§ 1206.112, as applicable.
(3) If you transport or exchange at
arm’s-length (or both transport and
exchange) at least 20 percent, but not
all, of your oil produced from the lease
to a market center, you must determine
the adjustment between the lease and
the market center for the oil that is not
transported or exchanged (or both
transported and exchanged) to or
through a market center as follows:
(i) Determine the volume-weighted
average of the lease-to-market center
adjustment calculated under paragraphs
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(a)(1) and (2) of this section for the oil
that you do transport or exchange (or
both transport and exchange) from your
lease to a market center.
(ii) Use that volume-weighted average
lease-to-market center adjustment as the
adjustment for the oil that you do not
transport or exchange (or both transport
and exchange) from your lease to a
market center.
(4) If you transport or exchange (or
both transport and exchange) less than
20 percent of the crude oil produced
from your lease between the lease and
a market center, you must propose to
ONRR an adjustment between the lease
and the market center for the portion of
the oil that you do not transport or
exchange (or both transport and
exchange) to a market center. Until you
obtain such approval, you may use your
proposed adjustment. If ONRR
prescribes a different adjustment, you
must apply ONRR’s adjustment to all
periods for which you used your
proposed adjustment. You must pay any
additional royalties due resulting from
using ONRR’s adjustment, plus late
payment interest from the original
royalty due date, or you may report a
credit for any overpaid royalties plus
interest under 30 U.S.C. 1721(h).
(5) You may not both take a
transportation allowance and use a
location and quality adjustment or
exchange differential for the same oil
between the same points.
(b) For oil that you value using
NYMEX prices, you must adjust the
value between the market center and
Cushing, Oklahoma, as follows:
(1) If you have arm’s-length exchange
agreements between the market center
and Cushing under which you exchange
to Cushing at least 20 percent of all the
oil you own at the market center during
the production month, you must use the
volume-weighted average of the location
and quality differentials from those
agreements as the adjustment between
the market center and Cushing for all
the oil that you produce from the leases
during that production month for which
that market center is used.
(2) If paragraph (b)(1) of this section
does not apply, you must use the WTI
differential published in an ONRRapproved publication for the market
center nearest your lease, for crude oil
most similar in quality to your
production, as the adjustment between
the market center and Cushing. For
example, for light sweet crude oil
produced offshore of Louisiana, you
must use the WTI differential for Light
Louisiana Sweet crude oil at St. James,
Louisiana. After you select an ONRRapproved publication, you may not
select a different publication more often
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than once every 2 years, unless the
publication you use is no longer
published or ONRR revokes its approval
of the publication. If you must change
publications, you must begin a new 2year period.
(3) If neither paragraph (b)(1) nor (2)
of this section applies, you may propose
an alternative differential to ONRR.
Until you obtain such approval, you
may use your proposed differential. If
ONRR prescribes a different differential,
you must apply ONRR’s differential to
all periods for which you used your
proposed differential. You must pay any
additional royalties due resulting from
using ONRR’s differential, plus late
payment interest from the original
royalty due date, or you may report a
credit for any overpaid royalties plus
interest under 30 U.S.C. 1721(h).
(c)(1) If you adjust for location and
quality differentials or for transportation
costs under paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section, you also must adjust the
NYMEX price or ANS spot price for
quality based on premiums or penalties
determined by pipeline quality bank
specifications at intermediate
commingling points or at the market
center if those points are downstream of
the royalty measurement point
approved by BSEE or BLM, as
applicable. You must make this
adjustment only if and to the extent that
such adjustments were not already
included in the location and quality
differentials determined from your
arm’s-length exchange agreements.
(2) If the quality of your oil as
adjusted is still different from the
quality of the representative crude oil at
the market center after making the
quality adjustments described in
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c)(1) of this
section, you may make further gravity
adjustments using posted price gravity
tables. If quality bank adjustments do
not incorporate or provide for
adjustments for sulfur content, you may
make sulfur adjustments, based on the
quality of the representative crude oil at
the market center, of 5.0 cents per onetenth percent difference in sulfur
content.
(i) You may request prior ONRR
approval to use a different adjustment.
(ii) If ONRR approves your request to
use a different quality adjustment, you
may begin using that adjustment the
production month following the month
ONRR received your request.
(d) The examples in this paragraph
illustrate how to apply the requirement
of this section.
(1) Example. Assume that a Federal
lessee produces crude oil from a lease
near Artesia, New Mexico. Further,
assume that the lessee transports the oil
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to Roswell, New Mexico, and then
exchanges the oil to Midland, Texas.
Assume the lessee refines the oil
received in exchange at Midland.
Assume that the NYMEX price is
$86.21/bbl, adjusted for the roll; that the
WTI differential (Cushing to Midland) is
¥$2.27/bbl; that the lessee’s exchange
agreement between Roswell and
Midland results in a location and
quality differential of ¥$0.08/bbl; and
that the lessee’s actual cost of
transporting the oil from Artesia to
Roswell is $0.40/bbl. In this example,
the royalty value of the oil is $86.21 ¥
$2.27 ¥ $0.08 ¥ $0.40 = $83.46/bbl.
(2) Example. Assume the same facts as
in the example in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, except that the lessee
transports and exchanges to Midland 40
percent of the production from the lease
near Artesia, and transports the
remaining 60 percent directly to its own
refinery in Ohio. In this example, the 40
percent of the production would be
valued at $83.46/bbl, as explained in the
previous example. In this example, the
other 60 percent also would be valued
at $83.46/bbl.
(3) Example. Assume that a Federal
lessee produces crude oil from a lease
near Bakersfield, California. Further,
assume that the lessee transports the oil
to Hynes Station and then exchanges the
oil to Cushing, which it further
exchanges with oil it refines. Assume
that the ANS spot price is $105.65/bbl
and that the lessee’s actual cost of
transporting the oil from Bakersfield to
Hynes Station is $0.28/bbl. The lessee
must request approval from ONRR for a
location and quality adjustment
between Hynes Station and Long Beach.
For example, the lessee likely would
propose using the tariff on Line 63 from
Hynes Station to Long Beach as the
adjustment between those points.
Assume that adjustment to be $0.72,
including the sulfur and gravity bank
adjustments, and that ONRR approves
the lessee’s request. In this example, the
preliminary (because the location and
quality adjustment is subject to ONRR
review) royalty value of the oil is
$105.65 ¥ $0.72 ¥ $0.28 = $104.65/bbl.
The fact that oil was exchanged to
Cushing does not change use of ANS
spot prices for royalty valuation.
§ 1206.114
centers?
How will ONRR identify market
ONRR will monitor market activity
and, if necessary, add to or modify the
list of market centers published to
www.onrr.gov. ONRR will consider the
following factors and conditions in
specifying market centers:
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(a) Points where ONRR-approved
publications publish prices useful for
index purposes;
(b) Markets served;
(c) Input from industry and others
knowledgeable in crude oil marketing
and transportation;
(d) Simplification; and
(e) Other relevant matters.
allowance amount taken from the date
that amount is taken to the date you pay
the additional royalties due.
(b) If you improperly net a
transportation allowance against the oil
instead of reporting the allowance as a
separate entry on Form ONRR–2014,
ONRR may assess a civil penalty under
30 CFR part 1241.
§ 1206.115 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
§ 1206.118 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation allowances?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on transportation costs
you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length
transportation contracts, production
agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
§ 1206.116 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on transportation costs
you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
transportation facilities or arrangements,
you must base your initial deduction on
estimates of allowable transportation
costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the transportation
system as your estimate, if available. If
such data is not available, you must use
estimates based on data for similar
transportation systems.
(3) Section 1206.118 applies when
you amend your report based on the
actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. You
may find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(d) If you are authorized under
§ 1206.112(j) to use an exception to the
requirement to calculate your actual
transportation costs, you must follow
the reporting requirements of
§ 1206.115.
§ 1206.117 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
(a) If you deduct a transportation
allowance on Form ONRR–2014 that
exceeds 50 percent of the value of the
oil transported, you must pay additional
royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under §§ 1218.54 and
1218.102 of this chapter, on the excess
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(a) If your actual transportation
allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR–2014 for each
month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional
royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under §§ 1218.54 and
1218.102 of this chapter from the date
you took the deduction to the date you
repay the difference.
(b) If the actual transportation
allowance is greater than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR–2014 for
any month during the period reported
on the allowance form, you are entitled
to a credit plus interest.
§ 1206.119 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
(a) You must calculate royalties based
on the quantity and quality of oil as
measured at the point of royalty
settlement that BLM or BSEE approves
for onshore leases and OCS leases,
respectively.
(b) If you base the value of oil
determined under this subpart on a
quantity and/or quality that is different
from the quantity and/or quality at the
point of royalty settlement that BLM or
BSEE approves, you must adjust that
value for the differences in quantity
and/or quality.
(c) You may not make any deductions
from the royalty volume or royalty value
for actual or theoretical losses. Any
actual loss that you sustain before the
royalty settlement metering or
measurement point is not subject to
royalty if BLM or BSEE, whichever is
appropriate, determines that such loss
was unavoidable.
(d) You must pay royalties on 100
percent of the volume measured at the
approved point of royalty settlement.
You may not claim a reduction in that
measured volume for actual losses
beyond the approved point of royalty
settlement or for theoretical losses that
you claim to have taken place either
before or after the approved point of
royalty settlement.
■ 7. Revise subpart D to read as follows:
Subpart D—Federal Gas
Sec.
1206.140 What is the purpose and scope of
this subpart?
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1206.141 How do I calculate royalty value
for unprocessed gas I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm’s-length or nonarm’s-length contract?
1206.142 How do I calculate royalty value
for processed gas I or my affiliate sell(s)
under an arm’s-length or non-arm’slength contract?
1206.143 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
1206.144 How will ONRR determine the
value of my gas for royalty purposes?
1206.145 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty under
this subpart?
1206.146 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.147 When is an ONRR audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process considered final?
1206.148 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
1206.149 Does ONRR protect information I
provide?
1206.150 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
1206.151 How do I perform accounting for
comparison?
1206.152 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
1206.153 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract?
1206.154 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length transportation contract?
1206.155 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.156 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.157 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
1206.158 What reporting adjustments must
I make for transportation allowances?
1206.159 What general requirements
regarding processing allowances apply to
me?
1206.160 How do I determine a processing
allowance, if I have an arm’s-length
processing contract?
1206.161 How do I determine a processing
allowance if I have a non-arm’s-length
processing contract?
1206.162 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
processing contract?
1206.163 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
processing contract?
1206.164 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a processing
allowance?
1206.165 What reporting adjustments must
I make for processing allowances?
Subpart D—Federal Gas
§ 1206.140 What is the purpose and scope
of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all gas
produced from Federal oil and gas
leases onshore and on the Outer
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Continental Shelf (OCS). It explains
how you, as a lessee, must calculate the
value of production for royalty purposes
consistent with mineral leasing laws,
other applicable laws, and lease terms.
(b) The terms ‘‘you’’ and ‘‘your’’ in
this subpart refer to the lessee.
(c) If the regulations in this subpart
are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute;
(2) A settlement agreement between
the United States and a lessee resulting
from administrative or judicial
litigation;
(3) A written agreement between the
lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the
value of production from any lease that
ONRR expects, at least, would
approximate the value established
under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of an oil and
gas lease subject to this subpart; then
the statute, settlement agreement,
written agreement, or lease provision
will govern to the extent of the
inconsistency.
(d) ONRR may audit and order you to
adjust all royalty payments.
§ 1206.141 How do I calculate royalty value
for unprocessed gas I or my affiliate sell(s)
under an arm’s-length or non-arm’s-length
contract?
(a) This section applies to
unprocessed gas. Unprocessed gas is:
(1) Gas that is not processed;
(2) Any gas that you are not required
to value under § 1206.142 or that ONRR
does not value under § 1206.144;
(3) Processed gas that you must value
prior to processing under § 1206.151 of
this part; and
(4) Any gas you sell prior to
processing based on a price per MMBtu
or Mcf when the price is not based on
the residue gas and gas plant products.
(b) The value of gas under this section
for royalty purposes is the gross
proceeds accruing to you or your
affiliate under the first arm’s-length
contract less an applicable
transportation allowance determined
under § 1206.152. This value does not
apply if you may exercise the option
provided in paragraph (c) of this section
or if ONRR decides to value your gas
under § 1206.144. You must use this
paragraph (b) to value gas when:
(1) You sell under an arm’s-length
contract;
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate
or another person under a non-arm’slength contract and that affiliate or
person, or another affiliate of either of
them, then sells the gas under an arm’slength contract, unless you exercise the
option provided in paragraph (c) of this
section;
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(3) You, your affiliate, or another
person sell(s) under multiple arm’slength contracts for gas produced from
a lease that is valued under this
paragraph. In that case, unless you
exercise the option provided in
paragraph (c) of this section, because
you sold non-arm’s length to your
affiliate or another person, the value of
the gas is the volume-weighted average
of the value established under this
paragraph for each contract for the sale
of gas produced from that lease; or
(4) You or your affiliate sell(s) under
a pipeline cash-out program. In that
case, for over-delivered volumes within
the tolerance under a pipeline cash-out
program, the value is the price the
pipeline must pay you or your affiliate
under the transportation contract. You
must use the same value for volumes
that exceed the over-delivery tolerances,
even if those volumes are subject to a
lower price under the transportation
contract.
(c) If you do not sell under an arm’slength contract, you may elect to value
your gas under this paragraph (c). You
may not change your election more
often than once every two years.
(1)(i) If you can only transport gas to
one index pricing point published in an
ONRR-approved publication, available
at www.onrr.gov, your value, for royalty
purposes, is the highest reported
monthly bidweek price for that index
pricing point for the production month.
(ii) If you can transport gas to more
than one index pricing point published
in an ONRR-approved publication,
available at www.onrr.gov, your value,
for royalty purposes, is the highest
reported monthly bidweek price for the
index pricing points to which your gas
could be transported for the production
month, whether or not there are
constraints for that production month.
(iii) If there are sequential index
pricing points on a pipeline, you must
use the first index pricing point at or
after your gas enters the pipeline.
(iv) You must reduce the number
calculated under paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
and (c)(1)(ii) of this section by 5 percent
for sales from the OCS Gulf of Mexico
and by 10 percent for sales from all
other areas, but not by less than 10 cents
per MMBtu or more than 30 cents per
MMBtu.
(v) After you select an ONRRapproved publication available at
www.onrr.gov, you may not select a
different publication more often than
once every two years.
(vi) ONRR may exclude an individual
index pricing point found in an ONRRapproved publication, if ONRR
determines that the index pricing point
does not accurately reflect the values of
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production. ONRR will publish a list of
excluded index pricing points available
at www.onrr.gov.
(2) You may not take any other
deductions from the value calculated
under this paragraph (c).
(d) If you have no written contract for
the sale of gas or no sale of gas subject
to this section and:
(1) There is an index pricing point for
the gas, then you must value your gas
under paragraph (c) of this section;
(2) There is not an index pricing point
for the gas, then ONRR will decide the
value under § 1206.144.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the value using the
procedures in § 1206.148(a).
(ii) You may use that method to
determine value, for royalty purposes,
until ONRR issues its decision.
(iii) After ONRR issues its
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.143(a)(2).
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.142 How do I calculate royalty value
for processed gas I or my affiliate sell(s)
under an arm’s-length or non-arm’s-length
contract?
(a) This section applies to the
valuation of processed gas, including
but not limited to:
(1) Gas you or your affiliate do not
sell, or otherwise dispose of, under an
arm’s-length contract prior to
processing;
(2) Gas where your or your affiliate’s
arm’s-length contract for the sale of gas
prior to processing provides for
payment to be determined on the basis
of the value of any products resulting
from processing, including residue gas
or natural gas liquids;
(3) Gas you or your affiliate process
under an arm’s-length keepwhole
contract; and
(4) Gas where your or your affiliate’s
arm’s-length contract includes a
reservation of the right to process the
gas and you or your affiliate exercise(s)
that right.
(b) The value of gas subject to this
section, for royalty purposes, is:
(1) The combined value of the residue
gas and all gas plant products you
determine under this section;
(2) Plus the value of any condensate
recovered downstream of the point of
royalty settlement without resorting to
processing you determine under
§ 1206.141 of this part;
(3) Less applicable transportation and
processing allowances you determine
under this subpart, unless you exercise
the option provided in paragraph (d) of
this section.
(c) The value of residue gas or any gas
plant product under this section for
royalty purposes is the gross proceeds
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accruing to you or your affiliate under
the first arm’s-length contract. This
value does not apply if you exercise the
option provided in paragraph (d) of this
section, or if ONRR decides to value
your residue gas or any gas plant
product under § 1206.144. You must use
this paragraph (c) to value residue gas
or any gas plant product when:
(1) You sell under an arm’s-length
contract;
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate
or another person under a non-arm’slength contract, and that affiliate or
person, or another affiliate of either of
them then sells the residue gas or any
gas plant product under an arm’s-length
contract, unless you exercise the option
provided in paragraph (d) of this
section;
(3) You, your affiliate, or another
person sell(s) under multiple arm’slength contracts for residue gas or any
gas plant products recovered from gas
produced from a lease that you value
under this paragraph. In that case,
unless you exercise the option provided
in paragraph (d) of this section, because
you sold non-arm’s-length to your
affiliate or another person, the value of
the residue gas or any gas plant product
is the volume-weighted average of the
gross proceeds established under this
paragraph for each arm’s-length contract
for the sale of residue gas or any gas
plant products recovered from gas
produced from that lease; or
(4) You or your affiliate sell(s) under
a pipeline cash-out program. In that
case, for over-delivered volumes within
the tolerance under a pipeline cash-out
program, the value is the price the
pipeline must pay you or your affiliate
under the transportation contract. You
must use the same value for volumes
that exceed the over-delivery tolerances,
even if those volumes are subject to a
lower price under the transportation
contract.
(d) If you do not sell under an arm’slength contract, you may elect to value
your residue gas and natural gas liquids
(NGLS) under this paragraph (d). You
may not change your election more
often than once every two years.
(1)(i) If you can only transport residue
gas to one index pricing point published
in an ONRR-approved publication,
available at www.onrr.gov, your value,
for royalty purposes, is the highest
reported monthly bidweek price for that
index pricing point for the production
month.
(ii) If you can transport residue gas to
more than one index pricing point
published in an ONRR-approved
publication, available at www.onrr.gov,
your value, for royalty purposes, is the
highest reported monthly bidweek price
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655
for the index pricing points to which
your gas could be transported for the
production month, whether or not there
are constraints, for the production
month.
(iii) If there are sequential index
pricing points on a pipeline, you must
use the first index pricing point at or
after your residue gas enters the
pipeline.
(iv) You must reduce the number
calculated under paragraphs (d)(1)(i)
and (ii) of this section by 5 percent for
sales from the OCS Gulf of Mexico and
by 10 percent for sales from all other
areas, but not by less than 10 cents per
MMBtu or more than 30 cents per
MMBtu.
(v) After you select an ONRRapproved publication available at
www.onrr.gov, you may not select a
different publication more often than
once every two years.
(vi) ONRR may exclude an individual
index pricing point found in an ONRRapproved publication, if ONRR
determines that the index pricing point
does not accurately reflect the values of
production. ONRR will publish a list of
excluded index pricing points available
at www.onrr.gov.
(2)(i) If you sell NGLs in an area with
one or more ONRR-approved
commercial price bulletins available at
www.onrr.gov, you must choose one
bulletin and your value, for royalty
purposes, is the monthly average price
for that bulletin for the production
month.
(ii) You must reduce the number
calculated under paragraph (d)(2)(i) of
this section by the amounts ONRR posts
at www.onrr.gov for the geographic
location of your lease. The methodology
ONRR will use to calculate the amounts
is set forth in the preamble to this
regulation. This methodology is binding
on you and ONRR. ONRR will update
the amounts periodically using this
methodology.
(iii) After you select an ONRRapproved commercial price bulletin
available at www.onrr.gov, you may not
select a different commercial price
bulletin more often than once every 2
years.
(3) You may not take any other
deductions from the value calculated
under this paragraph (d).
(4) ONRR will post changes to any of
the rates in this paragraph (d) on its
Web site.
(e) If you have no written contract for
the sale of gas or no sale of gas subject
to this section and:
(1) There is an index pricing point or
commercial price bulletin for the gas,
then you must value your gas under
paragraph (d) of this section.
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(2) There is not an index pricing point
or commercial price bulletin for the gas,
then ONRR will determine the value
under § 1206.144.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the value using the
procedures in § 1206.148(a).
(ii) You may use that method to
determine value, for royalty purposes,
until ONRR issues its decision.
(iii) After ONRR issues its
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.143(a)(2).
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.143 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and
audit the royalties you report. If ONRR
determines that your reported value is
inconsistent with the requirements of
this subpart, ONRR will direct you to
use a different measure of royalty value
or decide your value under § 1206.144.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a
different royalty value, you must either
pay any additional royalties due, plus
late payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter
or report a credit for, or request a refund
of, any overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this
subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR
will examine if your or your affiliate’s
contract reflects the total consideration
actually transferred, either directly or
indirectly, from the buyer to you or your
affiliate for the gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products. If ONRR determines that
a contract does not reflect the total
consideration, ONRR may decide your
value under § 1206.144.
(c) ONRR may decide your value
under § 1206.144, if ONRR determines
that the gross proceeds accruing to you
or your affiliate under a contract do not
reflect reasonable consideration
because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) You have breached your duty to
market the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor by selling your
gas, residue gas, or gas plant products at
a value that is unreasonably low. ONRR
may consider a sales price unreasonably
low, if it is 10 percent less than the
lowest reasonable measures of market
price, including but not limited to,
index prices and prices reported to
ONRR for like-quality gas, residue gas,
or gas plant products; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly valued your gas, residue gas, or
gas plant products under § 1206.141 or
§ 1206.142 for any reason, including but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents ONRR
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requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart B.
(d) You have the burden of
demonstrating that your or your
affiliate’s contract is arm’s length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify
that the provisions in your or your
affiliate’s contract include(s) all of the
consideration the buyer paid you or
your affiliate, either directly or
indirectly, for the gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or
amendment, if you or your affiliate
fail(s) to take proper or timely action to
receive prices or benefits to which you
or your affiliate are entitled, you must
pay royalty based upon that obtainable
price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely
application for a price increase or
benefit allowed under your or your
affiliate’s contract, but the purchaser
refuses, and you or your affiliate take
reasonable documented measures to
force purchaser compliance, you will
not owe additional royalties unless or
until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration
resulting from the price increase. You
may not construe this paragraph to
permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where
a purchaser fails to pay, in whole or in
part, or timely, for a quantity of gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make
all contracts, contract revisions, or
amendments in writing, and all parties
to the contract must sign the contract,
contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to
comply with paragraph (g)(1) of this
section, ONRR may decide your value
under § 1206.144.
(3) This provision applies
notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
§ 1206.144 How will ONRR determine the
value of my gas for royalty purposes?
If ONRR decides to value your gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products for
royalty purposes under § 1206.143, or
any other provision in this subpart, then
ONRR will determine the value, for
royalty purposes, by considering any
information we deem relevant, which
may include, but is not limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality gas in the
same field or nearby fields or areas;
(b) The value of like-quality residue
gas or gas plant products from the same
plant or area;
(c) Public sources of price or market
information that ONRR deems reliable;
(d) Information available or reported
to ONRR, including but not limited to,
on Form ONRR–2014 and Form ONRR–
4054;
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(e) Costs of transportation or
processing, if ONRR determines they are
applicable; or
(f) Any information ONRR deems
relevant regarding the particular lease
operation or the salability of the gas.
§ 1206.145 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty under
this subpart?
If you value your gas under this
subpart, you must retain all data
relevant to the determination of the
royalty you paid. You can find
recordkeeping requirements in parts
1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the royalty
value, including all allowable
deductions; and
(2) How you complied with this
subpart.
(b) Upon request, you must submit all
data to ONRR. You must comply with
any such requirement within the time
ONRR specifies.
§ 1206.146 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable condition
and to market production?
(a) You must place gas, residue gas,
and gas plant products in marketable
condition and market the gas, residue
gas, and gas plant products for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the
lessor at no cost to the Federal
Government.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an
arm’s-length contract to determine
royalty, you must increase those gross
proceeds to the extent that the
purchaser, or any other person, provides
certain services that you normally are
responsible to perform to place the gas,
residue gas, and gas plant products in
marketable condition or to market the
gas.
§ 1206.147 When is an ONRR audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process considered final?
Notwithstanding any provision in
these regulations to the contrary, ONRR
does not consider any audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process that results in ONRR
redetermining royalty due, under this
subpart, final or binding as against the
Federal Government or its beneficiaries
unless ONRR chooses to formally close
the audit period in writing.
§ 1206.148 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
(a) You may request a valuation
determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any gas produced. Your
request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases
involved, all interest owners of those
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leases, the designee(s), and the
operator(s) for those leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant
facts. You must inform ONRR of any
changes to relevant facts that occur
before we respond to your request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant
documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the
issue(s), including citations to all
relevant precedents (including adverse
precedents); and
(6) Suggest your proposed valuation
method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR
may:
(1) Request that the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a determination; or
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue
guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR
will not provide a determination or
guidance. Situations in which ONRR
typically will not provide any
determination or guidance include, but
are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on
hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of
pending litigation or administrative
appeals.
(c)(1) A determination the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget signs is binding on both you and
ONRR until the Assistant Secretary
modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues
a determination, you must make any
adjustments to royalty payments that
follow from the determination and, if
you owe additional royalties, you must
pay the additional royalties due, plus
late payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(3) A determination the Assistant
Secretary signs is the final action of the
Department and is subject to judicial
review under 5 U.S.C. 701–706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not
binding on ONRR, delegated States, or
you with respect to the specific
situation addressed in the guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR’s decision
whether or not to issue guidance or
request an Assistant Secretary
determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not
appealable decisions or orders under 30
CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring
you to pay royalty on the same basis as
the guidance, you may appeal that order
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary
may use any of the applicable criteria in
this subpart to provide guidance or
make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute
or regulation on which ONRR based any
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guidance, or the Assistant Secretary
based any determination, takes
precedence over the determination or
guidance after the effective date of the
statute or regulation, regardless of
whether ONRR or the Assistant
Secretary modifies or rescinds the
guidance or determination.
(g) ONRR may make requests and
replies under this section available to
the public, subject to the confidentiality
requirements under § 1206.149.
§ 1206.149
I provide?
Does ONRR protect information
(a) Certain information you or your
affiliate submit(s) to ONRR regarding
royalties on gas, including deductions
and allowances, may be exempt from
disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and
regulations permit, ONRR will keep
confidential any data you or your
affiliate submit(s) that is privileged,
confidential, or otherwise exempt from
disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all
requests for information under the
Freedom of Information Act regulations
of the Department of the Interior at 43
CFR part 2.
§ 1206.150 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
(a)(1) You must calculate royalties
based on the quantity and quality of
unprocessed gas as measured at the
point of royalty settlement that BLM or
BSEE approves for onshore leases and
OCS leases, respectively.
(2) If you base the value of gas
determined under this subpart on a
quantity and/or quality that is different
from the quantity and/or quality at the
point of royalty settlement that BLM or
BSEE approves, you must adjust that
value for the differences in quantity
and/or quality.
(b)(1) For residue gas and gas plant
products, the quantity basis for
computing royalties due is the monthly
net output of the plant, even though
residue gas and/or gas plant products
may be in temporary storage.
(2) If you value residue gas and/or gas
plant products determined under this
subpart on a quantity and/or quality of
residue gas and/or gas plant products
that is different from that which is
attributable to a lease determined under
paragraph (c) of this section, you must
adjust that value for the differences in
quantity and/or quality.
(c) You must determine the quantity
of the residue gas and gas plant
products attributable to a lease based on
the following procedure:
(1) When you derive the net output of
the processing plant from gas obtained
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from only one lease, you must base the
quantity of the residue gas and gas plant
products for royalty computation on the
net output of the plant.
(2) When you derive the net output of
a processing plant from gas obtained
from more than one lease producing gas
of uniform content, you must base the
quantity of the residue gas and gas plant
products allocable to each lease on the
same proportions as the ratios obtained
by dividing the amount of gas delivered
to the plant from each lease by the total
amount of gas delivered from all leases.
(3) When the net output of a
processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from more than one lease
producing gas of non-uniform content:
(i) You must determine the quantity of
the residue gas allocable to each lease
by multiplying the amount of gas
delivered to the plant from the lease by
the residue gas content of the gas, and
dividing that arithmetical product by
the sum of the similar arithmetical
products separately obtained for all
leases from which gas is delivered to the
plant, and then multiplying the net
output of the residue gas by the
arithmetic quotient obtained.
(ii) You must determine the net
output of gas plant products allocable to
each lease by multiplying the amount of
gas delivered to the plant from the lease
by the gas plant product content of the
gas, and dividing that arithmetical
product by the sum of the similar
arithmetical products separately
obtained for all leases from which gas is
delivered to the plant, and then
multiplying the net output of each gas
plant product by the arithmetic quotient
obtained.
(4) You may request prior ONRR
approval of other methods for
determining the quantity of residue gas
and gas plant products allocable to each
lease. If approved, you must apply that
method to all gas production from
Federal leases that is processed in the
same plant beginning with the
production month following the month
ONRR received your request to use
another method.
(d)(1) You may not make any
deductions from the royalty volume or
royalty value for actual or theoretical
losses. Any actual loss of unprocessed
gas that you sustain before the royalty
settlement meter or measurement point
is not subject to royalty; if BLM or
BSEE, whichever is appropriate,
determines that such loss was
unavoidable.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section and § 1202.151(c),
you must pay royalties due on 100
percent of the volume determined under
paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
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section. You may not reduce that
determined volume for actual losses
after you have determined the quantity
basis, or for theoretical losses that you
claim to have taken place. Royalties are
due on 100 percent of the value of the
unprocessed gas, residue gas, and/or gas
plant products, as provided in this
subpart, less applicable allowances. You
may not take any deduction from the
value of the unprocessed gas, residue
gas, and/or gas plant products to
compensate for actual losses after you
have determined the quantity basis or
for theoretical losses that you claim to
have taken place.
§ 1206.151 How do I perform accounting
for comparison?
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, if you or your affiliate
(or a person to whom you have
transferred gas under a non-arm’s-length
contract or without a contract) processes
your or your affiliate’s gas and after
processing the gas, you or your affiliate
do not sell the residue gas under an
arm’s-length contract, the value, for
royalty purposes, will be the greater of:
(1) The combined value, for royalty
purposes, of the residue gas and gas
plant products resulting from processing
the gas determined under § 1206.142 of
this subpart, plus the value, for royalty
purposes, of any condensate recovered
downstream of the point of royalty
settlement without resorting to
processing determined under § 1206.102
of this subpart; or
(2) The value, for royalty purposes, of
the gas prior to processing as
determined under § 1206.141 of this
subpart.
(b) The requirement for accounting for
comparison contained in the terms of
leases will govern as provided in
§ 1206.142(a)(2) of this subpart.
(c) When lease terms require
accounting for comparison, you must
perform accounting for comparison
under paragraph (a) of this section.
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§ 1206.152 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
(a) ONRR will allow a deduction for
the reasonable, actual costs to transport
residue gas, gas plant products, or
unprocessed gas from the lease to the
point off the lease under § 1206.153 or
§ 1206.154, as applicable. You may not
deduct transportation costs you incur to
move a particular volume of production
to reduce royalties you owe on
production for which you did not incur
those costs. This paragraph applies
when:
(1) You value unprocessed gas under
§ 1206.141(b) or residue gas and gas
plant products under § 1206.142(b)
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based on a sale at a point off the lease,
unit, or communitized area where the
residue gas, gas plant products, or
unprocessed gas is produced; and
(2)(i) The movement to the sales point
is not gathering.
(ii) For gas produced on the OCS, the
movement of gas from the wellhead to
the first platform is not transportation.
(b) You must calculate the deduction
for transportation costs based on your or
your affiliate’s cost of transporting each
product through each individual
transportation system. If your or your
affiliate’s transportation contract
includes more than one product in a
gaseous phase, you must allocate costs
consistently and equitably to each of the
products transported. Your allocation
must use the same proportion as the
ratio of the volume of each product
(excluding waste products with no
value) to the volume of all products in
the gaseous phase (excluding waste
products with no value).
(1) You may not take an allowance for
transporting lease production that is not
royalty-bearing.
(2) You may propose to ONRR a
prospective cost allocation method
based on the values of the products
transported. ONRR will approve the
method, if it is consistent with the
purposes of the regulations in this
subpart.
(3) You may use your proposed
procedure to calculate a transportation
allowance beginning with the
production month following the month
ONRR received your proposed
procedure until ONRR accepts or rejects
your cost allocation. If ONRR rejects
your cost allocation, you must amend
your Form ONRR–2014 for the months
that you used the rejected method and
pay any additional royalty due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(c)(1) Where you or your affiliate
transport(s) both gaseous and liquid
products through the same
transportation system, you must
propose a cost allocation procedure to
ONRR.
(2) You may use your proposed
procedure to calculate a transportation
allowance until ONRR accepts or rejects
your cost allocation. If ONRR rejects
your cost allocation, you must amend
your Form ONRR–2014 for the months
that you used the rejected method and
pay any additional royalty due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(3) You must submit your initial
proposal, including all available data,
within 3 months after you first claim the
allocated deductions on Form ONRR–
2014.
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(d) If you value unprocessed gas
under § 1206.141(c) or residue gas and
gas plant products under § 1206.142 (d),
you may not take a transportation
allowance.
(e)(1) Your transportation allowance
may not exceed 50 percent of the value
of the residue gas, gas plant products, or
unprocessed gas as determined under
§ 1206.141 or § 1206.142 of this subpart.
(2) If ONRR approved your request to
take a transportation allowance in
excess of the 50-percent limitation
under former § 1206.156(c)(3), that
approval is terminated as of the effective
date of the final rule.
(f) You must express transportation
allowances for residue gas, gas plant
products, or unprocessed gas as a dollarvalue equivalent. If your or your
affiliate’s payments for transportation
under a contract are not on a dollar-perunit basis, you must convert whatever
consideration you or your affiliate are
paid to a dollar-value equivalent.
(g) ONRR may determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.144 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length transportation
contract does not reflect the reasonable
cost of the transportation because you
breached your duty to market the gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products for the
mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor
by transporting your gas, residue gas, or
gas plant products at a cost that is
unreasonably high. We may consider a
transportation allowance unreasonably
high if it is 10-percent higher than the
highest reasonable measures of
transportation costs including, but not
limited to, transportation allowances
reported to ONRR and tariffs for gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products
transported through the same system; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly calculated a transportation
allowance under § 1206.153 or
§ 1206.154 for any reason, including but
not limited to, you or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents ONRR
requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart B.
(h) You do not need ONRR approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance.
§ 1206.153 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an arm’slength transportation contract?
(a)(1) If you or your affiliate incur
transportation costs under an arm’slength transportation contract, you may
claim a transportation allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred as
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more fully explained in paragraph (b) of
this section, except as provided in
§ 1206.152(g) and subject to the
limitation in § 1206.152(e).
(2) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is
arm’s-length.
(b) Subject to the requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section, you may
include, but are not limited to, the
following costs to determine your
transportation allowance under
paragraph (a) of this section. You may
not use any cost as a deduction that
duplicates all or part of any other cost
that you use under this section.
(1) Firm demand charges paid to
pipelines. You may deduct firm demand
charges or capacity reservation fees you
or your affiliate paid to a pipeline,
including charges or fees for unused
firm capacity you or your affiliate have
not sold before you report your
allowance. If you or your affiliate
receive(s) a payment from any party for
release or sale of firm capacity after
reporting a transportation allowance
that included the cost of that unused
firm capacity, or if you or your affiliate
receive(s) a payment or credit from the
pipeline for penalty refunds, rate case
refunds, or other reasons, you must
reduce the firm demand charge claimed
on the Form ONRR–2014 by the amount
of that payment. You must modify the
Form ONRR–2014 by the amount
received or credited for the affected
reporting period, and pay any resulting
royalty due, plus late payment interest
calculated under §§ 1218.54 and
1218.102 of this chapter;
(2) Gas supply realignment (GSR)
costs. The GSR costs result from a
pipeline reforming or terminating
supply contracts with producers to
implement the restructuring
requirements of FERC Orders in 18 CFR
part 284;
(3) Commodity charges. The
commodity charge allows the pipeline
to recover the costs of providing service;
(4) Wheeling costs. Hub operators
charge a wheeling cost for transporting
gas from one pipeline to either the same
or another pipeline through a market
center or hub. A hub is a connected
manifold of pipelines through which a
series of incoming pipelines are
interconnected to a series of outgoing
pipelines;
(5) Gas Research Institute (GRI) fees.
The GRI conducts research,
development, and commercialization
programs on natural gas related topics
for the benefit of the U.S. gas industry
and gas customers. GRI fees are
allowable provided such fees are
mandatory in FERC-approved tariffs;
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(6) Annual Charge Adjustment (ACA)
fees. FERC charges these fees to
pipelines to pay for its operating
expenses;
(7) Payments (either volumetric or in
value) for actual or theoretical losses.
However, theoretical losses are not
deductible in transportation
arrangements unless the transportation
allowance is based on arm’s-length
transportation rates charged under a
FERC- or State regulatory-approved
tariff, or ONRR approves your use of a
FERC or State regulatory-approved tariff
as an exception from the requirement to
calculate actual costs under
§ 1206.154(l) of this subpart. If you or
your affiliate receive(s) volumes or
credit for line gain, you must reduce
your transportation allowance
accordingly and pay any resulting
royalties, plus late payment interest
calculated under §§ 1218.54 and
1218.102 of this chapter;
(8) Temporary storage services. This
includes short duration storage services
offered by market centers or hubs
(commonly referred to as ‘‘parking’’ or
‘‘banking’’), or other temporary storage
services provided by pipeline
transporters, whether actual or provided
as a matter of accounting. Temporary
storage is limited to 30 days or less;
(9) Supplemental costs for
compression, dehydration, and
treatment of gas. ONRR allows these
costs only if such services are required
for transportation and exceed the
services necessary to place production
into marketable condition required
under § 1206.146 of this part;
(10) Costs of surety. You may deduct
the costs of securing a letter of credit, or
other surety, that the pipeline requires
you or your affiliate as a shipper to
maintain under a transportation
contract; and
(11) Hurricane Surcharges. You may
deduct hurricane surcharges you or your
affiliate actually pay(s).
(c) You may not include the following
costs to determine your transportation
allowance under paragraph (a) of this
section:
(1) Fees or costs incurred for storage.
This includes storing production in a
storage facility, whether on or off the
lease, for more than 30 days;
(2) Aggregator/marketer fees. This
includes fees you or your affiliate pay(s)
to another person (including your
affiliates) to market your gas, including
purchasing and reselling the gas, or
finding or maintaining a market for the
gas production;
(3) Penalties you or your affiliate
incur(s) as shipper. These penalties
include, but are not limited to:
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(i) Over-delivery cash-out penalties.
This includes the difference between
the price the pipeline pays you or your
affiliate for over-delivered volumes
outside the tolerances and the price you
or your affiliate receive(s) for overdelivered volumes within the
tolerances;
(ii) Scheduling penalties. This
includes penalties you or your affiliate
incur(s) for differences between daily
volumes delivered into the pipeline and
volumes scheduled or nominated at a
receipt or delivery point;
(iii) Imbalance penalties. This
includes penalties you or your affiliate
incur(s) (generally on a monthly basis)
for differences between volumes
delivered into the pipeline and volumes
scheduled or nominated at a receipt or
delivery point; and
(iv) Operational penalties. This
includes fees you or your affiliate
incur(s) for violation of the pipeline’s
curtailment or operational orders issued
to protect the operational integrity of the
pipeline.
(4) Intra-hub transfer fees. These are
fees you or your affiliate pay(s) to hub
operators for administrative services
(e.g., title transfer tracking) necessary to
account for the sale of gas within a hub;
(5) Fees paid to brokers. This includes
fees you or your affiliate pay(s) to
parties who arrange marketing or
transportation, if such fees are
separately identified from aggregator/
marketer fees;
(6) Fees paid to scheduling service
providers. This includes fees you or
your affiliate pay(s) to parties who
provide scheduling services, if such fees
are separately identified from
aggregator/marketer fees;
(7) Internal costs. This includes
salaries and related costs, rent/space
costs, office equipment costs, legal fees,
and other costs to schedule, nominate,
and account for sale or movement of
production; and
(8) Other nonallowable costs. Any
cost you or your affiliate incur(s) for
services you are required to provide at
no cost to the lessor, including but not
limited to, costs to place your gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products into
marketable condition disallowed under
§ 1206.146 and costs of boosting residue
gas disallowed under 30 CFR
1202.151(b).
(d) If you have no written contract for
the transportation of gas, then ONRR
will determine your transportation
allowance under § 1206.144. You may
not use this paragraph (d), if you or your
affiliate perform(s) your own
transportation.
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(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.148(a).
(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues its determination.
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§ 1206.154 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
transportation contract, including
situations where you or your affiliate
provide your own transportation
services. You must calculate your
transportation allowance based on your
or your affiliate’s reasonable, actual
costs for transportation during the
reporting period using the procedures
prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate’s actual costs
may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(e), (f), and (g) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (h) of
this section;
(3) Depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment under
paragraph (i)(1) of this section, or you
may elect to use a cost equal to a return
on the initial depreciable capital
investment in the transportation system
under paragraph (i)(2) of this section.
After you have elected to use either
method for a transportation system, you
may not later elect to change to the
other alternative without ONRR
approval. If ONRR accepts your request
to change methods, you may use your
changed method beginning with the
production month following the month
ONRR received your change request;
and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage
value under paragraph (i)(1)(iii) of this
section, after you have depreciated the
transportation system to its reasonable
salvage value.
(c)(1) To the extent not included in
costs identified in paragraphs (e)
through (g) of this section, if you or your
affiliate incur(s) the actual
transportation costs listed under
§ 1206.153(b)(2), (5), and (6) of this
subpart under your or your affiliate’s
non-arm’s-length contract, you may
include those costs in your calculations
under this section. You may not include
any of the other costs identified under
§ 1206.153 (b); and
(2) You may not include in your
calculations under this section any of
the nonallowable costs listed under
§ 1206.153(c).
(d) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
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any other cost that you use under this
section.
(e) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment) that
are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(f) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(1) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense that you
can document.
(g) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(i) Maintenance of the transportation
system;
(ii) Maintenance of equipment;
(iii) Maintenance labor; and
(iv) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(h) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation
system, is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance
taxes and other fees, including royalties,
are not allowable expenses.
(i)(1) To calculate depreciation and a
return on undepreciated capital
investment, you may elect to use either
a straight-line depreciation method
based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves that the
transportation system services, or a unit
of production method. After you make
an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request.
(i) A change in ownership of a
transportation system will not alter the
depreciation schedule the original
transporter/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(ii) You may depreciate a
transportation system only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(iii)(A) To calculate the return on
undepreciated capital investment, you
may use an amount equal to the
undepreciated capital investment in the
transportation system multiplied by the
rate of return you determine under
paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(B) After you have depreciated a
transportation system to the reasonable
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salvage value, you may continue to
include in the allowance calculation a
cost equal to the reasonable salvage
value multiplied by a rate of return
under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(2) As an alternative to using
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as
provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, you may use as a cost an
amount equal to the allowable initial
capital investment in the transportation
system multiplied by the rate of return
determined under paragraph (i)(3) of
this section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(3) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(i) You must use the monthly average
that BBB rate Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
(ii) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
§ 1206.155 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on transportation costs
you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length
transportation contracts, production
agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
§ 1206.156 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on non-arm’s-length
transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
transportation facilities or arrangements,
you must base your initial deduction on
estimates of allowable transportation
costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the transportation
system as your estimate. If such data is
not available, you must use estimates
based on data for similar transportation
systems.
(3) Section 1206.158 applies when
you amend your report based on your
actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. You
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can find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(d) If you are authorized under
§ 1206.154(j) to use an exception to the
requirement to calculate your actual
transportation costs, you must follow
the reporting requirements of
§ 1206.155.
§ 1206.157 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you
took an unauthorized transportation
allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your
transportation allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit with interest.
(b) If you deduct a transportation
allowance on Form ONRR–2014 that
exceeds 50 percent of the value of the
gas, residue gas, or gas plant products
transported, you must pay late payment
interest on the excess allowance amount
taken from the date that amount is taken
until the date you pay the additional
royalties due.
(c) If you improperly net a
transportation allowance against the
sales value of the residue gas, gas plant
products, or unprocessed gas instead of
reporting the allowance as a separate
entry on Form ONRR–2014, ONRR may
assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR part
1241.
§ 1206.158 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation
allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR–2014 for each
month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional
royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under §§ 1218.54 and
1218.102 of this chapter from the date
you took the deduction to the date you
repay the difference.
(b) If the actual transportation
allowance is greater than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR–2014 for
any month during the period reported
on the allowance form, you are entitled
to a credit plus interest.
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§ 1206.159 What general processing
allowances requirements apply to me?
(a)(1) When you value any gas plant
product under § 1206.142(c) of this
subpart, you may deduct from value the
reasonable actual costs of processing.
(2) You do not need ONRR approval
before reporting a processing allowance.
(b) You must allocate processing costs
among the gas plant products. You must
determine a separate processing
allowance for each gas plant product
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and processing plant relationship.
ONRR considers NGLs one product.
(c)(1) You may not apply the
processing allowance against the value
of the residue gas.
(2) The processing allowance
deduction on the basis of an individual
product may not exceed 662⁄3 percent of
the value of each gas plant product
determined under § 1206.142(c). Before
you calculate the 662⁄3 percent limit,
you must first reduce the value for any
transportation allowances related to
post-processing transportation
authorized under § 1206.152.
(3) If ONRR approved your request to
take a processing allowance in excess of
the limitation in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section under former § 1206.158(c)(3),
that approval is terminated as of
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(4) If ONRR approved your request to
take an extraordinary cost processing
allowance under former § 1206.158(d),
ONRR terminates that approval as of
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(d)(1) ONRR will not allow a
processing cost deduction for the costs
of placing lease products in marketable
condition, including dehydration,
separation, compression, or storage,
even if those functions are performed off
the lease or at a processing plant.
(2) Where gas is processed for the
removal of acid gases, commonly
referred to as ‘‘sweetening,’’ ONRR will
not allow processing cost deductions for
such costs unless the acid gases
removed are further processed into a gas
plant product.
(A) In such event, you are eligible for
a processing allowance determined
under this subpart.
(B) ONRR will not grant any
processing allowance for processing
lease production that is not royalty
bearing.
§ 1206.160 How do I determine a
processing allowance, if I have an arm’slength processing contract?
(a)(1) If you or your affiliate incur
processing costs under an arm’s-length
processing contract, you may claim a
processing allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs incurred as more fully
explained in paragraph (b) of this
section, except as provided in
paragraphs (a)(3)(1) and (a)(3)(ii) of this
section and subject to the limitation in
§ 1206.159(c)(2).
(2) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is
arm’s length.
(3) ONRR may determine your
processing allowance under § 1206.144,
if:
(i) ONRR determines that your or your
affiliate’s contract reflects more than the
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consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from you or your
affiliate to the processor for processing;
or
(ii) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length processing
contract does not reflect the reasonable
cost of the processing because you
breached your duty to market the gas for
the mutual benefit of yourself and the
lessor by processing your gas at a cost
that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a processing allowance
unreasonably high, if it is 10-percent
higher than the highest reasonable
measures of processing costs, including
but not limited to processing allowances
reported to ONRR for gas processed in
the same plant or area.
(b)(1) If your or your affiliate’s arm’slength processing contract includes
more than one gas plant product and
you can determine the processing costs
for each product based on the contract,
then you must determine the processing
costs for each gas plant product under
the contract.
(2) If your or your affiliate’s arm’slength processing contract includes
more than one gas plant product and
you cannot determine the processing
costs attributable to each product from
the contract, you must propose an
allocation procedure to ONRR.
(i) You may use your proposed
allocation procedure until ONRR issues
its determination.
(ii) You must submit all relevant data
to support your proposal.
(iii) ONRR will determine the
processing allowance based upon your
proposal and any additional information
ONRR deems necessary.
(iv) You must submit the allocation
proposal within 3 months of claiming
the allocated deduction on Form
ONRR–2014.
(3) You may not take an allowance for
the costs of processing lease production
that is not royalty-bearing.
(4) If your or your affiliate’s payments
for processing under an arm’s-length
contract are not based on a dollar-perunit basis, you must convert whatever
consideration you or your affiliate paid
to a dollar-value equivalent.
(c) If you have no written contract for
the arm’s-length processing of gas, then
ONRR will determine your processing
allowance under § 1206.144. You may
not use this paragraph (c) if you or your
affiliate perform(s) your own processing.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.148(a).
(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
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§ 1206.161 How do I determine a
processing allowance if I have a non-arm’slength processing contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
processing contract, including situations
where you or your affiliate provide your
own processing services. You must
calculate your processing allowance
based on you or your affiliate’s
reasonable, actual costs for processing
during the reporting period using the
procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) You or your affiliate’s actual costs
include the following:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of
this section;
(3) Depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment in
accordance with paragraph (h)(1) of this
section, or you may elect to use a cost
equal to the initial depreciable capital
investment in the processing plant
under paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
After you have elected to use either
method for a processing plant, you may
not later elect to change to the other
alternative without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request; and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage
value under paragraph (h)(1)(iii) of this
section, after you have depreciated the
processing plant to its reasonable
salvage value.
(c) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
any other cost that you use under this
section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment),
which are an integral part of the
processing plant.
(e) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(1) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense that you
can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(1) Maintenance of the processing
plant;
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(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the processing plant, is
an allowable expense. State and Federal
income taxes and severance taxes and
other fees, including royalties, are not
allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation and a
return on undepreciated capital
investment, you may elect to use either
a straight-line depreciation method
based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the processing
plant services, or a unit-of-production
method. After you make an election,
you may not change methods without
ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your
request to change methods, you may use
your changed method beginning with
the production month following the
month ONRR received your change
request.
(i) A change in ownership of a
processing plant will not alter the
depreciation schedule that the original
processor/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(ii) You may depreciate a processing
plant only once with or without a
change in ownership.
(iii)(A) To calculate a return on
undepreciated capital investment, you
may use an amount equal to the
undepreciated capital investment in the
processing plant multiplied by the rate
of return you determine under
paragraph (h)(3) of this section.
(B) After you have depreciated a
processing plant to its reasonable
salvage value, you may continue to
include in the allowance calculation a
cost equal to the reasonable salvage
value multiplied by a rate of return
under paragraph (h)(3) of this section.
(2) You may use as a cost an amount
equal to the allowable initial capital
investment in the processing plant
multiplied by the rate of return
determined under paragraph (h)(3) of
this section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(3) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(i) You must use the monthly average
that BBB rate Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
(ii) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
(i)(1) You must determine the
processing allowance for each gas plant
product based on your or your affiliate’s
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reasonable and actual cost of processing
the gas. You must base your allocation
of costs to each gas plant product upon
generally accepted accounting
principles.
(2) You may not take an allowance for
processing lease production that is not
royalty-bearing.
(j) You may apply for an exception
from the requirement to calculate actual
costs under paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section.
(1) ONRR will grant the exception, if:
(i) You have or your affiliate has
arm’s-length contracts for processing
other gas production at the same
processing plant; and
(ii) At least 50-percent of the gas
processed annually at the plant is
processed under arm’s-length
processing contracts.
(2) If ONRR grants the exception, you
must use as your processing allowance
the volume-weighted average prices
charged other persons under arm’slength contracts for processing at the
same plant.
§ 1206.162 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
processing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on arm’s-length
processing costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length
processing contracts, production
agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
§ 1206.163 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
processing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on non-arm’s-length
processing costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
processing facilities or arrangements,
you must base your initial deduction on
estimates of allowable gas processing
costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the processing plant
as your estimate, if available. If such
data is not available, you must use
estimates based on data for similar
processing plants.
(3) Section 1206.165 applies when
you amend your report based on your
actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
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calculate the allowance deduction. You
can find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(d) If you are authorized under
§ 1206.161(j) to use an exception to the
requirement to calculate your actual
processing costs, you must follow the
reporting requirements of § 1206.162.
§ 1206.164 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a processing
allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you
took an unauthorized processing
allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your processing
allowance, you may be entitled to a
credit with interest.
(b) If you deduct a processing
allowance on Form ONRR–2014 that
exceeds 662⁄3 percent of the value of a
gas plant product, you must pay late
payment interest on the excess
allowance amount taken from the date
that amount is taken until the date you
pay the additional royalties due.
(c) If you improperly net a processing
allowance against the sales value of a
gas plant product instead of reporting
the allowance as a separate entry on
Form ONRR–2014, ONRR may assess a
civil penalty under 30 CFR part 1241.
§ 1206.165 What reporting adjustments
must I make for processing allowances?
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(a) If your actual processing allowance
is less than the amount you claimed on
Form ONRR–2014 for each month
during the allowance reporting period,
you must pay additional royalties due,
plus late payment interest calculated
under §§ 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this
chapter from the date you took the
deduction to the date you repay the
difference.
(b) If the actual processing allowance
is greater than the amount you claimed
on Form ONRR–2014 for any month
during the period reported on the
allowance form, you are entitled to a
credit plus interest.
■ 8. Revise subpart F to read as follows:
Subpart F—Federal Coal
Sec.
1206.250 What is the purpose and scope of
this subpart?
1206.251 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
1206.252 How do I calculate royalty value
for coal I or my affiliate sell(s) under an
arm’s-length or non-arm’s-length
contract?
1206.253 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
1206.254 How will ONRR determine the
value of my coal for royalty purposes?
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1206.255 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty under
this subpart?
1206.256 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.257 When is an ONRR audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process considered final?
1206.258 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
1206.259 Does ONRR protect information I
provide?
1206.260 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
1206.261 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract or
no written arm’s-length contract?
1206.262 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length transportation contract?
1206.263 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.264 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.265 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
1206.266 What reporting adjustments must
I make for transportation allowances?
1206.267 What general washing allowance
requirements apply to me?
1206.268 How do I determine washing
allowances if I have an arm’s-length
washing contract or no written arm’slength contract?
1206.269 How do I determine washing
allowances if I have a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.270 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.271 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.272 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a washing
allowance?
1206.273 What reporting adjustments must
I make for washing allowances?
Subpart F—Federal Coal
§ 1206.250 What is the purpose and scope
of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all coal
produced from Federal coal leases. It
explains how you, as the lessee, must
calculate the value of production for
royalty purposes consistent with the
mineral leasing laws, other applicable
laws and lease terms.
(b) The terms ‘‘you’’ and ‘‘your’’ in
this subpart refer to the lessee.
(c) If the regulations in this subpart
are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute;
(2) A settlement agreement between
the United States and a lessee resulting
from administrative or judicial
litigation;
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(3) A written agreement between the
lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the
value of production from any lease that
ONRR expects, at least, would
approximate the value established
under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of a coal
lease subject to this subpart, then the
statute, settlement agreement, written
agreement, or lease provision will
govern to the extent of the
inconsistency.
(d) ONRR may audit and order you to
adjust all royalty payments.
§ 1206.251 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
(a) You must calculate royalties based
on the quantity and quality of coal at the
royalty measurement point that ONRR
and BLM jointly determine.
(b) You must measure coal in short
tons using the methods BLM prescribes
for Federal coal leases under 43 CFR
part 3000. You must report coal quantity
on appropriate forms required in 30 CFR
part 1210—Forms and Reports.
(c)(1) You are not required to pay
royalties on coal you produce and add
to stockpiles or inventory until you use,
sell, or otherwise finally dispose of such
coal.
(2) ONRR may request BLM to require
you to increase your lease bond if BLM
determines that stockpiles or inventory
are excessive such that they increase the
risk of resource degradation.
(d) You must pay royalty at the rate
specified in your lease at the time you
use, sell, or otherwise finally dispose of
the coal.
(e) You must allocate washed coal by
attributing the washed coal to the leases
from which it was extracted.
(1) If the wash plant washes coal from
only one lease, the quantity of washed
coal allocable to the lease is the total
output of washed coal from the plant.
(2) If the wash plant washes coal from
more than one lease, you must
determine the tonnage of washed coal
attributable to each lease by:
(i) First, calculating the input ratio of
washed coal allocable to each lease by
dividing the tonnage of coal you input
to the wash plant from each lease by the
total tonnage of coal input to the wash
plant from all leases; and
(ii) Then multiplying the input ratio
derived under paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this
section by the tonnage of total output of
washed coal from the plant.
§ 1206.252 How do I calculate royalty value
for coal I or my affiliate sell(s) under an
arm’s-length or non-arm’s-length contract?
(a) The value of coal under this
section for royalty purposes is the gross
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proceeds accruing to you or your
affiliate under the first arm’s-length
contract less an applicable
transportation allowance determined
under §§ 1206.260 through 1206.262
and washing allowance under
§§ 1206.267 through 1206.269. You
must use this paragraph (a) to value coal
when:
(1) You sell under an arm’s-length
contract; or
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate
or another person under a non-arm’slength contract, and that affiliate or
person, or another affiliate of either of
them, then sells the coal under an arm’slength contract.
(b) If you have no contract for the sale
of coal subject to this section because
you or your affiliate used the coal in a
power plant you or your affiliate own(s)
for the generation and sale of electricity
and;
(1) You or your affiliate sell(s) the
electricity, then the value of the coal
subject to this section, for royalty
purposes, is the gross proceeds accruing
to you for the power plant’s arm’slength sales of the electricity less
applicable transportation and washing
deductions determined under
§§ 1206.260 through 1206.262 and
§§ 1206.267 through 1206.269 of this
subpart and, if applicable, transmission
and generation deductions determined
under §§ 1206.353 and 1206.352 of
subpart H;
(2) You or your affiliate do(es) not sell
the electricity at arm’s length (i.e. you or
your affiliate deliver(s) the electricity
directly to the grid), then ONRR will
determine the value of the coal under
§ 1206.254.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the value using the
procedures in § 1206.258(a).
(ii) You may use that method to
determine value, for royalty purposes,
until ONRR issues a determination.
(iii) After ONRR issues a
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.253(a)(2).
(c) If you are a coal cooperative, or a
member of a coal cooperative, and:
(1) You sell or transfer coal to another
member of the coal cooperative, and
that member of the coal cooperative
then sells the coal under an arm’s-length
contract, then you must value the coal
under paragraph (a) of this section; or
(2) You sell or transfer coal to another
member of the coal cooperative and the
coal is used by you, the coal
cooperative, or another member of the
coal cooperative in a power plant for the
generation and sale of electricity, then
you must value the coal under
paragraph (b) of this section.
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(d) If you are entitled to take a
washing allowance and transportation
allowance for royalty purposes under
this section, under no circumstances
may the washing allowance plus the
transportation allowance reduce the
royalty value of the coal to zero.
(e) The values in this section do not
apply, if ONRR decides to value your
coal under § 1206.254.
§ 1206.253 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and
audit the royalties you report. If ONRR
determines that your reported value is
inconsistent with the requirements of
this subpart, ONRR will direct you to
use a different measure of royalty value,
or decide your value, under § 1206.254.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a
different royalty value, you must either
pay any underpaid royalties due, plus
late payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter or report a
credit for, or request a refund of, any
overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this
subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR
will examine if your or your affiliate’s
contract reflects the total consideration
actually transferred, either directly or
indirectly, from the buyer to you or your
affiliate for the coal. If ONRR
determines that a contract does not
reflect the total consideration, ONRR
may decide your value under
§ 1206.254.
(c) ONRR may decide to value your
coal under § 1206.254 if ONRR
determines that the gross proceeds
accruing to you or your affiliate under
a contract do not reflect reasonable
consideration because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) You breached your duty to market
the coal for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor by selling your
coal at a value that is unreasonably low.
ONRR may consider a sales price
unreasonably low if it is 10-percent less
than the lowest other reasonable
measures of market price, including but
not limited to, prices reported to ONRR
for like-quality coal; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly valued your coal under
§ 1206.252 for any reason, including but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents to ONRR
under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart E.
(d) You have the burden of
demonstrating that your or your
affiliate’s contract is arm’s length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify
that the provisions in your or your
affiliate’s contract include(s) all of the
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consideration the buyer paid you or
your affiliate, either directly or
indirectly, for the coal.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or
amendment, if you or your affiliate
fail(s) to take proper or timely action to
receive prices or benefits to which you
or your affiliate are entitled, you must
pay royalty based upon that obtainable
price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely
application for a price increase or
benefit allowed under your or your
affiliate’s contract, but the purchaser
refuses, and you or your affiliate take
reasonable documented measures to
force purchaser compliance, you will
not owe additional royalties unless or
until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration
resulting from the price increase. You
may not construe this paragraph to
permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where
a purchaser fails to pay, in whole or in
part, or timely, for a quantity of coal.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make
all contracts, contract revisions, or
amendments in writing, and all parties
to the contract must sign the contract,
contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to
comply with paragraph (g)(1) of this
section, ONRR may decide to value your
coal under § 1206.254.
(3) This provision applies
notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
§ 1206.254 How will ONRR determine the
value of my coal for royalty purposes?
If ONRR decides to value your coal for
royalty purposes under § 1206.254, or
any other provision in this subpart, then
ONRR will determine value by
considering any information we deem
relevant, which may include, but is not
limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality coal from
the same mine, nearby mines, same
region, or other regions, or washed in
the same or nearby wash plant;
(b) Public sources of price or market
information that ONRR deems reliable,
including but not limited to, the price
of electricity;
(c) Information available to ONRR and
information reported to it, including but
not limited to, on Form ONRR–4430;
(d) Costs of transportation or washing,
if ONRR determines they are applicable;
or
(e) Any other information ONRR
deems relevant regarding the particular
lease operation or the salability of the
coal.
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§ 1206.255 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty under
this subpart?
If you value your coal under this
subpart, you must retain all data
relevant to the determination of the
royalty you paid. You can find
recordkeeping requirements in parts
1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the royalty
value, including all allowable
deductions; and
(2) How you complied with this
subpart.
(b) Upon request, you must submit all
data to ONRR. You must comply with
any such requirement within the time
ONRR specifies.
§ 1206.256 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable condition
and to market production?
(a) You must place coal in marketable
condition and market the coal for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the
lessor at no cost to the Federal
Government.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an
arm’s-length contract to determine
royalty, you must increase those gross
proceeds to the extent that the
purchaser, or any other person, provides
certain services that you normally are
responsible to perform to place the coal
in marketable condition or to market the
coal.
§ 1206.257 When is an ONRR audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process considered final?
Notwithstanding any provision in
these regulations to the contrary, ONRR
will not consider any audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process that results in ONRR
redetermining royalty due, under this
subpart, final or binding as against the
Federal Government or its beneficiaries
unless ONRR chooses to formally close
the audit period in writing.
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§ 1206.258 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
(a) You may request a valuation
determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any coal produced. Your
request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases
involved, all interest owners of those
leases, and the operator(s) for those
leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant
facts. You must inform ONRR of any
changes to relevant facts that occur
before we respond to your request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant
documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the
issue(s), including citations to all
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relevant precedents (including adverse
precedents); and
(6) Suggest a proposed valuation
method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR
may:
(1) Request that the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a determination; or
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue
guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR
will not provide a determination or
guidance. Situations in which ONRR
typically will not provide any
determination or guidance include, but
are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on
hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of
pending litigation or administrative
appeals.
(c)(1) A determination the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget signs is binding on both you and
ONRR until the Assistant Secretary
modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues
a determination, you must make any
adjustments in royalty payments that
follow from the determination and, if
you owe additional royalties, you must
pay any additional royalties due, plus
late payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter.
(3) A determination the Assistant
Secretary signs is the final action of the
Department and is subject to judicial
review under 5 U.S.C. 701–706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not
binding on ONRR, delegated States, or
you with respect to the specific
situation addressed in the guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR’s decision
whether or not to issue guidance or
request an Assistant Secretary
determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not
appealable decisions or orders under 30
CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring
you to pay royalty on the same basis as
the guidance, you may appeal that order
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary
may use any of the applicable criteria in
this subpart to provide guidance or
make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute
or regulation on which ONRR based any
guidance, or the Assistant Secretary
based any determination, takes
precedence over the determination or
guidance after the effective date of the
statute or regulation, regardless of
whether ONRR or the Assistant
Secretary modifies or rescinds the
guidance or determination.
(g) ONRR may make requests and
replies under this section available to
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665
the public, subject to the confidentiality
requirements under § 1206.259.
§ 1206.259
I provide?
Does ONRR protect information
(a) Certain information you or your
affiliate submit(s) to ONRR regarding
royalties on coal, including deductions
and allowances, may be exempt from
disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and
regulations permit, ONRR will keep
confidential any data you or your
affiliate submit(s) that is privileged,
confidential, or otherwise exempt from
disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all
requests for information under the
Freedom of Information Act regulations
of the Department of the Interior at 43
CFR part 2.
§ 1206.260 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
(a)(1) ONRR will allow a deduction
for the reasonable, actual costs to
transport coal from the lease to the point
off the lease or mine as determined
under § 1206.261 or § 1206.262, as
applicable.
(2) You do not need ONRR approval
before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs incurred.
(b) You may take a transportation
allowance when:
(1) You value coal under § 1206.252 of
this part;
(2) You transport the coal from a
Federal lease to a sales point, which is
remote from both the lease and mine; or
(3) You transport the coal from a
Federal lease to a wash plant when that
plant is remote from both the lease and
mine and, if applicable, from the wash
plant to a remote sales point.
(c) You may not take an allowance for:
(1) Transporting lease production that
is not royalty-bearing;
(2) In-mine movement of your coal; or
(3) Costs to move a particular tonnage
of production for which you did not
incur those costs.
(d) You only may claim a
transportation allowance when you sell
the coal and pay royalties.
(e) You must allocate transportation
allowances to the coal attributed to the
lease from which it was extracted.
(1) If you commingle coal produced
from Federal and non-Federal leases,
you may not disproportionately allocate
transportation costs to Federal lease
production. Your allocation must use
the same proportion as the ratio of the
tonnage from the Federal lease
production to the tonnage from all
production.
(2) If you commingle coal produced
from more than one Federal lease, you
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must allocate transportation costs to
each Federal lease as appropriate. Your
allocation must use the same proportion
as the ratio of the tonnage of each
Federal lease production to the tonnage
of all production.
(3) For washed coal, you must allocate
the total transportation allowance only
to washed products.
(4) For unwashed coal, you may take
a transportation allowance for the total
coal transported.
(5)(i) You must report your
transportation costs on Form ONRR–
4430 as clean coal short tons sold
during the reporting period multiplied
by the sum of the per-short-ton cost of
transporting the raw tonnage to the
wash plant and, if applicable, the pershort-ton cost of transporting the clean
coal tons from the wash plant to a
remote sales point.
(ii) You must determine the cost per
short ton of clean coal transported by
dividing the total applicable
transportation cost by the number of
clean coal tons resulting from washing
the raw coal transported.
(f) You must express transportation
allowances for coal as a dollar-value
equivalent per short ton of coal
transported. If you do not base your or
your affiliate’s payments for
transportation under a transportation
contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
must convert whatever consideration
you or your affiliate paid to a dollarvalue equivalent.
(g) ONRR may determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.254 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length transportation
contract does not reflect the reasonable
cost of the transportation because you
breached your duty to market the coal
for the mutual benefit of yourself and
the lessor by transporting your coal at a
cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance
unreasonably high if it is 10-percent
higher than the highest reasonable
measures of transportation costs
including, but not limited to,
transportation allowances reported to
ONRR and the cost to transport coal
through the same transportation system;
or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly calculated a transportation
allowance under § 1206.261 or
§ 1206.262 for any reason including, but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents that ONRR
requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart E.
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§ 1206.261 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an arm’slength transportation contract or no written
arm’s-length contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s)
transportation costs under an arm’slength transportation contract, you may
claim a transportation allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred for
transporting the coal under that
contract.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is at
arm’s length.
(c) If you have no written contract for
the arm’s-length transportation of coal,
then ONRR will determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.254. You may not use this
paragraph (c) if you or your affiliate
perform(s) your own transportation.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.258(a).
(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
§ 1206.262 How do I determine a
transportation allowance for a non-arm’slength transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
transportation contract, including
situations where you or your affiliate
provide your own transportation
services. You must calculate your
transportation allowance based on your
or your affiliate’s reasonable, actual
costs for transportation during the
reporting period using the procedures
prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate’s actual costs
may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of
this section;
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h)
of this section and a return on
undepreciated capital investment under
paragraph (i) of this section, or you may
elect to use a cost equal to a return on
the initial depreciable capital
investment in the transportation system
under paragraph (j) of this section. After
you have elected to use either method
for a transportation system, you may not
later elect to change to the other
alternative without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request; and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage
value, under paragraph (i) of this
section, after you have depreciated the
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transportation system to its reasonable
salvage value.
(c) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
any other cost that you use under this
section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment),
which are an integral part of the
transportation system.
(e) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(1) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expenses that you
can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(1) Maintenance of the transportation
system;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation
system, is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance
taxes and other fees, including royalties,
are not allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you
may elect to use either (i) a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of
the transportation system or the life of
the reserves which the transportation
system services, or (ii) a unit-ofproduction method. After you make an
election, you may not change methods
without ONRR approval. If ONRR
accepts your request to change methods,
you may use your changed method
beginning with the production month
following the month ONRR received
your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a
transportation system will not alter the
depreciation schedule that the original
transporter/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(3) You may depreciate a
transportation system only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(i)(1) To calculate a return on
undepreciated capital investment, you
must multiply the remaining
undepreciated capital balance as of the
beginning of the period for which you
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are calculating the transportation
allowance by the rate of return provided
in paragraph (k) of this section.
(2) After you have depreciated a
transportation system to its reasonable
salvage value, you may continue to
include in the allowance calculation a
cost equal to the reasonable salvage
value multiplied by a rate of return
determined under paragraph (k) of this
section.
(j) As an alternative to using
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as
provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, you may use as a cost an
amount equal to the allowable initial
capital investment in the transportation
system multiplied by the rate of return
determined under paragraph (k) of this
section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance
(k) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average
BBB rate that Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues a
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.266.
§ 1206.263 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on transportation costs
you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length
transportation contracts, production
agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.264 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on non-arm’s-length
transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
transportation facilities or arrangements,
you must base your initial deduction on
estimates of allowable transportation
costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the transportation
system as your estimate, if available. If
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such data is not available, you must use
estimates based on data for similar
transportation systems.
(3) Section 1206.266 applies when
you amend your report based on the
actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. You
can find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
§ 1206.265 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you
took an unauthorized transportation
allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your
transportation allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a
transportation allowance against the
sales value of the coal instead of
reporting the allowance as a separate
entry on Form ONRR–4430, ONRR may
assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR part
1241.
§ 1206.266 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation
allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR–4430 for each
month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional
royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under § 1218.202 of this
chapter from the date you took the
deduction to the date you repay the
difference.
(b) If the actual transportation
allowance is greater than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR–4430 for
any month during the period reported
on the allowance form, you are entitled
to a credit without interest.
§ 1206.267 What general washing
allowance requirements apply to me?
(a)(1) If you determine the value of
your coal under § 1206.252 of this
subpart, you may take a washing
allowance for the reasonable, actual
costs to wash coal. The allowance is a
deduction when determining coal
royalty value for the costs you incur to
wash coal.
(2) You do not need ONRR approval
before reporting a washing allowance.
(b) You may not:
(1) Take an allowance for the costs of
washing lease production that is not
royalty bearing;
(2) Disproportionately allocate
washing costs to Federal leases. You
must allocate washing costs to washed
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667
coal attributable to each Federal lease by
multiplying the input ratio determined
under § 1206.251(e)(2)(i) by the total
allowable costs.
(c)(1) You must express washing
allowances for coal as a dollar-value
equivalent per short ton of coal washed.
(2) If you do not base your or your
affiliate’s payments for washing under
an arm’s-length contract on a dollar-perunit basis, you must convert whatever
consideration you or your affiliate paid
to a dollar-value equivalent.
(d) ONRR may determine your
washing allowance under § 1206.254
because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length washing contract
does not reflect the reasonable cost of
the washing because you breached your
duty to market the coal for the mutual
benefit of yourself and the lessor by
washing your coal at a cost that is
unreasonably high. We may consider a
washing allowance unreasonably high if
it is 10-percent higher than the highest
other reasonable measures of washing,
including but not limited to, washing
allowances reported to ONRR and costs
for coal washed in the same plant or
other plants in the region; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly calculated a washing
allowance under §§ 1206.267 through
1206.269 for any reason, including but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents that ONRR
requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart E.
(e) You only may claim a washing
allowance, when you sell the washed
coal and report and pay royalties.
§ 1206.268 How do I determine washing
allowances if I have an arm’s-length
washing contract or no written arm’s-length
contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s)
washing costs under an arm’s-length
washing contract, you may claim a
washing allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs incurred.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is
arm’s length.
(c) If you have no written contract for
the arm’s-length washing of coal, then
ONRR will determine your washing
allowance under § 1206.254. You may
not use this paragraph (c) if you or your
affiliate perform(s) your own washing. If
you or your affiliate perform(s) the
washing, then:
(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.258(a).
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(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
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§ 1206.269 How do I determine washing
allowances if I have a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
washing contract, including situations
where you or your affiliate provides
your own washing services. You must
calculate your washing allowance based
on your or your affiliate’s reasonable,
actual costs for washing during the
reporting period using the procedures
prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate’s actual costs
can include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of
this section;
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h)
of this section and a return on
undepreciated capital investment under
paragraph (i) of this section, or you may
elect to use a cost equal to a return on
the initial depreciable capital
investment in the wash plant under
paragraph (j) of this section. After you
have elected to use either method for a
wash plant, you may not later elect to
change to the other alternative without
ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your
request to change methods, you may use
your changed method beginning with
the production month following the
month ONRR received your change
request; and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage
value, under paragraph (i) of this
section, after you have depreciated the
wash plant to its reasonable salvage
value.
(c) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
any other cost that you use under this
section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment),
which are an integral part of the wash
plant.
(e) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(1) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expenses that you
can document.
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(f) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(1) Maintenance of the wash plant;
(2) Maintenance of equipment; and
(3) Maintenance labor.
(4) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the wash plant, is an
allowable expense. State and Federal
income taxes and severance taxes and
other fees, including royalties, are not
allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you
may elect to use either a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of
the wash plant or the life of the reserves
which the wash plant services, or a unitof-production method. After you make
an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a wash
plant will not alter the depreciation
schedule that the original washer/lessee
established for purposes of the
allowance calculation.
(3) With or without a change in
ownership, you may depreciate a wash
plant only once.
(i)(1) To calculate a return on
undepreciated capital investment, you
must multiply the remaining
undepreciated capital balance as of the
beginning of the period for which you
are calculating the washing allowance
by the rate of return provided in
paragraph (k) of this section.
(2) After you have depreciated a wash
plant to its reasonable salvage value,
you may continue to include in the
allowance calculation a cost equal to the
salvage value multiplied by a rate of
return determined under paragraph (k)
of this section.
(j) As an alternative to using
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as
provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, you may use as a cost an
amount equal to the allowable initial
capital investment in the wash plant
multiplied by the rate of return as
determined under paragraph (k) of this
section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(k) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average
BBB rate that Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
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(2) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues its
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.273.
§ 1206.270 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
washing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on washing costs you
or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length washing
contracts, production agreements,
operating agreements, and related
documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
§ 1206.271 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on non-arm’s-length
washing costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
washing facilities or arrangements, you
must base your initial deduction on
estimates of allowable washing costs for
the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the wash plant as
your estimate, if available. If such data
is not available, you must use estimates
based on data for similar wash plants.
(3) Section 1206.273 applies when
you amend your report based on the
actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. You
can find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
§ 1206.272 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a washing
allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you
took an unauthorized washing
allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your washing
allowance, you may be entitled to a
credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a washing
allowance against the sales value of the
coal instead of reporting the allowance
as a separate entry on Form ONRR–
4430, ONRR may assess a civil penalty
under 30 CFR part 1241.
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§ 1206.273 What reporting adjustments
must I make for washing allowances?
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(a) If your actual washing allowance
is less than the amount you claimed on
Form ONRR–4430 for each month
during the allowance reporting period,
you must pay additional royalties due,
plus late payment interest calculated
under § 1218.202 of this chapter from
the date you took the deduction to the
date you repay the difference.
(b) If the actual washing allowance is
greater than the amount you claimed on
Form ONRR–4430 for any month during
the period reported on the allowance
form, you are entitled to a credit
without interest.
■ 9. Revise subpart J to read as follows:
Subpart J—Indian Coal
Sec.
1206.450 What is the purpose and scope of
this subpart?
1206.451 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
1206.452 How do I calculate royalty value
for coal I or my affiliate sell(s) under an
arm’s-length or non-arm’s-length
contract?
1206.453 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
1206.454 How will ONRR determine the
value of my coal for royalty purposes?
1206.455 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty under
this subpart?
1206.456 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable
condition and to market production?
1206.457 When is an ONRR audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process considered final?
1206.458 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
1206.459 Does ONRR protect information I
provide?
1206.460 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
1206.461 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an
arm’s-length transportation contract or
no written arm’s-length contract?
1206.462 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length transportation contract?
1206.463 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
1206.464 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract or no written
arm’s-length contract?
1206.465 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
1206.466 What reporting adjustments must
I make for transportation allowances?
1206.467 What general washing allowance
requirements regarding apply to me?
1206.468 How do I determine a washing
allowance if I have an arm’s-length
washing contract or no written arm’slength contract?
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1206.469 How do I determine a washing
allowance if I have a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.470 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
washing contract?
1206.471 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
washing contract or no written arm’slength contract?
1206.472 What interest and penalties apply
if I improperly report a washing
allowance?
1206.473 What reporting adjustments must
I make for washing allowances?
Subpart J—Indian Coal
§ 1206.450 What is the purpose and scope
of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all coal
produced from Indian tribal coal leases
and coal leases on land held by
individual Indian mineral owners. It
explains how you, as the lessee, must
calculate the value of production for
royalty purposes consistent with the
mineral leasing laws, other applicable
laws, and lease terms (except leases on
the Osage Indian Reservation, Osage
County, Oklahoma).
(b) The terms ‘‘you’’ and ‘‘your’’ in
this subpart refer to the lessee.
(c) If the regulations in this subpart
are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute or treaty;
(2) A settlement agreement;
(3) A written agreement between the
lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the
value of production from any lease that
ONRR expects, at least, would
approximate the value established
under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of a coal
lease subject to this subpart, then the
statute, settlement agreement, written
agreement, or lease provision will
govern to the extent of the
inconsistency.
(d) ONRR may audit and order you to
adjust all royalty payments.
(e) The regulations in this subpart,
intended to ensure that the trust
responsibilities of the United States
with respect to the administration of
Indian coal leases, are discharged under
the requirements of the governing
mineral leasing laws, treaties, and lease
terms.
§ 1206.451 How do I determine royalty
quantity and quality?
(a) You must calculate royalties based
on the quantity and quality of coal at the
royalty measurement point that ONRR
and BLM jointly determine.
(b) You must measure coal in short
tons using the methods BLM prescribes
for Indian coal leases. You must report
coal quantity on appropriate forms
required in 30 CFR part 1210.
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669
(c)(1) You are not required to pay
royalties on coal you produce and add
to stockpiles or inventory until you use,
sell, or otherwise finally dispose of such
coal.
(2) ONRR may request BLM to require
you to increase your lease bond if BLM
determines that stockpiles or inventory
are excessive such that they increase the
risk of resource degradation.
(d) You must pay royalty at the rate
specified in your lease at the time you
use, sell, or otherwise finally dispose of
the coal.
(e) You must allocate washed coal by
attributing the washed coal to the leases
from which it was extracted.
(1) If the wash plant washes coal from
only one lease, the quantity of washed
coal allocable to the lease is the total
output of washed coal from the plant.
(2) If the wash plant washes coal from
more than one lease, you must
determine the tonnage of washed coal
attributable to each lease by:
(i) First, calculating the input ratio of
washed coal allocable to each lease by
dividing the tonnage of coal you input
to the wash plant from each lease by the
total tonnage of coal input to the wash
plant from all leases; and
(ii) Then multiplying the input ratio
derived under paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this
section by the tonnage of total output of
washed coal from the plant.
§ 1206.452 How do I calculate royalty value
for coal I or my affiliate sell(s) under an
arm’s-length or non-arm’s-length contract?
(a) The value of coal under this
section for royalty purposes is the gross
proceeds accruing to you or your
affiliate under the first arm’s-length
contract less an applicable
transportation allowance determined
under §§ 1206.460 through 1206.462
and washing allowance under
§§ 1206.467 through 1206.469. You
must use this paragraph (a) to value coal
when:
(1) You sell under an arm’s-length
contract; or
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate
or another person under a non-arm’slength contract, and that affiliate or
person, or another affiliate of either of
them, then sells the coal under an arm’slength contract.
(b) If you have no contract for the sale
of coal subject to this section because
you or your affiliate used the coal in a
power plant you or your affiliate own(s)
for the generation and sale of electricity
and;
(1) You or your affiliate sell(s) the
electricity, then the value of the coal
subject to this section, for royalty
purposes, is the gross proceeds accruing
to you for the power plant’s arm’s-
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length sales of the electricity less
applicable transportation and washing
deductions determined under
§§ 1206.460 through 1206.462 and
§§ 1206.467 through 1206.469 of this
subpart and, if applicable, transmission
and generation deductions determined
under §§ 1206.353 and 1206.352 of
subpart H;
(2) You or your affiliate do(es) not sell
the electricity at arm’s length (i.e. you or
your affiliate deliver(s) the electricity
directly to the grid), then ONRR will
determine the value of the coal under
§ 1206.454.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the value using the
procedures in § 1206.458(a).
(ii) You may use that method to
determine value, for royalty purposes,
until ONRR issues a determination.
(iii) After ONRR issues a
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.453(a)(2).
(c) If you are a coal cooperative, or a
member of a coal cooperative, and;
(1) You sell or transfer coal to another
member of the coal cooperative, and
that member of the coal cooperative
then sells the coal under an arm’s-length
contract, then you must value the coal
under paragraph (a) of this section; or
(2) You sell or transfer coal to another
member of the coal cooperative, and the
coal is used by you, the coal
cooperative, or another member of the
coal cooperative, in a power plant for
the generation and sale of electricity,
then you must value the coal under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) If you are entitled to take a
washing allowance and transportation
allowance for royalty purposes under
this section, under no circumstances
may the washing allowance plus the
transportation allowance reduce the
royalty value of the coal to zero.
(e) The values in this section do not
apply, if ONRR decides to value your
coal under § 1206.454.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.453 How will ONRR determine if my
royalty payments are correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and
audit the royalties you report. If ONRR
determines that your reported value is
inconsistent with the requirements of
this subpart, ONRR will direct you to
use a different measure of royalty value,
or decide your value, under § 1206.454.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a
different royalty value, you must either
pay any underpaid royalties plus late
payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter or report a
credit for, or request a refund of, any
overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this
subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
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conducting reviews and audits, ONRR
will examine if your or your affiliate’s
contract reflects the total consideration
actually transferred, either directly or
indirectly, from the buyer to you or your
affiliate for the coal. If ONRR
determines that a contract does not
reflect the total consideration, ONRR
may decide your value under
§ 1206.454.
(c) ONRR may decide to value your
coal under § 1206.454, if ONRR
determines that the gross proceeds
accruing to you or your affiliate under
a contract do not reflect reasonable
consideration because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) You breached your duty to market
the coal for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor by selling your
coal at a value that is unreasonably low.
ONRR may consider a sales price
unreasonably low, if it is 10-percent less
than the lowest other reasonable
measures of market price, including but
not limited to, prices reported to ONRR
for like-quality coal; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly valued your coal under
§ 1206.452 for any reason, including but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents to ONRR
under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart E.
(d) You have the burden of
demonstrating that your or your
affiliate’s contract is arm’s length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify
that the provisions in your or your
affiliate’s contract include(s) all of the
consideration the buyer paid you or
your affiliate, either directly or
indirectly, for the coal.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or
amendment, if you or your affiliate
fail(s) to take proper or timely action to
receive prices or benefits to which you
or your affiliate are entitled, you must
pay royalty based upon that obtainable
price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely
application for a price increase or
benefit allowed under your or your
affiliate’s contract, but the purchaser
refuses, and you or your affiliate take
reasonable documented measures to
force purchaser compliance, you will
not owe additional royalties unless or
until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration
resulting from the price increase. You
may not construe this paragraph to
permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where
a purchaser fails to pay, in whole or in
part, or timely, for a quantity of coal.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make
all contracts, contract revisions, or
amendments in writing, and all parties
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to the contract must sign the contract,
contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to
comply with paragraph (g)(1) of this
section, ONRR may decide to value your
coal under § 1206.454.
(3) This provision applies
notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
§ 1206.454 How will ONRR determine the
value of my coal for royalty purposes?
If ONRR decides to value your coal for
royalty purposes under § 1206.454, or
any other provision in this subpart, then
ONRR will determine value by
considering any information we deem
relevant, which may include, but is not
limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality coal from
the same mine, nearby mines, same
region, or other regions, or washed in
the same or nearby wash plant;
(b) Public sources of price or market
information that ONRR deems reliable,
including but not limited to, the price
of electricity;
(c) Information available to ONRR and
information reported to it, including but
not limited to, on Form ONRR–4430;
(d) Costs of transportation or washing,
if ONRR determines they are applicable;
or
(e) Any other information ONRR
deems relevant regarding the particular
lease operation or the salability of the
coal.
§ 1206.455 What records must I keep to
support my calculations of royalty under
this subpart?
If you value your coal under this
subpart, you must retain all data
relevant to the determination of the
royalty you paid. You can find
recordkeeping requirements in parts
1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the royalty
value, including all allowable
deductions; and
(2) How you complied with this
subpart.
(b) Upon request, you must submit all
data to ONRR or the representative of
the Indian lessor, or to the Inspector
General of the Department of the
Interior or other persons authorized to
receive such information. Such data
may include arm’s-length sales and
sales quantity data for like-quality coal
sold, purchased, or otherwise obtained
by you or your affiliate from the same
mine, nearby mines, same region, or
other regions. You must comply with
any such requirement within the time
ONRR specifies.
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§ 1206.456 What are my responsibilities to
place production into marketable condition
and to market production?
(a) You must place coal in marketable
condition and market the coal for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the
lessor at no cost to the Indian lessor.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an
arm’s-length contract to determine
royalty, you must increase those gross
proceeds to the extent that the
purchaser, or any other person, provides
certain services that you normally are
responsible to perform to place the coal
in marketable condition or to market the
coal.
§ 1206.457 When is an ONRR audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process considered final?
Notwithstanding any provision in
these regulations to the contrary, ONRR
will not consider any audit, review,
reconciliation, monitoring, or other like
process that results in ONRR
redetermining royalty due, under this
subpart, final or binding as against the
Federal Government or its beneficiaries
unless ONRR chooses to formally close
the audit period in writing.
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§ 1206.458 How do I request a valuation
determination or guidance?
(a) You may request a valuation
determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any coal produced. Your
request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases
involved, all interest owners of those
leases, and the operator(s) for those
leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant
facts. You must inform ONRR of any
changes to relevant facts that occur
before we respond to your request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant
documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the
issue(s), including citations to all
relevant precedents (including adverse
precedents); and
(6) Suggest a proposed valuation
method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR
may:
(1) Request that the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a determination; or
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue
guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR
will not provide a determination or
guidance. Situations in which ONRR
typically will not provide any
determination or guidance include, but
are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on
hypothetical situations; and
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(ii) Matters that are the subject of
pending litigation or administrative
appeals.
(c)(1) A determination the Assistant
Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget signs is binding on both you and
ONRR until the Assistant Secretary
modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues
a determination, you must make any
adjustments in royalty payments that
follow from the determination and, if
you owe additional royalties, you must
pay any additional royalties due, plus
late payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter.
(3) A determination the Assistant
Secretary signs is the final action of the
Department and is subject to judicial
review under 5 U.S.C. 701–706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not
binding on ONRR, Tribes, individual
Indian mineral owners, or you with
respect to the specific situation
addressed in the guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR’s decision
whether or not to issue guidance or
request an Assistant Secretary
determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not
appealable decisions or orders under 30
CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring
you to pay royalty on the same basis as
the guidance, you may appeal that order
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary
may use any of the applicable criteria in
this subpart to provide guidance or
make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute
or regulation on which ONRR based any
guidance, or the Assistant Secretary
based any determination, takes
precedence over the determination or
guidance after the effective date of the
statute or regulation, regardless of
whether ONRR or the Assistant
Secretary modifies or rescinds the
guidance or determination.
(g) ONRR may make requests and
replies under this section available to
the public, subject to the confidentiality
requirements under § 1206.459.
§ 1206.459
I provide?
Does ONRR protect information
(a) Certain information you or your
affiliate submit(s) to ONRR regarding
royalties on coal, including deductions
and allowances, may be exempt from
disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and
regulations permit, ONRR will keep
confidential any data you or your
affiliate submit(s) that is privileged,
confidential, or otherwise exempt from
disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all
requests for information under the
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671
Freedom of Information Act regulations
of the Department of the Interior at 43
CFR part 2.
§ 1206.460 What general transportation
allowance requirements apply to me?
(a)(1) ONRR will allow a deduction
for the reasonable, actual costs to
transport coal from the lease to the point
off the lease or mine as determined
under § 1206.461 or § 1206.462, as
applicable.
(2) Before you may take any
transportation allowance, you must
submit a completed page 1 of Form
ONRR–4293, Coal Transportation
Allowance Report, under sections
§ 1206.463 and § 1206.464 of this
subpart. You may claim a transportation
allowance retroactively for a period of
not more than 3 months prior to the first
day of the month that ONRR receives
your Form ONRR–4293.
(3) You may not use a transportation
allowance that was in effect before
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL
RULE]. You must use the provisions of
this subpart to determine your
transportation allowance.
(b) You may take a transportation
allowance when:
(1) You value coal under § 1206.452 of
this part;
(2) You transport the coal from an
Indian lease to a sales point which, is
remote from both the lease and mine; or
(3) You transport the coal from an
Indian lease to a wash plant when that
plant is remote from both the lease and
mine and, if applicable, from the wash
plant to a remote sales point.
(c) You may not take an allowance for:
(1) Transporting lease production that
is not royalty-bearing;
(2) In-mine movement of your coal; or
(3) Costs to move a particular tonnage
of production for which you did not
incur those costs.
(d) You only may claim a
transportation allowance when you sell
the coal and pay royalties.
(e) You must allocate transportation
allowances to the coal attributed to the
lease from which it was extracted.
(1) If you commingle coal produced
from Indian and non-Indian leases, you
may not disproportionately allocate
transportation costs to Indian lease
production. Your allocation must use
the same proportion as the ratio of the
tonnage from the Indian lease
production to the tonnage from all
production.
(2) If you commingle coal produced
from more than one Indian lease, you
must allocate transportation costs to
each Indian lease as appropriate. Your
allocation must use the same proportion
as the ratio of the tonnage of each Indian
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leases production to the tonnage of all
production.
(3) For washed coal, you must allocate
the total transportation allowance only
to washed products.
(4) For unwashed coal, you may take
a transportation allowance for the total
coal transported.
(5)(i) You must report your
transportation costs on Form ONRR–
4430 as clean coal short tons sold
during the reporting period multiplied
by the sum of the per short-ton cost of
transporting the raw tonnage to the
wash plant and, if applicable, the per
short-ton cost of transporting the clean
coal tons from the wash plant to a
remote sales point.
(ii) You must determine the cost per
short ton of clean coal transported by
dividing the total applicable
transportation cost by the number of
clean coal tons resulting from washing
the raw coal transported.
(f) You must express transportation
allowances for coal as a dollar-value
equivalent per short ton of coal
transported. If you do not base your or
your affiliate’s payments for
transportation under a transportation
contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
must convert whatever consideration
you or your affiliate paid to a dollarvalue equivalent.
(g) ONRR may determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.454 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length transportation
contract does not reflect the reasonable
cost of the transportation because you
breached your duty to market the coal
for the mutual benefit of yourself and
the lessor by transporting your coal at a
cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance
unreasonably high if it is 10-percent
higher than the highest reasonable
measures of transportation costs
including, but not limited to,
transportation allowances reported to
ONRR and the cost to transport coal
through the same transportation system;
or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly calculated a transportation
allowance under § 1206.461 or
§ 1206.462 for any reason including, but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents that ONRR
requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart E.
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§ 1206.461 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have an arm’slength transportation contract or no written
arm’s-length contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s)
transportation costs under an arm’slength transportation contract, you may
claim a transportation allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred for
transporting the coal under that
contract.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is at
arm’s length.
(c) If you have no written contract for
the arm’s-length transportation of coal,
then ONRR will determine your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.454. You may not use this
paragraph (c) if you or your affiliate
perform(s) your own transportation.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.458(a).
(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
§ 1206.462 How do I determine a
transportation allowance if I have a nonarm’s-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
transportation contract, including
situations where you or your affiliate
provide your own transportation
services. Calculate your transportation
allowance based on your or your
affiliate’s reasonable, actual costs for
transportation during the reporting
period using the procedures prescribed
in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate’s actual costs
may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of
this section; and
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h)
of this section and a return on
undepreciated capital investment under
paragraph (i) of this section, or you may
elect to use a cost equal to a return on
the initial depreciable capital
investment in the transportation system
under paragraph (j) of this section. After
you have elected to use either method
for a transportation system, you may not
later elect to change to the other
alternative without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request.
(c) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
any other cost that you use under this
section.
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(d) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment) which
are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(e) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(1) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense that you
can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(1) Maintenance of the transportation
system;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation
system, is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and Indian
tribal severance taxes and other fees,
including royalties, are not allowable
expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you
may elect to use either a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of
the transportation system or the life of
the reserves which the transportation
system services, or a unit-of-production
method. After you make an election,
you may not change methods without
ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your
request to change methods, you may use
your changed method beginning with
the production month following the
month ONRR received your change
request.
(2) A change in ownership of a
transportation system will not alter the
depreciation schedule the original
transporter/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(3) You may depreciate a
transportation system only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(i) To calculate a return on
undepreciated capital investment,
multiply the remaining undepreciated
capital balance as of the beginning of
the period for which you are calculating
the transportation allowance by the rate
of return provided in paragraph (k) of
this section.
(j) As an alternative to using
depreciation and a return on
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undepreciated capital investment, as
provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, you may use as a cost an
amount equal to the allowable initial
capital investment in the transportation
system multiplied by the rate of return
determined under paragraph (k) of this
section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(k) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average
BBB rate that Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues a
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.466.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.463 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on transportation costs
you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length
transportation contracts, production
agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
(d)(1) You must submit page 1 of the
initial Form ONRR–4293 prior to, or at
the same time as, you report the
transportation allowance determined
under an arm’s-length contract on Form
ONRR–4430.
(2) The initial Form ONRR–4293 is
effective beginning with the production
month that you are first authorized to
deduct a transportation allowance and
continues until the end of the calendar
year, or until the termination,
modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate, whichever is
earlier.
(3) After the initial period that ONRR
first authorized you to deduct a
transportation allowance and for
succeeding periods, you must submit
the entire Form ONRR–4293 by the
earlier of:
(i) Within 3 months after the end of
the calendar year; or
(ii) After the termination,
modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate.
(4) You may request to use an
allowance for a longer period than that
required under paragraph (d)(2) of this
section.
(i) You may use that allowance
beginning with the production month
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following the month ONRR received
your request to use the allowance for a
longer period until ONRR decides
whether to approve the longer period.
(ii) ONRR’s decision whether or not to
approve a longer period is not
appealable under 30 CFR part 1290.
(iii) If ONRR does not approve the
longer period, you must adjust your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.466.
§ 1206.464 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
transportation contract or no written arm’slength contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on non-arm’s-length
transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. You
can find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(c)(1) You must submit an initial
Form ONRR–4293 prior to, or at the
same time as, the transportation
allowance determined under a nonarm’s-length contract or no written
arm’s-length contract situation that you
report on Form ONRR–4430. If ONRR
receives a Form ONRR–4293 by the end
of the month that the Form ONRR–4430
is due, ONRR will consider the form
timely received. You may base the
initial form on estimated costs.
(2) The initial Form ONRR–4293 is
effective beginning with the production
month that you are first authorized to
deduct a transportation allowance and
continues until the end of the calendar
year or termination, modification, or
amendment of the applicable contract or
rate, whichever is earlier.
(3)(i) At the end of the calendar-year
for which you submitted a Form ONRR–
4293 based on estimates, you must
submit another completed Form ONRR–
4293 containing the actual costs for that
calendar year.
(ii) If the transportation continues,
you must include on Form ONRR–4293
your estimated costs for the next
calendar year.
(A) You must base the estimated
transportation allowance on the actual
costs for the previous reporting period
plus or minus any adjustments based on
your knowledge of decreases or
increases that will affect the allowance.
(B) ONRR must receive Form ONRR–
4293 within 3 months after the end of
the previous calendar year.
(d)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
transportation facilities or arrangements,
on your initial Form ONRR–4293, you
must include estimates of the allowable
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673
transportation costs for the applicable
period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the transportation
system as your estimate, if available. If
such data is not available, you must use
estimates based on data for similar
transportation systems.
(e) Upon ONRR’s request, you must
submit all data used to prepare your
Form ONRR–4293. You must provide
the data within a reasonable period of
time, as ONRR determines.
(f) Section 1206.466 applies when you
amend your Form ONRR–4293 based on
the actual costs.
§ 1206.465 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a transportation
allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you
took an unauthorized transportation
allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your
transportation allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a
transportation allowance against the
sales value of the coal instead of
reporting the allowance as a separate
entry on Form ONRR–4430, ONRR may
assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR part
1241.
§ 1206.466 What reporting adjustments
must I make for transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation
allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR–4430 for each
month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional
royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under § 1218.202 of this
chapter from the date you took the
deduction to the date you repay the
difference.
(b) If the actual transportation
allowance is greater than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR–4430 for
any month during the period reported
on the allowance form, you are entitled
to a credit without interest.
§ 1206.467 What general washing
allowance requirements apply to me?
(a)(1) If you determine the value of
your coal under § 1206.452 of this
subpart, you may take a washing
allowance for the reasonable, actual
costs to wash coal. The allowance is a
deduction when determining coal
royalty value for the costs you incur to
wash coal.
(2) Before you may take any
deduction, you must submit a
completed page one of Form ONRR–
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 / Proposed Rules
4292, Coal Washing Allowance Report,
under §§ 1206.470 and 1206.471 of this
subpart. You may claim a washing
allowance retroactively for a period of
not more than 3 months prior to the first
day of the month that you have filed
Form ONRR–4292 with ONRR.
(3) You may not use a washing
allowance that was in effect before the
effective date of the final rule. You must
use the provisions of this subpart to
determine your washing allowance.
(b) You may not:
(1) Take an allowance for the costs of
washing lease production that is not
royalty bearing;
(2) Disproportionately allocate
washing costs to Indian leases. You
must allocate washing costs to washed
coal attributable to each Indian lease by
multiplying the input ratio determined
under § 1206.451(e)(2)(i) by the total
allowable costs.
(c)(1) You must express washing
allowances for coal as a dollar-value
equivalent per short ton of coal washed.
(2) If you do not base your or your
affiliate’s payments for washing under
an arm’s-length contract on a dollar-perunit basis, you must convert whatever
consideration you or your affiliate paid
to a dollar-value equivalent.
(d) ONRR may determine your
washing allowance under § 1206.454
because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between
the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the
consideration you or your affiliate paid
under an arm’s-length washing contract
does not reflect the reasonable cost of
the washing because you breached your
duty to market the coal for the mutual
benefit of yourself and the lessor by
washing your coal at a cost that is
unreasonably high. We may consider a
washing allowance unreasonably high if
it is 10-percent higher than the highest
other reasonable measures of washing,
including but not limited to, washing
allowances reported to ONRR and costs
for coal washed in the same plant or
other plants in the region; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you
properly calculated a washing
allowance under §§ 1206.467 through
1206.469 for any reason, including but
not limited to, your or your affiliate’s
failure to provide documents that ONRR
requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart E.
(e) You only may claim a washing
allowance, if you sell the washed coal
and report and pay royalties.
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20:22 Jan 05, 2015
Jkt 235001
§ 1206.468 How do I determine a washing
allowance if I have an arm’s-length washing
contract or no written arm’s-length
contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s)
washing costs under an arm’s-length
washing contract, you may claim a
washing allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs incurred.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate
that your or your affiliate’s contract is
arm’s length.
(c) If you have no contract for the
washing of coal, then ONRR will
determine your transportation
allowance under § 1206.454. You may
not use this paragraph (c), if you or your
affiliate perform(s) your own washing. If
you or your affiliate perform(s) the
washing, then:
(1) You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in § 1206.458(a).
(2) You may use that method to
determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
§ 1206.469 How do I determine a washing
allowance if I have a non-arm’s-length
washing contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your
affiliate do(es) not have an arm’s-length
washing contract, including situations
where you or your affiliate provides
your own washing services. Calculate
your washing allowance based on your
or your affiliate’s reasonable, actual
costs for washing during the reporting
period using the procedures prescribed
in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate’s actual costs
may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs
(d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of
this section; and
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h)
of this section and a return on
undepreciated capital investment under
paragraph (i) of this section, or a cost
equal to a return on the initial
depreciable capital investment in the
wash plant under paragraph (j) of this
section. After you have elected to use
either method for a wash plant, you may
not later elect to change to the other
alternative without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request.
(c) You may not use any cost as a
deduction that duplicates all or part of
any other cost that you use under this
section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs
are generally those for depreciable fixed
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
assets (including costs of delivery and
installation of capital equipment),
which are an integral part of the wash
plant.
(e) Allowable operating expenses
include:
(1) Operations supervision and
engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expenses that you
can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses
include:
(1) Maintenance of the wash plant;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and
attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and
allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the wash plant is an
allowable expense. State and Federal
income taxes and Indian tribal
severance taxes and other fees,
including royalties, are not allowable
expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you
may elect to use either (i) a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of
the wash plant or the life of the reserves
which the wash plant services, or (ii) a
unit-of-production method. After you
make an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If
ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed
method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR
received your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a wash
plant will not alter the depreciation
schedule the original washer/lessee
established for purposes of the
allowance calculation.
(3) With or without a change in
ownership, you may depreciate a wash
plant only once.
(i) To calculate a return on
undepreciated capital investment,
multiply the remaining undepreciated
capital balance as of the beginning of
the period for which you are calculating
the washing allowance by the rate of
return provided in paragraph (k) of this
section.
(j) As an alternative to using
depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as
provided under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, you may use as a cost an
amount equal to the allowable initial
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 / Proposed Rules
capital investment in the wash plant
multiplied by the rate of return as
determined under paragraph (k) of this
section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(k) The rate of return is the industrial
rate associated with Standard & Poor’s
BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average
BBB rate that Standard & Poor’s
publishes for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent
calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues its
determination, you must make the
adjustments under § 1206.473.
(4) You may request to use an
allowance for a longer period than that
required under paragraph (d)(2) of this
section.
(i) You may use that allowance
beginning with the production month
following the month ONRR received
your request to use the allowance for a
longer period until ONRR decides
whether to approve the longer period.
(ii) ONRR’s decision whether or not to
approve a longer period is not
appealable under 30 CFR part 1290.
(iii) If ONRR does not approve the
longer period, you must adjust your
transportation allowance under
§ 1206.466.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1206.470 What are my reporting
requirements under an arm’s-length
washing contract?
§ 1206.471 What are my reporting
requirements under a non-arm’s-length
washing contract or no written arm’s-length
contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on washing costs you
or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit arm’s-length washing
contracts, production agreements,
operating agreements, and related
documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of
this chapter.
(d)(1) You must file an initial Form
ONRR–4292 prior to, or at the same
time, as the washing allowance
determined under an arm’s-length
contract or no written arm’s-length
contract situation that you report on
Form ONRR–4430. If ONRR receives a
Form ONRR–4292 by the end of the
month that the Form ONRR–4430 is
due, ONRR will consider the form
timely received.
(2) The initial Form ONRR–4292 is
effective beginning with the production
month that you are first authorized to
deduct a washing allowance and
continues until the end of the calendar
year, or until the termination,
modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate, whichever is
earlier.
(3) After the initial period that ONRR
first authorized you to deduct a washing
allowance, and for succeeding periods,
you must submit the entire Form
ONRR–4292 by the earlier of:
(i) Within 3 months after the end of
the calendar year; or
(ii) After the termination,
modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate.
(a) You must use a separate entry on
Form ONRR–4430 to notify ONRR of an
allowance based on non-arm’s-length
washing costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your
affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. You
can find recordkeeping requirements in
parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(c)(1) You must submit an initial
Form ONRR–4292 prior to, or at the
same time as, the washing allowance
determined under a non-arm’s-length
contract or no written arm’s-length
contract situation that you report on
Form ONRR–4430. If ONRR receives a
Form ONRR–4292 by the end of the
month that the Form ONRR–4430 is
due, ONRR will consider the form
received timely. You may base the
initial reporting on estimated costs.
(2) The initial Form ONRR–4292 is
effective beginning with the production
month that you are first authorized to
deduct a washing allowance and
continues until the end of the calendar
year or termination, modification, or
amendment of the applicable contract or
rate, whichever is earlier.
(3)(i) At the end of the calendar year
for which you submitted a Form ONRR–
4292, you must submit another
completed Form ONRR–4292 containing
the actual costs for that calendar year.
(ii) If coal washing continues, you
must include on Form ONRR–4292 your
estimated costs for the next calendar
year.
(A) You must base the estimated coal
washing allowance on the actual costs
for the previous period plus or minus
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675
any adjustments based on your
knowledge of decreases or increases that
will affect the allowance.
(B) ONRR must receive Form ONRR–
4292 within 3 months after the end of
the previous calendar year.
(d)(1) For new non-arm’s-length
washing facilities or arrangements on
your initial Form ONRR–4292, you must
include estimates of allowable washing
costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your
affiliate’s most recently available
operations data for the wash plant as
your estimate, if available. If such data
is not available, you must use estimates
based on data for similar wash plants.
(e) Upon ONRR’s request, you must
submit all data you used to prepare your
Forms ONRR–4293. You must provide
the data within a reasonable period of
time, as ONRR determines.
(f) Section 1206.472 applies when you
amend your Form ONRR–4292 based on
the actual costs.
§ 1206.472 What interest and penalties
apply if I improperly report a washing
allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you
took an unauthorized washing
allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under
§ 1218.202 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your washing
allowance, you may be entitled to a
credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a washing
allowance against the sales value of the
coal instead of reporting the allowance
as a separate entry on Form ONRR–
4430, ONRR may assess a civil penalty
under 30 CFR part 1241.
§ 1206.473 What reporting adjustments
must I make for washing allowances?
(a) If your actual washing allowance
is less than the amount you claimed on
Form ONRR–4430 for each month
during the allowance reporting period,
you must pay additional royalties due,
plus late payment interest calculated
under § 1218.202 of this chapter from
the date you took the deduction to the
date you repay the difference.
(b) If the actual washing allowance is
greater than the amount you claimed on
Form ONRR–4430 for any month during
the period reported on the allowance
form, you are entitled to a credit
without interest.
[FR Doc. 2014–30033 Filed 12–19–14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4310–T2–P
E:\FR\FM\06JAP2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 3 (Tuesday, January 6, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 607-675]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-30033]
[[Page 607]]
Vol. 80
Tuesday,
No. 3
January 6, 2015
Part II
Department of the Interior
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Office of Natural Resources Revenue
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
30 CFR Parts 1202 and 1206
Consolidated Federal Oil & Gas and Federal & Indian Coal Valuation
Reform; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 3 / Tuesday, January 6, 2015 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 608]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Natural Resources Revenue
30 CFR Parts 1202 and 1206
[Docket No. ONRR-2012-0004]
RIN 1012-AA13
Consolidated Federal Oil & Gas and Federal & Indian Coal
Valuation Reform
AGENCY: Office of Natural Resources Revenue, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Office of Natural Resources Revenue (ONRR) proposes to
change the regulations governing valuation for royalty purposes of oil
and gas produced from Federal onshore and offshore leases and coal
produced from Federal and Indian leases. The proposed rule also
consolidates definitions for oil, gas, and coal product valuation into
one subpart applicable to the Federal oil and gas and Federal and
Indian coal subparts.
DATES: You must submit comments on or before March 9, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments to ONRR on this proposed rulemaking
by any method below. Please refer to the Regulation Identifier Number
(RIN) 1012-AA13 in your comments. (See also Public Availability of
Comments under Procedural Matters.)
Electronically go to www.regulations.gov. In the entry
titled ``Enter Keyword or ID,'' enter ``ONRR-2012-0004,'' then click
``Search.'' Follow the instructions to submit public comments. ONRR
will post all comments.
Mail comments to Armand Southall, Regulatory Specialist,
P.O. Box 25165, MS 61030A, Denver, Colorado 80225.
Hand-carry comments, or use an overnight courier service,
to the Office of Natural Resources Revenue, Building 85, Room A-614,
Denver Federal Center, West 6th Ave. and Kipling St., Denver, Colorado
80225.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For comments or questions on
procedural issues, contact Armand Southall, ONRR, telephone (303) 231-
3221, or email at armand.southall@onrr.gov. The authors of the proposed
rule are Sarah Inderbitzin, Richard Adamski, Michael DeBerard, Peter
Christnacht, Kimbra Davis, and Lance Wenger.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
In 2007, the Royalty Policy Committee (RPC) Subcommittee on Royalty
Management issued a report titled ``Mineral Revenue Collection From
Federal and Indian Lands and the Outer Continental Shelf.'' The
Subcommittee's report recommended clarification of the regulations
governing onshore gas and transportation deductions to provide more
certainty for ONRR, BLM, and industry, which should result in better
compliance. More specifically, the Subcommittee recommended revisions
to the gas valuation regulations and guidelines to address the cost-
bundling issue and to facilitate the calculation of gas transportation
and gas processing deductions. The Subcommittee also recommended the
use of market indices for gas valuation in the context of non-arm's-
length transactions in lieu of benchmarks, which have been used since
1988.
The Subcommittee's report also recommended ``revis(ing) and
implement(ing) the regulations and guidance for calculating prices used
in checking royalty compliance for solid minerals, with particular
attention to non-arm's-length transactions.''
The current Federal oil valuation regulations have been in effect
since 2000, with a subsequent amendment relating primarily to the use
of index pricing in some circumstances. The current Federal gas
valuation regulations have been in effect since March 1, 1988, with
various subsequent amendments relating primarily to the transportation
allowance provisions. The current Federal and Indian coal valuation
regulations have been in effect since March 1, 1989, with minor
subsequent amendments relating primarily to the Federal black lung
excise taxes, abandoned mine lands fees, State and local severance
taxes, and washing and transportation allowance provisions. In the
years since we wrote these regulations, the Secretary of the Interior's
(Secretary) responsibility to determine the royalty value of minerals
produced has not changed, but the industry and marketplace have changed
dramatically. ONRR proposes these amendments to our valuation
regulations to permit the Secretary to discharge the Department of the
Interior's (Department) royalty valuation responsibility in an
environment of continuing and accelerating change in the industry and
the marketplace. The Secretary's responsibilities regarding oil and gas
production from Federal leases and coal production from Federal and
Indian leases require development of flexible valuation methodologies
that lessees can accurately comply with in a timely manner.
To increase the effectiveness and efficiency of our rules, ONRR is
proposing proactive and innovative changes. We intend for this proposed
rulemaking to provide regulations that (1) offer greater simplicity,
certainty, clarity, and consistency in product valuation for mineral
lessees and mineral revenue recipients; (2) are more understandable;
(3) decrease industry's cost of compliance and ONRR's cost to ensure
industry compliance; and (4) provide early certainty to industry and
ONRR that companies have paid every dollar due. Therefore, ONRR
proposes to amend the current regulations at 30 CFR part 1202, subpart
F, and part 1206, subparts C, D, F, and J, governing the valuation, for
royalty purposes, of oil, gas, and coal produced from Federal leases
and coal produced from Indian leases.
On May 27, 2011, ONRR published Advance Notices of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRs) regarding the valuation, for royalty purposes, of
oil, gas, and coal produced from Federal leases and coal produced from
Indian leases (76 FR 30878, 30881). ONRR received responses to the
Federal oil and gas valuation ANPR from 19 State, industry, industry
trade association, and the general public commenters. ONRR then
conducted 3 public workshops on Federal oil and gas valuation in
September and October 2011 in Houston, Texas, Washington, DC, and
Denver, Colorado. At the workshops, ONRR asked attendees to discuss,
among other things, the use of index prices to value oil and gas,
alternatives to the current requirement to track actual costs to
determine transportation allowances, and alternate methods for valuing
wellhead gas volumes to eliminate the requirement to trace the value of
liquids removed from processed gas.
ONRR received responses to the Federal and Indian coal valuation
ANPR from 11 industry representative, Tribe, State, community group
(representing several member groups), coal publication, and trade
organization commenters. ONRR then conducted 3 public workshops on
Federal and Indian coal valuation in October 2011 in Denver, Colorado;
St. Louis, Missouri; and Albuquerque, New Mexico. At those workshops,
ONRR asked attendees to discuss, among other things, (1) possible
alternatives to the current methods that we use to value arm's-length
and non-arm's-length coal sales, (2) coal comparability factors, (3)
possible alternatives to the current methods we use to value coal
cooperative sales of coal, (4) use of index prices to value coal, and
(5)
[[Page 609]]
possible alternatives to the current requirements to track actual costs
to determine transportation and washing allowances.
ONRR considered the input from the ANPRs and the workshops and
proposes this consolidated rulemaking to improve the current
regulations. The proposed rule would not alter the underlying
principles of the current regulations. By proposing these amendments,
the Department reaffirms that the value, for royalty purposes, of crude
oil and natural gas produced from Federal leases and coal produced from
Federal and Indian leases is determined at or near the lease and that
gross proceeds from arm's-length contracts are the best indication of
market value. Like the current regulations, these proposed regulations
would not restrict ONRR to a comparison of arm's-length sales of other
production occurring in the field or area to value production not sold
under an arm's-length contract. Thus, like the current regulations, in
this proposed rule, ONRR may begin with a ``downstream'' price or value
and determine value at the lease by allowing deductions for the cost of
transporting production to downstream sales points or markets, or by
allowing appropriate adjustments for location or quality.
Federal and Indian lessees are not obligated to sell their
production downstream of the lease. A lessee is at liberty to sell
production at or near the lease, even if selling downstream might yield
a higher royalty value than selling it at the lease. If a lessee
chooses to sell downstream, the choice to sell downstream does not make
otherwise non-deductible costs deductible (for example marketable
condition and marketing costs). See Independent Petroleum Ass'n of
America. v. DeWitt, 279 F.3d 1036 (D.C. Cir. 2002), cert. denied sub
nom., Independent Petroleum Ass'n of America. v. Watson, 537 U.S. 1105
(2003) (``Independent Petroleum Ass'n v. DeWitt''); Devon Energy Corp
v. Norton, No. 04-CV-0821 (GK), 2007 WL 2422005 (D.D.C. Aug. 23, 2007),
aff'd sub nom., Devon Energy Corp. v. Kempthorne, 551 F.3d 1030 (D.C.
Cir. 2008), cert. denied, 130 S. Ct. 86 (2009) (``Devon'') and cases
cited therein.
As noted above, the changes proposed in this rule reflect an effort
by ONRR to update its royalty valuation regulations to, among other
things, simplify processes and provide early clarity regarding
royalties owed. However, even with the changes outlined in this rule,
royalty valuations will continue to be complex, and the markets for
oil, gas, and coal will continue to evolve. Therefore, ONRR continues
to be interested in opportunities to further streamline the valuation
process, while also bringing added transparency to the system. In
particular, we seek ideas and comments on:
1. The potential for creating standardized ``schedules'' for
transportation and processing allowances to reduce the need to rely on
case-by-case operator reporting and agency review of actual costs.
2. Opportunities to more fundamentally reassess how non-arm's
length transactions are treated for the purposes of determining
royalties owed.
ONRR recognizes that the costs and benefits of making further
changes to its valuation regulations (beyond those specifically
proposed in this rule) will depend on the specific commodity at issue
(i.e., oil, gas or coal), as well as geographic or other factors. Thus,
detailed comments that elaborate on specific situations where further
valuation changes should be considered would be particularly useful to
ONRR as it proceeds with this rulemaking as well as any future rules
that may be considered.
II. Explanation of Proposed Amendments
Based on comments ONRR received on the ANPRs and at the public
workshops, and other relevant information, we propose this consolidated
rule to improve the current regulations to ensure greater clarity,
efficiency, certainty, and consistency in production valuation.
The general consensus of comments received on the ANPR about arm's-
length oil sales was that actual proceeds are the best indicator of
value, and ONRR should not change to index prices. Most commenters
agreed the valuation methodology for non-arm's-length sales of Federal
oil is working, as is using actual costs to determine transportation
allowances. Thus, ONRR is not currently proposing major changes to oil
valuation methodologies except to eliminate both unused valuation
options, such as tendering, and associated definition(s), and to make
the oil rule consistent with our proposed changes to the proposed
Federal gas rule.
The comments we received regarding gas produced from Federal leases
were, in certain instances, polarized. Very large companies generally
support index pricing as an option if it is revenue-neutral and there
are no required true-ups (end-of-year comparison of the index value to
actual sales and payment on the higher of the two). Independent gas
producers and States generally disagreed with the major companies and
did not support index pricing because they believe it may not reflect
actual value and may not be revenue neutral. The majority of
respondents generally support using actual costs for gas transportation
and processing deductions to maintain revenue neutrality. In response,
ONRR proposes no major changes for the valuation of arm's-length gas
sales. However, for non-arm's-length gas sales, ONRR proposes to
eliminate current benchmarks (a series of indicators of market value).
Instead, ONRR proposes valuation methodology options based on how gas
is sold using the first arm's-length-sale price (affiliate resales),
optional index prices, or weighted average pool prices.
The general consensus of ANPR commenters for coal valuation was not
to change royalty valuation of arm's-length sales and not to use coal
index values because of their very limited applicability. Commenters
suggested modifying the non-arm's-length coal benchmarks and
eliminating seldom-used benchmarks. Commenters agreed ONRR should keep
Federal and Indian rules separate. Therefore, at this time, ONRR is
proposing no changes to the valuation of arm's-length coal sales.
For non-arm's-length coal sales, ONRR proposes to eliminate the
current benchmarks. Instead, ONRR proposes to value coal on the gross
proceeds received from the first arm's-length sale. ONRR also proposes
to value sales of coal between coal cooperative members using the first
arm's-length sale or a netback methodology. In addition, if there is no
coal sale, and lessees or their affiliates use the coal to generate
electricity and sell the electricity, then ONRR proposes to value the
coal for royalty purposes based on the gross proceeds the lessee or its
affiliate receive for the power plant's arm's-length sales of the
electricity, less applicable deductions. ONRR proposes the same changes
for both Federal and Indian coal, with some minor exceptions, but would
continue to maintain separate regulations.
ONRR also proposes other changes to our regulations, although we
did not specifically request comments on these changes in the ANPRs or
at the workshops. One such proposed change is adding a new ``default
provision'' to address valuation when ONRR determines (1) a contract
does not reflect total consideration, (2) the gross proceeds accruing
to you or your affiliate under a contract do not reflect reasonable
consideration due to misconduct or breach of the duty to market for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor, or (3) it cannot
[[Page 610]]
ascertain the correct value of production because of a variety of
factors, including, but not limited to, a lessee's failure to provide
documents. In these cases, the Secretary may enforce his/her authority
and exercise considerable discretion to establish the reasonable value
of production using a variety of discretionary factors and any other
information the Secretary believes is appropriate.
Finally, we rewrote all sections of the current regulations in
Plain Language to meet the criteria of Executive Orders 12866 and 12988
and the Presidential Memorandum of June 1, 1998, and to make our rules
more clear, consistent, and readable. All citations to the current ONRR
regulations in title 30 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) in
this preamble refer to the July 1, 2012, CFR.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Before reading the additional explanatory information below, please
turn to the proposed rule language that immediately follows the List of
Subjects in 30 CFR parts 1202 and 1206 and signature page in this
proposed rule. The Department will codify this language in the CFR if
we finalize the proposed rule as written.
After you read the proposed rule, please return to the preamble
discussion below. The preamble contains more information about the
proposed rule, such as why we define a term in a certain manner and why
we chose one valuation method over another.
The derivation table below only shows a crosswalk of the recodified
sections of the current and the proposed regulations in part 1206.
Derivation Table for Part 1206
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The requirements of section: Are derived from section:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart C
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1206.20...................... 1206.101; 1206.151; 1206.251; 1206.451.
1206.101..................... 1206.102.
1206.102..................... 1206.103.
1206.103..................... 1206.104.
1206.106..................... 1206.105.
1206.107..................... 1206.106.
1206.108..................... 1206.107.
1206.109..................... 1206.108.
1206.110..................... 1206.109.
1206.111..................... 1206.110.
1206.112..................... 1206.111.
1206.113..................... 1206.112.
1206.114..................... 1206.113.
1206.115..................... 1206.114.
1206.116..................... 1206.115.
1206.117..................... 1206.116.
1206.118..................... 1206.117.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart D
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1206.140..................... 1206.150.
1206.141(a)(1)-(4)........... 1206.152(a)(1).
1206.141(b)(1)-(3)........... 1206.152(a)(2).
1206.141(b)(4)............... 1206.152(b)(1)(iv).
1206.142(a)(4)............... 1206.153(a)(1).
1206.142(b).................. 1206.153(a)(2).
1206.142(c).................. 1206.153(b)(1)(i).
1206.143(a)(1) and (b)....... 1206.152(b)(1)(ii); 1206.153(b)(1)(ii).
1206.143(a)(2)............... 1206.152(f); 1206.153(f).
1206.143(c).................. 1206.152(b)(1)(iii); 1206.153(b)(1)(iii).
1206.144..................... 1206.152(c)(1)-(3); 1206.153(c)(1)-(3).
1206.145..................... 1206.152(e)(1) and (2); 1206.153(e)(1)
and (2); 1206.157(c)(1)(ii) and
(c)(2)(iii); 1206.159(c)(1)(ii) and
(c)(2)(iii).
1206.146..................... 1206.152(i); 1206.153(i).
1206.147..................... 1206.152(k); 1206.153(k).
1206.148..................... 1206.152(g); 1206.153(g).
1206.149..................... 1206.152(l); 1206.153(l).
1206.150..................... 1206.154.
1206.151..................... 1206.155.
1206.152(a).................. 1206.156(a).
1206.152(b).................. 1206.156(b); 1206.57(a)(2) and (b)(3).
1206.152(c)(1)............... 1206.157(a)(2) and (b)(4).
1206.152(f).................. 1206.157(a)(4).
1206.153(b).................. 1206.157(f).
1206.153(c).................. 1206.157(g).
1206.154(a).................. 1206.157(b).
1206.154(e)-(h).............. 1206.157(b)(2)(i)-(iii).
1206.154(i).................. 1206.157(b)(2)(iv).
1206.154(i)(3)............... 1206.157(b)(2)(v).
1206.155..................... 1206.157(c)(1)(i), (ii).
1206.156..................... 1206.157(c)(2)(i)-(iv).
1206.157(a)(1) and (c)....... 1206.156(d).
1206.157(a)(2) and 1206.158.. 1206.157(e).
[[Page 611]]
1206.159(a)(1)............... 1206.158(a).
1206.159(b).................. 1206.158(b).
1206.159(c)(1) and (2)....... 1206.158(c)(1) and (2).
1206.159(d).................. 1206.158(d)(1).
1206.160..................... 1206.159(a).
1206.161..................... 1206.159(b).
1206.162..................... 1206.159(c)(1).
1206.163..................... 1206.159(c)(2).
1206.164..................... 1206.159(d).
1206.165..................... 1206.159(e).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart F
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1206.250..................... 1206.250.
1206.251..................... 1206.254; 1206.255; 1206.260.
1206.252(d).................. 1206.258(a); 1206.261(b).
1206.260(a)(1) and (b)....... 1206.261(a).
1206.260(c)(2)............... 1206.261(a)(2).
1206.260(d).................. 1206.261(c)(3).
1206.260(e).................. 1206.261(c)(1), (c)(2), and (e).
1206.260(f).................. 1206.262(a)(4).
1206.260(g).................. 1206.262(a)(2) and (a)(3).
1206.261..................... 1206.262(a)(1).
1206.262..................... 1206.262(b).
1206.263..................... 1206.262(c)(1).
1206.264..................... 1206.262(c)(2).
1206.265..................... 1206.262(d).
1206.266..................... 1206.262(e).
1206.267(a).................. 1206.258(a).
1206.267(b)(2)............... 1206.258(c); 1206.260.
1206.267(c).................. 1206.259(a)(4).
1206.267(d).................. 1206.259(a)(2) and (a)(3).
1206.267(e).................. 1206.258(e).
1206.268..................... 1206.259(a)(1).
1206.269..................... 1206.259(b).
1206.270..................... 1206.259(c)(1).
1206.271..................... 1206.259(c)(2).
1206.272..................... 1206.259(d).
1206.273..................... 1206.259(e).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart J
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1206.450..................... 1206.450.
1206.451..................... 1206.453; 1206.454; 1206.459.
1206.460..................... 1206.461(a)(1).
1206.463..................... 1206.461(c).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Section-By-Section Analysis of 30 CFR Part 1202--Royalties, Subpart
F--Coal
ONRR proposes to amend subpart F regarding Federal and Indian coal
production volumes on which you must pay royalties. The proposed rule
merely moves current 30 CFR 1206.253 and 1206.452 to 30 CFR part 1202,
subpart F to a new Sec. 1202.251. We also rewrote the current sections
in Plain Language without substantive change.
B. Section-By-Section Analysis of 30 CFR Part 1206--Product Valuation,
Subpart A--General Provisions and Definitions, Subpart C--Federal Oil,
Subpart D--Federal Gas, Subpart F--Federal Coal, and Subpart J--Indian
Coal
ONRR proposes to amend subparts A, C, D, F, and J relating to the
valuation of oil and gas produced from Federal leases and coal produced
from Federal and Indian leases.
Subpart A--General Provisions
1206.20 What definitions apply to subparts C, D, F, and J?
ONRR proposes to consolidate the definitions from Federal Oil (30
CFR 1206.101), Federal Gas (30 CFR 1206.151), Federal Coal (30 CFR
1206.251), and Indian Coal (30 CFR 1206.451). The consolidated
definitions reside in a proposed Sec. 1206.20 under proposed Subpart
A--General Provisions and Definitions.
ONRR proposes to consolidate the existing definitions for these
products to provide greater clarity and eliminate redundancy. Where
common terms exist in the four subparts, ONRR modifies the definitions
to incorporate the active voice and to use plain and simple language
similar to the language reflected in the 2000 Federal crude oil rule.
For example, the term arm's-length contract applies the modern language
of the 2000 Federal crude oil rule and extends its applicability to
Federal gas and Federal and Indian coal. Where a definition has
different meanings for different subparts, we define the term
[[Page 612]]
for each subpart in that definition. For example, see the definition of
``gross proceeds'' below. Terms we currently reference in only one
subpart, for example ANS (Alaska North Slope), remain unmodified,
except we propose to locate these definitions in the consolidated
definitions in Sec. 1206.20. Finally, ONRR proposes to add new
definitions.
We identify all new definitions in the table below and show if each
existing definition remains unchanged, is modified, or is eliminated.
Summary of Terms and Status
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Status
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Term Added new Removed
Modified Not modified definition definition
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ad valorem lease............................ ............... X ............... ...............
Affiliate................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Allowance................................... ............... ............... ............... X
ANS......................................... ............... X ............... ...............
Area........................................ X ............... ............... ...............
Arm's-length contract....................... X ............... ............... ...............
Audit....................................... X ............... ............... ...............
BIA......................................... ............... X ............... ...............
BLM......................................... ............... X ............... ...............
BOEM........................................ ............... ............... X ...............
BSEE........................................ ............... ............... X ...............
Coal........................................ ............... X ............... ...............
Coal cooperative............................ ............... ............... X ...............
Coal washing................................ ............... X ............... ...............
Compression................................. ............... X ............... ...............
Condensate.................................. X ............... ............... ...............
Constraint.................................. ............... ............... X ...............
Contract.................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Designee.................................... ............... X ............... ...............
Exchange agreement.......................... ............... X ............... ...............
FERC........................................ ............... ............... X ...............
Field....................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Gas......................................... ............... X ............... ...............
Gas plant products.......................... ............... X ............... ...............
Gathering................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Geographic region........................... ............... ............... X ...............
Gross proceeds.............................. X ............... ............... ...............
Index....................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Index pricing point......................... X ............... ............... ...............
Index zone.................................. ............... ............... X ...............
Indian allottee............................. ............... ............... ............... X
Indian Tribe................................ X ............... ............... ...............
Individual Indian mineral owner............. ............... ............... X ...............
Keepwhole contract.......................... ............... ............... X ...............
Lease....................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Lease products.............................. X ............... ............... ...............
Lessee...................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Like quality................................ ............... ............... X ...............
Like quality coal........................... ............... ............... ............... X
Like-quality lease products................. ............... ............... ............... X
Location differential....................... ............... X ............... ...............
Market center............................... ............... X ............... ...............
Marketable condition........................ ............... X ............... ...............
Marketing affiliate......................... ............... ............... ............... X
Mine........................................ ............... X ............... ...............
Minimum royalty............................. ............... ............... ............... X
Misconduct.................................. ............... ............... X ...............
Net-Back method............................. ............... ............... ............... X
Net output.................................. X ............... ............... ...............
Net profit share............................ ............... ............... ............... X
Netting..................................... X ............... ............... ...............
NGLs........................................ ............... ............... X ...............
NYMEX price................................. ............... X ............... ...............
Oil......................................... ............... X ............... ...............
ONRR........................................ ............... X ............... ...............
ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin..... ............... ............... X ...............
ONRR-approved publication................... X ............... ............... ...............
Outer Continental Shelf..................... ............... X ............... ...............
Payor....................................... ............... ............... X ...............
Person...................................... X ............... ............... ...............
Posted price................................ ............... ............... ............... X
Processing.................................. X ............... ............... ...............
Processing allowance........................ ............... ............... X ...............
[[Page 613]]
Prompt month................................ ............... X ............... ...............
Quality differential........................ ............... X ............... ...............
Region...................................... ............... ............... X ...............
Residue gas................................. ............... X ............... ...............
Rocky Mountain Region....................... ............... X ............... ...............
Roll........................................ X ............... ............... ...............
Sale........................................ X ............... ............... ...............
Sales type code............................. ............... ............... ............... X
Section 6 lease............................. ............... X ............... ...............
Short ton................................... ............... ............... X ...............
Spot market price........................... ............... ............... ............... X
Spot price.................................. ............... X ............... ...............
Spot sales agreement........................ ............... ............... ............... X
Tendering program........................... ............... ............... ............... X
Tonnage..................................... ............... ............... X ...............
Trading month............................... ............... X ............... ...............
Transportation allowance.................... X ............... ............... ...............
Warranty contract........................... ............... ............... ............... X
Washing allowance........................... ............... ............... X ...............
WTI differential............................ ............... X ............... ...............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We explain the new and modified terms and definitions below. For
most modified terms, we rewrote the terms in Plain Language and make no
substantive change.
Subpart C--Federal Oil
1206.100 What is the purpose of this subpart?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.100.
1206.101 How do I calculate royalty value for oil I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm's-length contract?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.102 except
for two substantive changes. First, proposed paragraph (a) contains the
same provisions as existing Sec. 1206.102(a) with one modification.
Proposed paragraph (a) adds that the value in this paragraph does not
apply ``if ONRR decides to value your oil under Sec. 1206.105.''
Proposed Sec. 1206.105 is ONRR's new proposed default valuation
mechanism.
ONRR also proposes to add a new provision to paragraph (c)(1)
allowing ONRR to decide a lessee's oil value if the lessee fails to
make the election in this paragraph. Under the current regulations, if
a contract is either non-arm's-length or an exchange agreement, a
lessee can choose one of two different valuation methods. ONRR proposes
to add a new provision to clarify the current regulations by explaining
the consequences if a lessee fails to properly make the election. For
example, if a lessee improperly classifies its contract as an arm's-
length contract under the current regulations, the lessee will most
likely pay royalties on the price specified in its contract. However,
if the lessee or ONRR subsequently determines the contract actually was
non-arm's-length or an exchange agreement, the existing regulations do
not specify if the lessee may make the election retroactively. To
remove this ambiguity, ONRR proposes to eliminate the lessee's election
in these situations and provide that ONRR can determine the lessee's
oil value under the new default valuation mechanism in Sec. 1206.105.
1206.102 How do I value oil not sold under an arm's-length contract?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.103 except
for two substantive changes. The first substantive change is to
paragraph (a), which explains when you may value oil under this
section. Proposed paragraph (a) requires you to use this section to
value your oil ``unless ONRR decides to value your oil under Sec.
1206.105.'' Proposed Sec. 1206.105 is ONRR's new proposed default
valuation mechanism.
ONRR also proposes to remove current 30 CFR 1206.103(b)(1)
containing the option for lessees to use a tendering program to value
oil they produce from Federal leases in the Rocky Mountain Region.
Since the final oil valuation regulations were published in March 2000,
ONRR is aware of only one company that valued its oil using this
provision. At that time, we received feedback from oil producers that
it was administratively inefficient to implement a tendering program
for valuation purposes. We do not believe any oil producer has used
this provision since then. Therefore, because industry has abandoned
its use of this provision, we propose to remove tendering from the
options available to value Federal oil produced in the Rocky Mountain
Region.
Finally, ONRR proposes to amend paragraphs (d) and (e) of Sec.
1206.103 in the current regulations. Under the current regulations,
lessees may apply paragraphs (d) and (e) to value their production with
ONRR approval. ONRR proposes to amend paragraphs (d) and (e) to instead
state that ONRR may decide to use these paragraphs to value production
under Sec. 1206.105.
1206.103 What publications are acceptable to ONRR?
The substantive requirements of this proposed section are the same
as current 30 CFR 1206.104. However, we propose to remove our
requirement to publish a notice of acceptable publications in the
Federal Register. Instead, we propose to provide acceptable
publications on our Web site.
1206.104 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
In this section, ONRR proposes amendments to the text of its gross
proceeds provisions to rewrite them in Plain Language and to make them
consistent with other valuation regulations. Thus, rather than repeat
the requirements or procedures in each applicable section of this rule,
ONRR proposes to have this section apply to this entire subpart.
However, the substantive requirements of proposed
[[Page 614]]
paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) remain unchanged. We propose the same
changes to the Federal gas amendments that we propose in this section,
so please refer to the discussion of the substantive changes we propose
to make to the Federal gas regulation in Sec. 1206.143 below for more
information.
1206.105 How will ONRR determine the value of my oil for royalty
purposes?
ONRR proposes to add a new ``default'' valuation Sec. 1206.105
under which ONRR can value your oil if we decide to do so pursuant to
the criteria under Sec. 1206.104 or any other provision in this
subpart. If ONRR determines value under this new default section, we
may consider any information we deem relevant. Also, this proposed
section enumerates factors ONRR may consider if we decide we will
determine value, for royalty purposes, under this section, which may
include, but not be limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality oil in the same field or nearby
fields or areas;
(b) The value of like-quality oil from the same plant;
(c) Public sources of price or market information ONRR deems
reliable;
(d) Information available and reported to ONRR, including but not
limited to, on Form ONRR-2014 and Form ONRR-4054;
(e) Costs of transportation or processing, if ONRR determines they
are applicable; or
(f) Any information ONRR deems relevant regarding the particular
lease operation or the salability of the oil.
This proposed section allows ONRR to consider any criteria we deem
relevant, as well as criteria similar to the current gas valuation
benchmarks under 30 CFR 1206.152(c)(1) and (2) and 1206.153(c)(1) and
(2). Like the valuation regulations in effect prior to the 1988
rulemaking that resulted in the current gas valuation regulations, 30
CFR 206.103 (1984) (onshore) and 206.150 (1984) (offshore), under
proposed Sec. 1206.105, ONRR has the authority and responsibility to
establish the reasonable value of production for royalty purposes and
possesses considerable discretion in determining that value.
Independent Petroleum Ass'n v. DeWitt, 279 F.3d at 1039-1040, and cases
cited therein. Thus, under this proposed section, ONRR has broad
authority to value your oil in the manner we deem most appropriate
considering the factors we deem most appropriate.
We add the same default provision to Federal gas in Sec. 1206.144,
Federal coal in Sec. 1206.254, and Indian coal in Sec. 1206.454.
1206.106 What records must I keep to support my calculations of value
under this subpart?
1206.107 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
The two proposed sections above are the same as current 30 CFR
1206.105 and 1206.106, except we rewrite the sections in Plain
Language.
1206.108 How do I request a value determination?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.107 except
we make some substantive changes to provide greater clarity to the
process a lessee may use to request valuation guidance and
determinations, as well as the effect of ONRR's response to such
requests. Because we are making the same changes to the Federal gas
amendments in this proposed rulemaking, please refer to proposed Sec.
1206.148 of the Federal gas regulation below for more information.
1206.109 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.108,
except we rewrite the section in Plain Language.
1206.110 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.109 except
we reword the section name and make the following substantive changes.
First, in proposed paragraph (a)(2)(ii), we add a new provision that
states you may not take a transportation allowance for the movement of
oil produced on the OCS from the wellhead to the first platform.
Because we are making the same change to the Federal gas amendments we
propose in this rulemaking, please refer to Sec. 1206.152(a)(2)(ii) of
the Federal gas regulation below for more information.
Second, we propose in paragraph (b) to clarify that if you request
to use a different cost allocation than that in paragraph (b), and we
approve your request, you can only use your proposed allocation
methodology prospectively. We make this proposed change to clarify that
you may not request retroactive changes to your royalty reporting and
payment. We make the same change to proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.112(b),
1206.112(i)(1), 1206.112(j), 1206.113(c)(2), 1206.150(c)(4),
1206.152(b), 1206.154(b)(3), 1206.154(i)(1), 1206.161(b)(3),
1206.151(h)(1), 1206.262(b)(3), 1206.262(h)(1), 1206.269(b)(3),
1206.269(h)(1), 1206.462(b)(3), 1206.462(h)(1), 1206.463(d)(4)(i),
1206.469(b)(3), 1206.469(h)(1), and 1206.470(d)(4)(i).
Third, in paragraph (d)(1) of this section, we propose to remove
current 30 CFR 1206.109(c)(2) that allows a lessee to request to exceed
the limit on transportation allowances of 50 percent of the value of
the oil. We also propose to terminate existing approvals to exceed the
50 percent limit under paragraph (d)(2). Because we are making the same
change to the Federal gas amendments in this proposed rulemaking,
please refer to Sec. 1206.152(e) below for more information.
Fourth, like the default provision for valuation we discuss above
under Sec. 1206.104, proposed paragraph (f) provides that ONRR may
determine your transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.105 if (1)
there is misconduct by or between the contracting parties, (2) the
total consideration the lessee or its affiliate pays under an arm's-
length contract does not reflect the reasonable cost of transportation
because the lessee breached its duty to market oil for the mutual
benefit of the lessee and the lessor by transporting oil at a cost that
is unreasonably high, or (3) ONRR cannot determine if the lessee
properly calculated a transportation allowance for any reason. Because
we are making the same change to the Federal gas amendments we propose
in this rulemaking, please refer to the discussion of Sec. 1206.152(g)
below for more information on this provision.
Finally, we also propose a new provision under paragraph (g) to
clarify that you do not need ONRR's approval before reporting a
transportation allowance for costs you incur. This is consistent with
existing practice.
1206.111 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.110,
except for three substantive changes. ONRR proposes to eliminate the
provision in current 30 CFR 1206.110(b)(4) that allows a lessee to
include the costs of carrying line fill on its books as a component of
arm's-length transportation allowances. Rather, we propose to
specifically preclude including this cost in transportation allowances
under new paragraph (c)(9) of this section. We propose to eliminate
allowing this cost because we believe this is a cost to market the oil
we disallow as a deduction under our existing valuation regulations.
Line fill occurs after the royalty measurement point and is necessary
for the pipeline operator to get Federal oil production to
[[Page 615]]
market. We request comments on whether this is a marketing cost.
We also propose to add a new paragraph (d) that applies if you have
no contract in writing for the arm's-length transportation of oil. In
that case, ONRR determines your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.105. Under the proposed rule, you may propose to ONRR a method to
determine the allowance using the procedures in Sec. 1206.108(a) and
may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR issues its
determination. This proposed paragraph does not apply if a lessee
performs its own transportation. Instead, proposed Sec. 1206.112 for
non-arm's-length transportation allowances, applies.
Finally, ONRR proposes to eliminate the provision in current 30 CFR
1206.110(g) that allows a lessee to report transportation costs, in
certain circumstances, as a transportation factor. We propose that a
lessee must report separately all transportation costs under both
arm's-length and non-arm's-length sales contracts as a transportation
allowance on Form ONRR-2014. ONRR believes requiring lessees to report
all deductions for transportation costs separately as allowances on
Form ONRR-2014 is more transparent, supports ONRR's increased data
mining efforts to promote accurate upfront royalty reporting, and
assists State and Federal auditors in their compliance work.
1206.112 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I do not have
an arm's-length transportation contract?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.111 except
for the following substantive changes.
We replace current 30 CFR 1206.111(b)(3) and (b)(4) with proposed
paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section, which allows you to elect to
calculate depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital investment
in a transportation system under proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(1) or a
return on undepreciated capital investment with no depreciation under
proposed paragraph (b)(3)(i)(2). The proposed regulation provides that
once you make an election, you may not change it without ONRR's
approval. In addition, proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii) replaces current
30 CFR 1206.111(b)(5). Currently, 30 CFR 1206.111(b)(5) allows you to
continue deducting 10 percent of the cost of capital expenditures once
you have depreciated the asset below 10 percent under current 30 CFR
1206.111(j). However, under proposed paragraph (i)(1)(iii) of this
section, instead of allowing a 10 percent deduction, we base the return
on undepreciated capital investment on the reasonable salvage value of
the asset. ONRR believes this method more reasonably reflects the
actual costs for oil transportation systems. Also, it makes the
treatment of depreciation consistent with other royalty valuation
rules, including the current Federal gas rule at 30 CFR 1206.157(g)
(proposed Sec. 1206.154(i)).
In proposed paragraph (c)(2)(ii), we prohibit you from including
actual or theoretical line loss as a transportation cost. ONRR proposes
to eliminate the provision in the current regulations at 30 CFR
1206.111(b)(6)(v) which allows a lessee to reduce the royalty volume
measured at the royalty measurement point by actual or theoretical line
loss occurring after the royalty measurement point. This change is
consistent with long-standing mineral leasing laws that require royalty
on the volume of production removed from the lease. Mineral Leasing
Act, 30 U.S.C. 181-287; Mineral Leasing Act for Acquired Lands, 30
U.S.C. 351-359 (onshore acquired lands); Indian leasing statutes, 25
U.S.C. 396a--396g (tribal leases); 25 U.S.C. 396 (allotted leases); and
the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. 1331-1356. This change
also makes Federal oil valuation consistent with ONRR's other product
valuation regulations.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2)(iii), ONRR eliminates the provision
in current 30 CFR 1206.111(b)(6)(ii) which allows a lessee to include
the costs of carrying line fill on its books as a component of non-
arm's-length transportation allowances. We believe this is a cost to
market the oil, which we disallow as a deduction under current
valuation regulations. Line fill occurs after the royalty measurement
point and is necessary for the pipeline operator to get Federal oil
production to market. We request comments on whether this is a
marketing cost.
Proposed paragraph (i)(1) allows you to calculate depreciation and
a return on undepreciated capital investment using either a straight-
line method (based on either the life of the equipment or the life of
the reserves that the transportation system services) or a unit of
production method. This depreciation method was in ONRR's oil valuation
regulations in effect for producer-owned transportation systems prior
to the effective date of the 2000 Federal oil valuation regulations.
This new proposed paragraph (i)(1) would replace the provision in
current 30 CFR 1206.111(h), which allows a lessee to depreciate a
transportation asset a second time after the lessee already fully
depreciated that asset. The current Federal oil valuation regulations
authorize fully depreciated transportation assets to be recapitalized a
second time when they are purchased from the original owner. ONRR
proposes to remove this provision. Under proposed paragraph (i)(1)(ii),
ONRR allows depreciation of pipeline assets only one time. If the
pipeline asset is sold, we allow the purchaser to continue the
remaining allowance depreciation schedule if applicable. This change
makes Federal oil valuation consistent with ONRR's other product
valuation regulations.
Proposed paragraph (i)(1)(iii)(B) changes the return on
undepreciated capital investment from10 percent to the reasonable
salvage value of the asset multiplied by the rate of return in proposed
paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
New proposed paragraph (i)(2) provides an alternative to
depreciating the asset under paragraph (i)(1). Under this option, you
may elect to use a cost equal to the allowable initial capital
investment in the transportation system, multiplied by the rate of
return in proposed paragraph (i)(3) of this section. If you chose this
option, you may not include depreciation as a cost in your allowance.
ONRR removed the provision limiting this option to transportation
assets put in place after March 1, 1988. When ONRR published its
Federal oil valuation regulations on May 5, 2004, it changed the
requirements for transportation allowances. In recognition that certain
transportation facilities had been given approval prior to these
regulations' effective date (August 1, 2004), ONRR made the new
requirements apply only to facilities that were placed in service on or
after the effective date of these regulations. Now, almost ten years
later, ONRR believes that none of facilities affected by the 2004 rule
change are still eligible for depreciation under the requirements in
effect prior to August 1, 2004. Therefore, we remove this language from
the proposed regulations.
Proposed paragraph (i)(3) would amend current 30 CFR 1206.111(i)(2)
to change the Standard & Poor's BBB bond rate we allow as an
approximation of the cost of capital for non-arm's-length
transportation. Currently, 30 CFR 1206.111(i)(2) allows a lessee to
compute the rate of return on the undepreciated cost of capital by
multiplying the undepreciated amount remaining by 1.3 times the
Standard & Poor's BBB bond rate. ONRR proposes to decrease the
multiplier of the Standard & Poor's BBB bond rate from 1.3 to 1.0. In
the final Federal oil
[[Page 616]]
valuation regulations published in March 2000, we increased the
multiplier of the Standard & Poor's BBB bond rate from 1.0 to 1.3. We
propose to change it back to 1.0 times the BBB bond rate because we
believe this rate better reflects the cost of borrowing to finance
capital expenditures involved in pipeline construction. It also is
consistent with our other product valuation regulations.
When a company or affiliate invests in shipping its own production,
it considers if it can more profitably transport its own production or
contract with a third party to provide the service. At this stage in
production development, a company has a solid asset to demonstrate its
ability to repay the capital investment necessary to construct the
pipeline. ONRR consulted with FERC and has concluded that the BBB bond
rate is an adequate representation for the cost of capital for the
construction of producer-owned pipelines.
1206.113 What adjustments and transportation allowances apply when I
value oil production from my lease using NYMEX prices or ANS spot
prices?
1206.114 How will ONRR identify market centers?
1206.115 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
Proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.113 through 1206.115 are the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.112 through 1206.114, but we rewrite the sections
in Plain Language and update the examples in current 30 CFR 1206.112(d)
using November 2012 prices.
1206.116 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.115 except
we make each sentence a paragraph. We also add a new paragraph (d) that
explains you must follow the reporting requirements for arm's-length
contract under Sec. 1206.115 if you are authorized under Sec.
1206.112(j) to not use your actual costs.
1206.117 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.116 except
we make each sentence a paragraph and add ``penalties'' to the heading
to better describe the section.
1206.118 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
1206.119 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
These two proposed sections, 30 CFR 1206.118 and 1206.119, are the
same as current Sec. Sec. 1206.117 and 1206.119, respectively, but we
rewrite the sections in Plain Language.
1206.120 How are operating allowances determined?
We propose to remove current 30 CFR 1206.120 on how to determine
operating allowances because it is unnecessary. If a lease has
provisions for operating allowances, that lease term will govern
valuation under proposed Sec. 1206.100(d)(4) of this subpart.
Subpart D--Federal Gas
ONRR proposes to add new Sec. Sec. 1206.140 through 1206.149 to
this subpart to codify, clarify, and enhance current ONRR Federal gas
valuation practices.
1206.140 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
We propose to redesignate the current regulations at Sec. 1206.150
to Sec. 1206.160. Also, in this proposed rule, we rewrote the
redesignated sections in Plain Language. Proposed Sec. 1206.140 is the
same as current 30 CFR 1206.150 except for three changes. First, we
propose to add a new paragraph (b) to explain that the terms ``you''
and ``your'' in this subpart refer to the lessee. Second, we propose to
redesignate paragraphs (b) and (c) as paragraphs (c) and (d). Finally,
we propose to remove existing regulations in paragraph (d), which state
this subpart is intended to ensure leases are administered in
accordance with governing mineral leasing laws and lease terms. We
believe current paragraph (d) is unnecessary and duplicative of our
authority to promulgate this rule.
1206.141 How do I calculate royalty value for unprocessed gas I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
This proposed section explains the valuation of unprocessed gas for
royalty purposes. Proposed paragraph (a)(1) explains that this section
applies to unprocessed gas--meaning gas that is never processed--
consistent with the current gas regulations.
Proposed paragraph (a)(2) explains this section applies to gas you
are not required to value under proposed Sec. 1206.142, or that ONRR
does not value under proposed Sec. 1206.144. Proposed Sec.
1206.142(a) explains what gas ONRR considers processed for valuation
purposes, and proposed Sec. 1206.144 explains ONRR's new proposed
default valuation mechanism. We discuss proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.142
and 1206.144 below.
Under proposed paragraph (a)(3), we state this section also applies
to processed gas you must value prior to processing under Sec.
1206.151 of this part. Proposed Sec. 1206.151 contains the dual
accounting provisions for Federal gas in current 30 CFR 1206.155.
Under proposed paragraph (a)(4), we consider unprocessed gas any
gas you sell prior to processing if price is based on an amount per
MMBtu or Mcf, and not on the value of residue gas and gas plant
products. Therefore, this proposed paragraph applies to the valuation
of gas when price is not based on a processed gas price.
Paragraph (b) proposes a new valuation methodology based on the
first arm's-length sale of the gas. ONRR promulgated the current gas
valuation regulations in 1988 to achieve market value based on
transactions between independent, non-affiliated parties. The
Department has long believed the values established in arm's-length
transactions are the best indication of market value, and the 1988
rules reflect that belief.
Although the Secretary's responsibility to determine the royalty
value of minerals produced has not changed, the industry and
marketplace have changed dramatically since we wrote the 1988
regulations. As discussed below, industry and marketplace changes, as
well as litigation necessitate changes to ONRR's valuation regulations.
Indeed, ONRR already amended the Indian gas (30 CFR part 1206, subpart
E) and Federal oil (30 CFR part 1206, subpart C) valuation regulations
to simplify those regulations and provide early certainty by valuing
those products based on the first arm's-length sale and/or on publicly
available prices.
When we developed the 1988 rules, producers most commonly sold
natural gas at the wellhead to natural gas pipeline companies, which
transported and sold the gas to local distribution companies. However,
from mid-1980 to early 1990, a series of FERC rulemakings resulted in
deregulation of some pipeline systems. As a result, industry now sells
directly to end users or distributors, and pipelines only provide
transportation services. Producers also created marketing affiliates to
which they initially transferred production.
For lessee sales to affiliates, the current Federal gas valuation
regulations require a lessee to value
[[Page 617]]
production based on a series of ``benchmarks'' to be applied in a
prescribed order (30 CFR 1206.152(c)). The first benchmark is the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee in a sale under its non-arm's-length
contract, provided that those gross proceeds are equivalent to the
gross proceeds derived from, or paid under, comparable arm's-length
contracts (30 CFR 1206.152(c)(1)). This method has posed practical
difficulties since companies are not privy to other companies'
``comparable'' sales transactions. In addition, ONRR and lessees have
found it difficult to determine what portion of lease production a
lessee must sell at arm's-length to reliably determine the value of the
remaining production. Likewise, the remaining benchmarks at 30 CFR
1206.152(c)(2) and (3) have proven difficult for industry to follow and
ONRR to administer. ONRR proposes to replace the current regulations in
Sec. 1206.152(c)(1), (2), and (3) with proposed paragraph (b).
To simplify and clarify valuation of non-arm's-length sales,
proposed paragraph (b) bases value on the first arm's-length sale with
applicable allowances. The first arm's-length sale may occur
immediately, or may follow one or more non-arm's-length transfers or
sales of the gas. However, under the proposed rule, you will use the
first arm's-length sale regardless of whether you sell or transfer gas
to one or more affiliates or other persons in non-arm's-length
transactions before the first arm's-length sale, and regardless of the
number of those non-arm's-length transactions. This arm's-length sales
value will apply unless you exercise the index-based option in proposed
paragraph (c) of this section we discuss below.
Proposed paragraph (b)(1) would state value is the gross proceeds
accruing to you under an arm's-length contract, less applicable
allowances.
Similarly, under proposed paragraph (b)(2), if you sell or transfer
your Federal gas production to your affiliate, or some other person at
less than arm's length, and that person or its affiliate then sells the
gas at arm's length, royalty value will be the other person's (or its
affiliate's) gross proceeds under the first arm's-length contract. For
example, a lessee might sell its Federal gas production to a person who
is not an ``affiliate'' as defined, but with whom its relationship is
not one of ``opposing economic interests'' and therefore is not at
arm's length. An illustrative example is when a number of working
interest owners in a large field form a cooperative venture that
purchases all of the working interest owners' production and resells
the combined volumes to a purchaser at arm's-length. Xeno, Inc., 134
IBLA 172 (1995), involved a similar situation. If none of the working
interest owners own 10 percent or more of the new entity, the new
entity would not be an ``affiliate'' of any of them. Nevertheless, the
relationship between the new entity and the respective working interest
owners is not at arm's length because of the lack of opposing economic
interests regarding the contract. In this case, we believe it
appropriate to value the production based on the arm's-length sale
price the cooperative venture receives for the gas. Therefore, under
proposed paragraph (b)(2), you must value the production based on the
gross proceeds accruing to you, your affiliate, or other person to whom
you transferred the gas (or its affiliate) when the gas ultimately is
sold at arm's length, unless you elect to use the index pricing option
we propose under Sec. 1206.141(c) of this section or ONRR decides to
value your gas under the new default valuation provision in proposed
Sec. 1206.144 discussed below.
In summary, to provide early certainty and simplification, ONRR
proposes to amend its valuation regulations for Federal gas to provide
that, with certain exceptions, the first arm's-length sale is the value
for royalty purposes consistent with valuation of non-arm's-length
sales of Federal oil production under current 30 CFR 1206.102(a).
Proposed paragraph (b)(3) explains valuation if you, your
affiliate, or another person sell under multiple arm's-length contracts
for gas produced from a lease that is valued under this proposed
paragraph (b). In this case, unless you exercise the index-based option
we provide in paragraph (c) of this section, because you sold non-arm's
length to your affiliate or another person, under the proposed rule,
you must value the gas based on the volume-weighted average of the
value established under this paragraph for each contract for the sale
of gas produced from that lease. This is identical to current 30 CFR
1206.102(b) applicable to valuation of Federal oil. In addition, we
believe this provision is consistent with ongoing practice under the
current gas valuation rule.
Proposed paragraph (b)(4) contains the provisions of the current
gas valuation rule at 30 CFR 1206.152(b)(1)(iv) that explains how to
value over-delivered volumes under a cash-out program, but we rewrite
this provision in Plain Language.
ONRR proposes to add a new paragraph (c) containing an index price
valuation methodology that a lessee may elect to use in lieu of valuing
its gas under proposed paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) of this section
based on the gross proceeds accruing to its affiliate or other person
under the first arm's-length sale. The proposed methodology is based on
publicly available index prices less a specified deduction to account
for processing and transportation costs. Under the proposed rule, this
valuation methodology also applies to ``no contract'' situations we
describe below under paragraph (e).
We believe this index price option simplifies the current valuation
methodology and provides early certainty. Many pipelines and service
providers now charge producers ``bundled'' fees that include both
deductible costs of transportation and non-deductible costs to place
production into marketable condition. Both ONRR and lessees with arm's-
length transportation contracts have found allocating the costs between
placing the gas in marketable condition and transportation is
administratively burdensome and time consuming. Similarly, when
processing plants charge bundled fees that include non-deductible
costs, the cost allocation is administratively burdensome and time
consuming.
Litigation also has complicated the application of ONRR's gas
valuation regulations. Although litigation has clarified what
constitutes marketable condition, its application is fact specific and
time consuming. See Devon and cases cited therein.
The proposed index-based option provides a lessee with an
alternative that is simple, certain, and avoids the requirements to
``trace'' production when there are numerous non-arm's-length sales
prior to an arm's-length sale and unbundle fees. Under this proposed
paragraph (c), the lessee may choose to value its gas only in an area
that has an active index pricing point published in a publication that
ONRR approves. The lessee may elect to value its gas under this
proposed paragraph, and that election is binding on the lessee for 2
years. ONRR would post a list of approved publications at www.onrr.gov.
ONRR proposes to use Platts and Natural Gas Intelligence as ONRR-
approved publications but invites comments on whether these
publications are appropriate, as well as whether there are other
publications that ONRR should use.
If the lease is in an area with active index pricing points, the
lessee must determine the applicable index pricing point or points. We
used the language in proposed paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii) ``If you
can only transport to one index pricing point'' and ``If you can
transport
[[Page 618]]
gas to more than one index pricing point,'' respectively (emphasis
added), because, under the proposed rule, we intend that for an index
pricing point to be applicable, the lessee must be able to physically
transport its gas by pipeline to that index pricing point. Further, an
index pricing point would be applicable as long as the lessee could
physically transport their gas by pipeline to that index pricing point
(emphasis added). This means that under the proposed rule, the index
pricing point applies even if the lessee could not transport its gas to
that index pricing point because the pipeline is constrained (for
example when all available capacity on a pipeline through which the
lessee's gas might flow to that index pricing point was already under
contract to other parties).
For example, assume you have a lease in the West Delta area of the
Gulf of Mexico and your lease is physically connected by pipeline to
the Mississippi Canyon Pipeline. In this case, your gas is physically
capable of flowing to the Toca Plant (through the Southern Natural Gas
Pipeline), the Yscloskey Plant (through the Tennessee Gas Pipeline), or
the Venice Plant, and you have multiple index pricing points to which
your gas can physically flow. Also, assume the highest reported monthly
bid week price among the multiple index pricing points is the Tennessee
Gas 500 Leg Price at the tailgate of the Yscloskey Plant. Finally,
assume you cannot flow your gas through the Tennessee Gas Pipeline (to
the Yscloskey Plant) because all available capacity on that pipeline is
under contract to other persons, and the pipeline has no capacity
available to you for the production month--in other words, it is
constrained. In this example, you would use the highest reported
monthly bid week price at the tailgate of the Yscloskey Plant as the
value under this paragraph even though your gas did not flow to that
index pricing point during the production month.
Under proposed paragraph (c), the lessee could not use index
pricing points if it could not physically transport its gas to that
index pricing point because there is not a pipeline or series of
pipelines that physically connect to the lease and flow from the lease
to the index pricing point. ONRR would exclude the use of these index
pricing points because they do not represent points at which the lessee
can sell its gas, and it is difficult to adjust these prices for
location differentials between the index pricing points and the lease.
If the lessee can transport its gas to only one index pricing
point, the value under proposed paragraph (c)(1)(i) is the highest
reported monthly bid week price for that index pricing point in the
ONRR-approved publication for the production month. If the lessee can
transport its gas to more than one index pricing point, the value under
proposed paragraph (c)(1)(ii) is the highest reported monthly bid week
price for the index pricing points to which the lessee could transport
its gas, in the ONRR-approved publication for the production month.
However, under paragraph (c)(1)(iii), if there are sequential index
pricing points on a pipeline, the lessee would use the first index
pricing point at or after the lessee's gas enters the pipeline.
ONRR recognizes that index pricing points are normally located off
the lease, and frequently at lengthy distances from the lease. Thus,
under proposed paragraph (c)(1)(iv), ONRR allows a lessee to reduce the
highest reported monthly bid week price by a set amount to account for
transportation costs a lessee would incur to move the gas from the
lease to an applicable index pricing point. ONRR proposes to allow a
lessee to reduce the highest reported monthly bid week prices by 5
percent for sales from the OCS Gulf of Mexico and by 10 percent for
sales from all other areas, but not by less than 10 cents per MMBtu or
more than 30 cents per MMBtu. ONRR proposes these percent reductions
based on the average gas transportation rates that lessees have
reported to ONRR from 2007 through 2010 for OCS and all other areas.
ONRR proposes to allow a lessee to choose the index price
methodology to value its gas under this paragraph for the following
reasons: (1) It relies on a market price at which gas is sold from the
area during the production month; (2) it recognizes costs that a lessee
must incur to transport gas from the lease to an index pricing point;
and (3) it makes payment and verification of royalties paid simple and
efficient, thereby saving both lessees and ONRR significant
administrative costs. Further, ONRR believes this alternative
methodology provides ONRR with a reasonable market value for the
lessee's gas that avoids requiring a lessee and ONRR to track every
resale of the lessee's gas during the production month, especially when
those sales can involve several transactions hundreds of miles
downstream from the lease. As we state above, it also avoids the
unbundling of transportation and processing costs.
ONRR proposes to use the highest reported monthly bid week price
with a reduction for transportation costs. We propose this because it
generally represents the gross proceeds net of transportation
allowances accruing to lessees that ONRR believes are most likely to
choose this option to value their gas based on information lessees and
others reported on Form ONRR-2014 for the period from 2007 through
2011.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(v) states that, after you select an ONRR-
approved publication available at www.onrr.gov, you may not select a
different publication more often than once every 2 years. ONRR also
proposes, under paragraph (c)(1)(vi), to exclude individual index
prices from this option if we determine that the index price does not
accurately reflect the value of production. ONRR plans to disallow the
use of index prices with low liquidity, such as those classified as
Tier 3 in the Platts publications. ONRR would post a list of excluded
index pricing points at www.onrr.gov. We would appreciate comments on
this proposal.
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) explains that you may not take any other
deductions from the value calculated under this paragraph (c) because
you would already receive a reduction for transportation under proposed
paragraph (c)(1)(iv).
Proposed paragraph (d)(1) provides that, if you have no written
contract or no sale of gas subject to this section and there is an
index pricing point for the gas, then you must value your gas under the
index pricing provisions of paragraph (c) of this section unless ONRR
values your gas under Sec. 1206.144. This provision includes, but is
not limited to, when: (1) The lessee sells its gas to an affiliate and
the affiliate uses the gas in its facility; (2) the lessee sells its
gas to an affiliate and the affiliate resells the gas to another
affiliate of either the lessee or itself and that affiliate uses the
gas in its facility; (3) the lessee uses the gas as fuel for its other
leases in the field or area; or (4) the lessee delivers gas to another
person as payment of an overriding royalty interest that other person
holds.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2) addresses situations in which you have no
contract for the sale of gas subject to this section and there is not
an index pricing point for the gas. In these situations, ONRR will
decide the value under Sec. 1206.144. However, when this occurs, under
paragraph (d)(2)(i), we require that you propose to ONRR a method to
determine the value using the procedures in proposed Sec. 1206.148(a).
Proposed Sec. 1206.148(a) describes the information you must provide
to ONRR when you request a valuation
[[Page 619]]
determination. Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(ii) allows you to use your
proposed method until ONRR issues a decision. After ONRR issues a
determination, under paragraph (d)(2)(iii), you will have to make any
adjustment under proposed Sec. 1206.143(a)(2). You have to make
adjustments only if ONRR decides you must use a different methodology
than you propose under paragraph (d)(2)(i).
1206.142 How do I calculate royalty value for processed gas I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
ONRR proposes a new Sec. 1206.142 including a new paragraph (a)
that amends and expands what is processed gas for royalty valuation
purposes. Currently, when gas is sold under an arm's-length contract
prior to processing, and the lessee neither retains nor exercises any
rights to the gas after processing (in other words, an outright sale
before the plant), such gas is valued as unprocessed gas. Included are
contracts where the title passes before processing, but payment is
based on the values of residue gas and gas plant products after
processing. Percentage-of-Proceeds (POP) contracts (contracts where the
lessee's arm's-length contract for the sale of that gas prior to
processing provides for the value to be determined on the basis of a
percentage of the purchaser's proceeds resulting from processing the
gas) are the most common of these contracts, but ONRR has observed a
myriad of variations of such contracts. Because this gas is valued as
unprocessed gas under the current regulations, there are no limits on
the minimum value of such gas for royalty purposes, except for gas sold
under arm's-length POP contracts, which has a minimum value of 100
percent of the residue gas. No such limitation applies to contracts
that do not specifically qualify as POP contracts.
For example, if the sales value is based on a percentage of an
index price for residue gas and/or NGLs, the current regulations base
value simply on the gross proceeds the lessee receives under the
contract. In essence, the unprocessed gas regulations allow such sales
arrangements to reduce the value of residue gas below the 100-percent
minimum value required under the processed gas regulations and below
the 1-percent minimum value for NGLs (assuming ONRR approves an
exception under the current rules in excess of 66\2/3\ percent of the
NGL value) required for processed gas.
ONRR has seen numerous contract arrangements that provide payment
terms based on: (1) A percentage of the volume or value of residue gas,
plant products, or any combination of the two actually recovered at the
plant; (2) the full volume and value of residue gas and/or plant
products recovered at the plant, less a flat fee per MMBtu of wet gas
entering the plant; (3) a combination of (1) and (2); and (4) the value
of a percentage of the theoretical volumes of residue gas and/or plant
products contained in the wet gas stream (so-called casing head gas
contracts). Because the many contract variations base the underlying
value on processed gas values, ONRR believes we should require a lessee
to value gas sold under such contracts as processed gas for royalty
purposes. This proposal provides the protection the current processed
gas regulations have against excessive transportation and processing
allowances and prevents a lessee from structuring contracts to avoid
these requirements. Such a change also clarifies if gas is processed
gas or unprocessed gas.
In summary, under proposed paragraph (a)(1), ONRR will consider gas
you or your affiliate do not sell or otherwise dispose of under an
arm's-length contract before processing ``processed gas.'' Paragraph
(a)(1) also applies to non-arm's-length sales of gas before processing
and transfers to a plant without a contract like the current
regulations.
Proposed paragraph (a)(2) applies to the situations described above
when payment is based on any constituent products resulting from
processing, such as residue gas, NGLs, sulfur, or carbon dioxide. We
would value POP contracts, percentage-of-index contracts, casing head
gas contracts, and contracts with any such variations of payment based
on volumes or value of those products as processed gas. With the
exception of POP contracts, this constitutes a departure from current
practice.
Proposed paragraph (a)(3), while not a change in current regulatory
practice, explicitly states that the lessee must value gas processed
under a keepwhole contract as processed gas. Under proposed Sec.
1206.20, we define a keepwhole contract as a processing agreement under
which the processor compensates the lessee by delivering to the lessee
a quantity of residue gas after processing equivalent to the quantity
of gas the processor received prior to processing, normally based on
heat content, less gas used as plant fuel and gas that is unaccounted
for and/or lost. The lessee does not receive NGLs under these
contracts. Over the past several years, ONRR has witnessed much
confusion over how to value gas sold under such contracts for royalty
purposes. This provision makes it clear that the lessee must value gas
processed under a keepwhole contract as processed gas. That is, royalty
would be based on 100 percent of the value of residue gas, 100 percent
of the value of gas plant products, plus the value of any condensate
recovered downstream of the point of royalty settlement prior to
processing, less applicable transportation and processing allowances.
To illustrate how to calculate the processing allowance in these
cases, assume you deliver 32,000 MMBtu of natural gas to the gas
processing plant. Also assume 7,000 MMBtu represents the shrinkage
volume (the MMBtu equivalent of the NGLs recovered), and the plant
recovers and retains 92,000 gallons of NGLs from your gas. Further,
assume the plant returns 7,000 MMBtu of gas to you at the tailgate of
the plant in addition to the residue gas that results after processing
your gas to ``keep you whole.'' Finally, assume the 7,000 MMBtu of gas
returned to you is worth $42,000 and the NGLs the plant retained are
worth $63,000. In this example, the cost you incur to process the gas
is $21,000 ($63,000-$42,000). If you incur additional costs, for
example a $0.03 per MMBtu fee times the 32,000 MMBtu you deliver to the
plant for processing, then you add those additional costs (in this
example, $960) to the $21,000 cost calculated above to determine your
total processing costs (in this example $21,960).
Proposed paragraph (a)(4) simply restates current 30 CFR
1206.153(a)(1) regarding arm's-length contracts and reservations of
rights to process gas the lessee or its affiliate exercises.
ONRR also proposes paragraph (b), which contains the same
requirements as current 30 CFR 1206.153(a)(2), but we rewrite it in
Plain Language, without substantive change.
Like the valuation of unprocessed gas under proposed Sec.
1206.141(b), proposed paragraph (c) provides that the value of residue
gas or any gas plant product under this section is the gross proceeds
accruing to you or your affiliate under the first arm's-length
contract. Also, like proposed Sec. 1206.141(b), this value does not
apply if you exercise the index-based option we provide in paragraph
(d) of this section or if ONRR decides to value your residue gas or any
gas plant product under the new default valuation provision in Sec.
1206.144. Proposed paragraphs (c)(1), (2), (3), and (4) explain to
which transactions this paragraph applies. See the discussion of
[[Page 620]]
the identical proposal for proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.141(b)(1), (2),
(3), and (4) above.
Proposed paragraph (d) contains the index-based valuation option
for valuation of your residue gas and NGLs. Under this proposed rule,
you may elect to value either your residue gas or your NGLs under the
index-based option, or you may elect to value both of them under this
option if your residue gas or NGLs meet the requirements for using the
optional valuation methodology we discuss above. Like the current
Federal oil regulations (30 CFR 1206.102(d)(1)(ii)) and proposed Sec.
1206.141(c), you cannot change your election to use this paragraph (d)
to value your gas more often than once every two years.
Proposed paragraph (d)(1) applies to residue gas. It has the same
index price option as proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.141(c)(i) through (vi)
we discuss above using index pricing points.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2) contains the index-based pricing option
for NGLs. Under paragraph (d)(2)(i), if you sell NGLs in an area with
one or more ONRR-approved commercial price bulletins available at
www.onrr.gov, you may choose one bulletin, and your value for royalty
purposes would be the monthly average price for that bulletin for the
production month. We consider you to be selling NGLs in an area with an
ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin if actual sales of NGLs that
the plant processing your gas recovers are made using NGLs prices in an
ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin. For example, in ONRR's
experience, actual sales of NGLs recovered in plants in New Mexico
commonly reference Mt. Belvieu prices in Platts, while actual sales of
NGLs recovered in plants in certain parts of Wyoming reference Mt.
Belvieu or Conway, Kansas prices. If your gas is processed at one of
these plants with these types of actual sales arrangements, under this
proposed rule, ONRR will consider you to be selling NGLs in an area
with an ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin. In that case, you may
elect to value your NGLs using the index price method if your NGLs meet
the requirements for using that method. ONRR will monitor actual sales
of NGLs and eliminate any area where an active market using NGLs prices
in an ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin ceases to exist.
Under proposed paragraph (d)(2)(ii), you may reduce the index-based
value you calculate under paragraph (d)(2)(i) by a specified amount to
account for a theoretical processing allowance and transportation and
fractionation (T&F). Therefore, the reduction includes two components
we calculated--an allowance based on processing allowance information
lessees report to ONRR and T&F based on our review of gas plant
contracts and gas plant statements.
For the processing allowance component, ONRR examined processing
allowances that lessees and others reported from January 2007 through
October 2011. We segregated the data into 2 subsets--the first being
the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) and the second being onshore Federal leases
and OCS leases other than those in the GOM. We segregated the leases
geographically because the GOM is closer to major market centers at Mt.
Belvieu, Napoleonville, and Geismer/Sorrento and, generally, has its
own processing, transportation, and fractionation regimen that is
distinct from the rest of the country. We do not believe it is fair or
accurate to benchmark processing for the entire country based on the
economics of GOM processing.
We could not segregate non-arm's-length processing allowances
because lessees do not identify processing allowances as arm's-length
or non-arm's-length when they report to ONRR. Rather, we calculated a
weighted average cents per gallon processing allowance by month for
both GOM and all other Federal leases. Using the weighted average cents
per gallon processing allowance we calculated, we determined the
average allowance rate over the 5-year period, along with the maximum
and minimum monthly rates as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
GOM Other
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average Rate.................... 17 [cent]/gal..... 22 [cent]/gal.
Maximum Rate.................... 29 [cent]/gal..... 32 [cent]/gal.
Minimum Rate.................... 10 [cent]/gal..... 15 [cent]/gal.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because we intend for this option to provide a simple method for
ONRR to calculate and provide to lessees, we used the minimum, rather
than the average rate, for the processing allowance portion of the
deduction. For both the GOM and all other Federal leases, the minimum
rate is 7 cents less than the average rate. ONRR believes that: (1) The
minimum allowance best protects the public interest and (2) a lessee
experiencing higher costs than this rate does not have to elect to use
this option and the lower cost allowance. Moreover, ONRR believes that
7 cents is a reasonable tradeoff given the simplicity, certainty, and
commensurate administrative savings this option would provide a lessee.
For the T&F part of the reduction, ONRR examined contracts that
specified T&F. If contracts did not specify T&F, we looked at the gas
plant statements. If the statements listed T&F as a line item, we used
that line item as the T&F. If the statements did not list T&F as a line
item, we calculated the difference between the price on the plant
statement and an appropriate published price to approximate the T&F. We
then averaged these T&F costs for GOM, New Mexico, and other as
follows:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GOM New Mexico Other
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average T&F.......................... 5 [cent]/gal........... 7 [cent]/gal........... 12 [cent]/gal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We broke out New Mexico because the T&F fees for New Mexico plants
were consistently around 7 cents per gallon and were considerably less
than for other onshore plants. We then added the processing allowances
we calculated and the T&F. Based on the 5-years' worth of data
discussed above, we calculated the total NGLs reductions lessees could
use under this option are as follows:
[[Page 621]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GOM New Mexico Other
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NGLs Deduction....................... 15 [cent]/gal.......... 22 [cent]/gal.......... 27 [cent]/gal.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under paragraph (d)(2)(ii), rather than publish the reductions in
the CFR, ONRR proposes to post the reductions at www.onrr.gov for the
geographic location of your lease. ONRR proposes to calculate the
reductions using the methodology explained above. This process would
give ONRR the flexibility to quickly recalculate and provide revised
reductions to lessees in response to market changes. This methodology
would be binding on you and ONRR. Under paragraph (d)(4), ONRR would
update the allowable reductions periodically using this methodology and
post changes at www.onrr.gov.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(iii) explains that after you select an
ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin available at www.onrr.gov, you
may not select a different commercial price bulletin more often than
once every two years. Under proposed paragraph (d)(3), you may not take
any other deductions from the value you used under this paragraph (d)
because it already includes reductions for transportation and
processing.
Proposed paragraph (e) mirrors proposed Sec. 1206.141(d). It
explains how you must value your processed gas if you have no written
contract for the sale of gas or no sale of the gas subject to this
section.
1206.143 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
In this section, ONRR proposes amendments to the current gross
proceeds provisions, rewriting them in Plain Language and making them
consistent with our other product valuation regulations (such as
geothermal resources and Federal oil). Like those published
regulations, rather than repeating the requirements or procedures in
each applicable section of this proposed rule, ONRR proposes to apply
this section to this entire subpart. However, the substantive
requirements of proposed paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) remain unchanged.
Below we discuss the paragraphs with substantive changes.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1), like our current regulations, states
``ONRR may monitor, review, and audit the royalties you report, and, if
ONRR determines that your reported value is inconsistent with the
requirements of this subpart, ONRR will direct you to use a different
measure of royalty value . . . .'' However, we propose to add paragraph
(a)(1) that states in addition to directing you to use a different
measure of value, we also may decide your value under Sec. 1206.144 as
we discuss below.
Proposed paragraph (b), like our current regulations, explains
``[w]hen the provisions in this subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR will examine if your or your
affiliate's contract reflects the total consideration actually
transferred, either directly or indirectly, from the buyer to you or
your affiliate for the gas, residue gas, or gas plant products.''
However, we propose to add a new paragraph (b) that if ONRR determines
a contract does not reflect the total consideration, ONRR may decide
your value under Sec. 1206.144 as we discuss below.
Proposed paragraph (c) broadly defines three circumstances when
ONRR will calculate the value of your gas using the method specified in
the new proposed ``default'' valuation Sec. 1206.144. During its
compliance activities, ONRR encounters a wide range of situations in
which lessees have inaccurately calculated value. By broadly defining
the circumstances in which ONRR may calculate value, this proposed rule
ensures ONRR can fulfill its statutory mandate under FOGRMA to ensure
that lessees accurately calculate, report, and pay royalties (30 U.S.C.
1701 and 1711).
Proposed paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) contain the provisions
regarding misconduct and breach of the duty to market in current 30 CFR
1206.152(b)(1)(i) and 1206.153(b)(1)(iii). Under the current
regulations, if ONRR determines there is misconduct between the
parties, or that the lessee has breached its duty to market, then the
lessee must value its gas under the current benchmarks for non-arm's-
length sales of gas in 30 CFR 1206.152(c)(2) or (c)(3) (unprocessed
gas) and 1206.153(c)(2) or (c)(3) (processed gas). However, as we
discuss above, ONRR proposes to eliminate the benchmarks in this
rulemaking. We propose instead that if ONRR determines there is
misconduct between the parties to a contract or the lessee has breached
its duty to market, we may decide your value under Sec. 1206.144 as we
discuss below.
As we discuss above in proposed Sec. 1206.20, misconduct, for
purposes of proposed paragraph (c)(1), means any failure to perform a
duty owed to the United States under a statute, regulation, or lease,
or unlawful or improper behavior regardless of the mental state of the
lessee or any individual employed by, or associated with, the lessee.
Misconduct, in this subpart, would be different than, and in addition
to, any violations subject to civil penalties under FOGRMA, 30 U.S.C.
1719, and its implementing regulations in part 1241 of this chapter.
Behavior that constitutes misconduct, under this part 1206, would not
need to be willful, knowing, voluntary, or intentional. This is a
valuation mechanism, not an enforcement tool. Under this proposed rule,
if ONRR determines that misconduct has occurred, ONRR will calculate
value under Sec. 1206.144. However, if ONRR determines the misconduct
was knowing or willful, it also could pursue civil penalties under part
1241 of this chapter.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2), ONRR defines what is a breach of
the duty to market. The proposed rule specifies that ONRR may determine
value under Sec. 1206.144 if a lessee sells gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products at an unreasonably low price. The proposed rule explains
what ONRR could consider an ``unreasonably low'' price. A lessee has a
duty to market gas for the mutual benefit of the United States, as
lessor, and the lessee. An unreasonably low price may reflect a failure
of the lessee to perform that duty. Proposed paragraph (a)(2) defines a
sales price as ``unreasonably low'' ``if it is 10 percent less than the
lowest reasonable measures of market price, including, but not limited
to, index prices and prices reported to ONRR for like-quality gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products.'' ONRR's authority to exercise this
provision is discretionary; ONRR ``may'' decide your value if it
determines your price is unreasonably low. In exercising its
discretion, ONRR may consider any information that shows a price
appears unreasonably low, and, thus, is not an accurate reflection of
fair market value.
ONRR also proposes a new paragraph (c)(3). Under proposed paragraph
(c)(3), ONRR may value your gas, residue gas, or gas plant products
under Sec. 1206.144 if ONRR cannot determine if you properly valued
your gas, residue gas, or gas plant products under Sec. 1206.141 or
Sec. 1206.142 for any reason. This is a broad ``catch-all'' provision
ONRR may
[[Page 622]]
use to decide the value of gas, residue gas, or gas plant products when
it cannot determine if a lessee properly valued its production. ONRR
will exercise this discretionary authority to meet its mandate under 30
U.S.C. 1711 to ensure accurate accounting for Federal oil and gas
royalties under the different circumstances it encounters during its
compliance verification activities. It is the lessee's responsibility
to provide ONRR with information sufficient for us to ensure that
royalties are accurately calculated. Under this provision, ONRR will
still meet its statutory mandate even when a lessee fails to provide
sufficient information. However, like proposed paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, this is an ONRR valuation mechanism that is in addition to any
civil penalty authority ONRR has under part 1241 of this chapter.
We propose a new paragraph (g)(1) that requires the lessee or its
affiliate to make all contracts in writing before it can use the
contracts as the basis for the lessee's valuation of its gas produced
from Federal leases. This proposed requirement will apply to any
contract revisions or amendments. Further, ONRR proposes that all
parties to the contract must sign the contracts, contract revisions, or
amendments before lessees can use them as the basis for the lessee's
valuation of its gas under these regulations.
ONRR believes this proposed requirement is critical to the proper
application of the valuation regulations. Lessees should provide to
ONRR the actual, written contracts signed by all parties because those
contracts document the very transactions on which the regulations
require lessees to base values and allowances. Without the applicable
sales, transportation, and/or processing contracts, neither the lessee
nor ONRR can verify that Federal royalties are properly paid. Because
ONRR would only require a lessee to provide its actual contractual
arrangements that it uses to conduct its business, this requirement
should place no burden on a lessee.
ONRR proposes a new paragraph (g)(2) providing that ONRR may decide
the value of a lessee's gas if the lessee or its affiliate fails to
make all contracts, contract revisions, or amendments in writing. If
the lessee cannot produce the written, signed contracts that would
otherwise serve as the basis of the lessee's valuation of its gas under
the regulations, ONRR may decide to determine the appropriate value of
the lessee's gas under newly proposed Sec. 1206.144 as we discuss
below.
Finally, ONRR proposes to add paragraph (g)(3) to make clear the
new provision requiring contracts to be in writing and signed by all
parties is in addition to any other recordkeeping requirements the
lessee must satisfy under this title, and that this new requirement
supersedes any provision in this title to the contrary.
1206.144 How will ONRR determine the value of my gas for royalty
purposes?
ONRR proposes a new ``default'' valuation Sec. 1206.144 that ONRR
may use to value your gas, residue gas, or gas plant products for
royalty purposes. Because we propose the same default provision for
federal oil, please refer to Sec. 1206.105 above for more information.
1206.145 What records must I keep to support my calculations of royalty
under this subpart?
1206.146 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.147 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring, or
other like process considered final?
1206.148 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
See discussion below.
1206.149 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
1206.150 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
ONRR proposes to rewrite in Plain Language the regulations for
recordkeeping, marketable condition and marketing, audit,
confidentiality, and quantity and quality requirements and procedures.
Also, ONRR proposes to make these sections consistent with other
product valuation regulations, such as the geothermal and Federal oil
regulations. In addition, rather than repeat the requirements or
procedures in each applicable section of this rule, ONRR proposes to
have these sections apply to this entire subpart. The substantive
requirements remain unchanged.
1206.148 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
ONRR proposes a new Sec. 1206.148 on how to request a valuation
determination or guidance. This section is the same as Sec. 1206.108
applicable to Federal oil we discuss above, with several substantive
changes. Proposed Sec. 1206.148 replaces and expands the provisions
contained in current 30 CFR 1206.152(g) and 1206.153(g). The newly
proposed section provides greater clarity on the process lessees may
use to request valuation guidance and determinations, as well as on the
effect of ONRR's response to such requests. Adding proposed Sec.
1206.148 will make the procedures for gas valuation requests consistent
with the procedures ONRR proposes for Federal oil and Federal and
Indian coal.
Under proposed paragraph (a), a lessee may request a valuation
determination or guidance from ONRR regarding any gas produced.
Paragraph (a)(1) through (3) explains that the lessee's request must be
in writing; identify all leases involved, all interest owners in the
leases, and the operator(s) for those leases; and completely explain
all relevant facts. In addition, under paragraphs (a)(4) through (6), a
lessee must provide all relevant documents, its analysis of the
issue(s), citations to all relevant precedents, including adverse
precedents, and its proposed valuation method.
In response to a lessee's request, under proposed paragraph (b),
ONRR may (1) decide that it will issue guidance, (2) inform the lessee
in writing that it will not provide a determination or guidance, or (3)
request that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget
issue a determination. This proposal changes the current Federal oil
regulations under 30 CFR 1206.107(b), which has caused confusion over
whether an ONRR-issued determination is a binding appealable order or
non-appealable guidance. Under this proposed rule, ONRR clarifies that
we only issue non-binding guidance for valuation of Federal oil and gas
and Federal and Indian coal. This proposal is consistent with ONRR's
existing practice of having only the Assistant Secretary sign decisions
that are binding on the Department. Also, ONRR proposes to remove the
regulatory language that we will ``reply to requests expeditiously.''
Our practice is to reply as quickly as possible, so we do not make it a
regulatory requirement.
Proposed paragraphs (b)(3)(i) and (ii) identify situations in which
ONRR and the Assistant Secretary typically do not provide a
determination or guidance, including, but not limited to, requests for
guidance on hypothetical situations and matters that are the subject of
pending litigation or administrative appeals.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(1), a determination the Assistant
Secretary of Policy, Management and Budget signs binds both the lessee
and ONRR unless the Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds the
determination. After the Assistant Secretary issues a determination,
under proposed paragraph (c)(2), the lessee must make
[[Page 623]]
any adjustments to its royalty payments that follow from the
determination. If the lessee owes additional royalties, it must pay the
additional royalties due plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter. In addition, proposed
paragraph (c)(3) explains that a determination the Assistant Secretary
signs is the final action of the Department and is subject to judicial
review under 5 U.S.C. 701-706.
Proposed paragraph (d) explains that, if ONRR issues guidance, the
guidance is not binding on ONRR, delegated States, or the lessee with
respect to the specific situation addressed in the guidance. This is a
change from the current Federal oil regulation at 30 CFR 1206.107(d)
that makes a determination ONRR issues binding on ONRR and delegated
States but not the lessee. Moreover, guidance, ONRR's decision whether
to issue guidance, and ONRR's decision whether to request a
determination by the Assistant Secretary would not be appealable
decisions or orders under 30 CFR part 1290. This is the same as current
30 CFR 1206.107(d)(1). However, as provided under current 30 CFR
1206.107(d)(2), under proposed paragraph (d)(2) of this section, if
ONRR issues an order requiring the lessee to pay royalty on the same
basis as the guidance, the lessee could appeal the order under 30 CFR
part 1290.
Under proposed paragraph (e), ONRR or the Assistant Secretary may
use any of the applicable criteria in this subpart to make a
determination or provide guidance. Also, under proposed paragraph (f),
if a statute or regulation on which ONRR based any determination or
guidance is changed, the changed statute or regulation takes precedence
over the determination or guidance after the effective date of the
statute or regulation, regardless of whether ONRR or the Assistant
Secretary modifies or rescinds the determination or guidance.
Therefore, under this proposed provision, determinations and guidance
are not open-ended.
1206.151 How do I perform accounting for comparison?
ONRR proposes to move the regulations in current 30 CFR 1206.155 to
proposed Sec. 1206.151, but we rewrite this section in Plain Language.
This section requires a lessee to pay royalties on the greater of the
value of the unprocessed gas or the value of its processed gas if the
lessee, its affiliate, a person to whom the lessee transferred gas
under a non-arm's-length contract, or a person to whom the lessee
transferred gas without a contract processes the lessee's or its
affiliate's gas and does not sell the residue gas at arm's length.
However, ONRR requests comments on whether we need this proposed
requirement for two reasons. First, proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.142 and
1206.143 of this subpart recognize the real market value of gas today
is the combined value of its constituent components--residue gas and
gas plant products. And, the proposed regulations value gas sold on
that basis as processed gas. There appears to be a limited market for
unprocessed gas, unless it is sold based upon the constituent products
contained therein, hence accounting for comparison may not be needed.
Second, because the criteria that triggers dual accounting--a non-
arm's-length sale of residue gas after processing--is not used to value
gas under this proposed rule, dual accounting may no longer be
appropriate because the residue gas is valued based on the first arm's-
length sale or index-based option.
ONRR also proposes to keep the requirement in current 30 CFR
1206.155 that lessees must perform dual accounting if required by lease
terms. ONRR believes this provision is consistent with proposed Sec.
1206.140(c)(4), which specifically recognizes the primacy of lease
terms over the terms of the regulations when they are inconsistent.
Before we discuss each section of proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.152
through 1206.158 regarding transportation allowances, we believe it is
helpful to discuss some general changes we make. The proposed
regulations move the current regulations regarding transportation
allowances from 30 CFR 1206.156 and 1206.157 to proposed Sec. Sec.
1206.152 through 1206.158. The proposed gas transportation allowance
regulations are changed, primarily in structure, but there also are a
few substantive changes. The structure of the proposed gas
transportation allowance regulations is modeled after the current
Federal oil transportation allowance regulations to achieve consistency
between the two. In most cases, the regulatory requirements do not
change. We reorganize the current provisions and rewrite them in Plain
Language. Like the current oil transportation allowance regulations,
this structure provides more regulatory section headings, better
organization, and greater visibility to locate regulatory requirements
applicable to the lessee's particular transportation allowance
situations. Also, we reorganize or combine many paragraphs that were
embedded within a current section into a new section for greater
visibility. We propose to segregate individual multiple requirements
within paragraphs into separate paragraphs to improve visibility and
identification.
1206.152 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
Proposed Sec. 1206.152 retains the provisions in current Sec.
1206.156 (``Transportation allowances--general''), makes Federal gas
regulations consistent with Federal oil regulations, and consolidates
provisions applicable to both arm's-length and non-arm's-length
transportation in the current regulations rather than repeating those
provisions in the respective sections explaining those allowances. We
also rewrite the current regulations in Plain Language and only discuss
substantive changes and additions below.
Proposed paragraph (a) contains the same requirements as current
Sec. 1206.156(a) and includes a new provision that ``[y]ou may not
deduct transportation costs you incur to move a particular volume of
production to reduce royalties you owe on production for which you did
not incur those costs.'' Consistent with current regulations, this
provision prevents the lessee from claiming transportation costs
incurred for a segment of transportation when the gas did not actually
flow on that segment. A lessee could only claim transportation costs
attributable to the actual movement of the lease production on that
transportation segment.
We also propose new paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2)(i), which are
consistent with the current Federal oil rule Sec. 1206.109(a)(2). New
paragraph (a)(1) states you may take a transportation allowance when
you value unprocessed gas under Sec. 1206.141(b) or residue gas and
gas plant products under Sec. 1206.142(b) based on a sale at a point
off the lease, unit, or communitized area where the gas is produced.
New paragraph (a)(2)(i) states that you may take a transportation
allowance when the movement to the sales point is not gathering.
Neither change to the current rule is substantive because both codify
existing practice and case law.
Proposed new paragraph (a)(2)(ii) states that ``[f]or gas produced
on the OCS, the movement of gas from the wellhead to the first platform
is not transportation.'' It is well established that the movement of
oil and gas that ONRR determines is ``gathering'' is not allowable as a
transportation allowance. California Co. v. Udall, 296 F.2d 384 (D.C.
Cir. 1961); Kerr-McGee Corp., 147 IBLA 277 (1999). However, on May 20,
1999, the then-Associate Director for the former MMS's Royalty
Management
[[Page 624]]
Program issued ``Guidance for Determining Transportation Allowances for
Production from Leases in Water Depths Greater Than 200 Meters'' (Deep
Water Policy). The Deep Water Policy provides the following guidelines:
(1) Current regulations must be followed; (2) movement costs are
allocated between royalty and non-royalty bearing substances; (3)
movement prior to a central accumulation point is considered gathering,
movement beyond the point is considered transportation; (4) leases and
units are treated similarly; (5) the movement is to a facility that is
not located on a lease adjacent to the lease on which the production
originates; and (6) allowances for subsea completions not located in
water deeper than 200 meters are considered on a case-by-case basis.
Both the current Federal oil and gas valuation rules define
gathering as ``the movement of lease production to a central
accumulation or treatment point on the lease, unit, or communitized
area, or to a central accumulation or treatment point off the lease,
unit, or communitized area that BLM or BSEE approves for onshore and
offshore leases, respectively.'' 30 CFR 1206.101 (Federal oil) and
1206.151 (Federal gas). Under the Deep Water Policy, ONRR considered a
subsea manifold located on the OCS in deep water to be a ``central
accumulation point'' regardless of whether it was actually a central
accumulation or treatment point as ONRR's regulations require. Since
ONRR issued the Deep Water Policy, lessees have been deducting the
costs of moving bulk production from the subsea manifold to the
platform where the oil and gas first surface. In addition, lessees have
attempted to expand the Deep Water Policy to deem subsea wellheads
``central accumulation points'' and take transportation allowances from
the sea bed floor to the first platform where the bulk production
surfaces. Thus, lessees have taken transportation allowances under the
Deep Water Policy, in some instances, for movement ONRR considers non-
deductible ``gathering'' under its regulations.
In addition, the Interior Board of Land Appeals (IBLA) has
concluded there are three definitive attributes of gas gathering lines:
(1) They move lease production to a central accumulation point; (2)
they connect to gas wells; and (3) they bring gas by separate and
individual lines to a central point where it is delivered into a single
line. Kerr-McGee Corp., 147 IBLA at 282 (citations omitted). In Kerr-
McGee, the IBLA stated that ``even though production is moved across
lease boundaries, because it is treated and sold on adjacent leases the
costs of moving it there are properly regarded as gathering, not
transportation.'' Id. at 283 (citations omitted). Under Kerr-McGee,
almost all of the movement the Deep Water Policy allows as a
transportation allowance is, in actuality, non-deductible ``gathering''
under ONRR's current valuation regulations.
We have determined that the Deep Water Policy is inconsistent with
our regulatory definition of gathering and Departmental decisions
interpreting that term. Therefore, we propose to rescind the Deep Water
Policy in this rulemaking. We propose to accomplish this by making two
changes. First, consistent with Kerr-McGee, we propose to add to the
definition of ``gathering'' that any movement of bulk production from
the wellhead to a platform offshore is gathering, not allowable
transportation. Second, we propose to add a new paragraph (a)(2)(ii) to
this section that states ``[f]or gas produced on the OCS, the movement
of gas from the wellhead to the first platform is not transportation.''
We also make this change to proposed Federal oil Sec.
1206.110(a)(2)(ii).
Proposed paragraph (b) of this section contains and consolidates
current requirements in 30 CFR 1206.156(b) and 1206.157(a)(2) and
(b)(3) regarding allocation of transportations costs based on your or
your affiliate's cost of transporting each product if you transport one
or more products in the gaseous phase in a transportation system.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1) contains and consolidates current
requirements in 30 CFR 1206.157(a)(2) and (b)(4) which all apply to
allocation of transportations costs when you or your affiliate
transport both gaseous and liquid products in the same transportation
system.
Under proposed paragraph (d), if you value unprocessed gas under
Sec. 1206.141(c) or residue gas and gas plant products under Sec.
1206.142(d)--the index-based valuation options--you may not take a
transportation allowance. This is because the index-based valuation
provisions already incorporate the costs of transportation.
Proposed paragraph (e)(1), eliminates the current provision
allowing lessees to request transportation allowances in excess of 50
percent of the sales value of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, or
NGLs. Currently, ONRR limits transportation allowances and factors to
50 percent of the sales value of unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products unless we approve an exception to the limitation. To
ensure a fair return to the public and to limit ONRR's administrative
costs to process such requests, the proposed regulation eliminates the
exception to the 50-percent limit. ONRR believes the current 50-percent
limit on transportation-related costs is adequate in the vast majority
of transportation situations. Thus, paragraph (e)(2) provides that any
existing approvals for the exception to the limitation terminate on the
effective date of the final rule. We will not grandfather any existing
approval to exceed the 50-percent limit.
Proposed paragraph (f) continues the current requirement under 30
CFR 1206.157(a)(4), applicable to arm's-length transportation, that
lessees must express transportation allowances for residue gas, gas
plant products, or unprocessed gas in a dollar-value equivalent. We
propose to also apply this requirement to non-arm's-length
transportation consistent with existing practice. We further propose
that if your or your affiliate's payments for transportation under a
contract are not in dollars-per-unit, you must convert the
consideration you or your affiliate paid to its dollar-value
equivalent.
Like the default provision for valuation we discuss above under
Sec. 1206.143(c), proposed paragraphs (g)(1), (2), and (3) provide
that ONRR may determine your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.144, if: (1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting
parties; (2) the total consideration the lessee or its affiliate pays
under an arm's-length contract does not reflect the reasonable cost of
transportation because the lessee breached its duty to market the
unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas plant products for the mutual
benefit of the lessee and the lessor by transporting such products at a
cost that is unreasonably high; or (3) ONRR cannot determine if the
lessee properly calculated a transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.153 or Sec. 1206.154, for any reason. Under proposed paragraph
(g)(2), ONRR may consider an allowance to be unreasonably high if it is
10-percent higher than the highest reasonable measures of
transportation costs, including, but not limited to, transportation
allowances lessees and others report to ONRR and tariffs for gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products transported through the same system.
Finally, we propose a new provision under paragraph (h) to make
clear that you do not need ONRR's approval before reporting a
transportation allowance for costs that you incur. This provision is in
the current regulations that apply to arm's-length transportation at 30
CFR 1206.157(a), but we propose to apply it to non-arm's-length
[[Page 625]]
transportation as well. This is consistent with existing practice.
1206.153 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract?
Proposed Sec. 1206.153 explains how lessees must determine a
transportation allowance under arm's-length transportation contracts.
As we discuss above, we propose to restructure this section for
consistency with the Federal oil transportation allowance regulations.
In addition, we move the requirements for non-arm's-length
transportation allowances to a separate Sec. 1206.154.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1) states that this section applies to both
the lessee and its affiliate if the lessee chooses to use the
affiliate's arm's-length sales contract for valuation and if that
affiliate incurs transportation costs under an arm's-length
transportation contract to move the lease production to the sales
point. However, ONRR will determine your transportation allowance under
Sec. 1206.152(g) if ONRR determines there is misconduct, the arm's-
length transportation cost is unreasonably high, or ONRR cannot
determine if your transportation allowance is proper. This provision
gives ONRR greater discretion and flexibility to determine
transportation allowances (for example, when arm's-length
transportation service providers charge bundled fees). See the
discussion of bundled fees in proposed Sec. 1206.141 above.
ONRR proposes to eliminate the provision in current 30 CFR
1206.157(a)(5) that allows lessees to report transportation costs, in
certain circumstances, as a transportation factor. Rather, we propose
that a lessee must report separately all transportation costs under
both arm's-length and non-arm's-length sales contracts as a
transportation allowance on Form ONRR-2014. ONRR believes that
requiring lessees to report all deductions for transportation costs
separately as allowances on Form ONRR-2014 is more transparent,
supports ONRR's increased data mining efforts to promote accuracy, and
assists State and Federal auditors with their compliance work. We
propose this same change for oil produced from Federal lands.
Proposed paragraph (b) allows a lessee to include the same costs we
allow under current 30 CFR 1206.157(f) in its transportation allowance.
Under new paragraph (b)(11), we also propose that a lessee may include
in its transportation allowance hurricane surcharges the lessee or its
affiliate pay. This proposal is consistent with existing practice.
Under proposed paragraph (c), we specify transportation costs we
would not allow a lessee to include in its transportation allowance.
These non-allowable costs remain mostly the same as those we currently
disallow under 30 CFR 1206.157(g). We believe it is already clear the
cost of boosting gas (e.g. recompressing residue gas at the plant after
processing) is not a deductible cost of transportation under current 30
CFR 1202.151(b) and the Assistant Secretary's decision at issue in
Devon. Nevertheless, proposed paragraph (c)(8) specifically states that
the costs of boosting residue gas are not allowable as a cost of
transportation.
Finally, we propose a new paragraph (d) that applies if you have no
written contract for the arm's-length transportation of gas. In that
case, ONRR determines your transportation allowance under proposed
Sec. 1206.144. Under this proposal, you have to propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance using the procedures in Sec.
1206.148(a) and could use that method until ONRR issues its
determination. This paragraph only applies when there is no contract
for arm's-length transportation. Thus, it would not apply if lessees
perform their own transportation. Rather, Sec. 1206.154 regarding non-
arm's-length transportation allowances applies.
1206.154 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length transportation contract?
We propose Sec. 1206.154 as a separate section explaining how to
calculate transportation allowances under a non-arm's-length contract,
such as where the lessee ships its production through its own pipeline
or through a pipeline its affiliate owns. Under proposed paragraph (a),
ONRR continues the provision in current 30 CFR 1206.157(b) that does
not recognize contracts between the lessee and its affiliate or any
other person without opposing economic interests regarding that
contract. Like the current regulations, you will determine non-arm's-
length transportation allowances based on your actual costs or the
actual costs of the affiliated pipeline owner.
Proposed paragraph (b) generally explains costs you may include in
your transportation allowance. Paragraph (b)(1) explains the lessee's
or its affiliate's actual costs include capital costs and operating and
maintenance expenses under paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) of this
section. Proposed paragraph (b)(2) explains you also could include
overhead under paragraph (h) of this section. Under proposed paragraph
(b)(3), we revise the current regulation to clarify the methodology for
the two options to calculate depreciation. Under this proposed
rulemaking, we allow lessees to choose between depreciation and a
return on undepreciated capital investment under paragraph (i)(1) of
this section, or a cost equal to a return on the initial depreciable
capital investment in the transportation system under paragraph (i)(2)
of this section. Finally, paragraph (b)(4) allows the lessee to
continue to claim a rate of return on the reasonable salvage value of
the transportation system after it is fully depreciated. For example,
if the pipeline had a salvage value of 5 percent, the lessee may claim
a rate of return on 5 percent of the system value, even though we would
allow no further depreciation. See the discussion of reasonable salvage
value in proposed Sec. 1206.112(i)(1)(iii).
We also propose to remove the provisions of current Sec.
1206.175(b)(5) that allow a lessee with a non-arm's-length contract to
use FERC or State-regulatory-agency approved tariffs as an exception
from the requirement to calculate actual costs. We remove this
provision to make it consistent with the current Federal oil valuation
regulations. Under the proposed rule, lessees must compute their actual
costs to determine transportation allowances under non-arm's-length
contracts even when a regulatory agency has approved a tariff.
Proposed paragraph (c) further explains the transportation costs
you may and may not include in a transportation allowance. Proposed
paragraph (c)(1) states that, to the extent that you have not already
included in your transportation allowances the allowable costs under
paragraphs (e) through (g) of this section, you may include in your
allowance the actual transportation costs we list under Sec.
1206.153(b)(2), (5), and (6) of this subpart (Gas supply realignment
(GSR) costs, Gas Research Institute (GRI) fees, and Annual Charge
Adjustment (ACA) fees that FERC imposes). ONRR proposes to disallow the
remaining costs we allow a lessee to include in arm's-length
transportation allowances under Sec. 1206.153(b) because the lessee
would not or should not ordinarily incur the costs as a pipeline owner
or be charged for those costs by its affiliate. However, there may be
instances when specific costs integral to transportation could be
included in the pipeline owner's operating and maintenance costs. ONRR
invites comments on what types of costs, other than those identified in
Sec. 1206.153(b)(2), (5), and (6), may be actual costs of
transportation
[[Page 626]]
under non-arm's-length transportation arrangements.
ONRR also proposes to eliminate the current provision allowing
lessees to deduct the costs of pipeline losses, both actual and
theoretical, under non-arm's-length transportation situations. These
regulations prohibited actual or theoretical pipeline losses prior to
the 1997 gas transportation allowance revisions that incorporated new
costs resulting from FERC Order No. 636. The advent of Order No. 636
should not have had any bearing on such non-arm's-length costs.
Therefore, ONRR proposes to remove this provision. ONRR recognizes that
pipeline losses are distinct from transportation fuel that is used on a
pipeline to power compressors used for actual transportation. Under the
proposal, ONRR continues to permit lessees to claim an allowance for
actual fuel used for qualifying transportation purposes. In addition,
we continue to disallow fuel for non-approved off-lease compressors and
off-lease fuel for other processes necessary to place lease production
in marketable condition.
Proposed paragraph (c)(2) explains that we do not allow a lessee to
include in its non-arm's-length transportation allowances the same
costs we do not allow to be included in arm's-length transportation
allowances under proposed Sec. 1206.153(c).
Like the arm's-length provision, proposed paragraph (d) states that
for non-arm's-length transportation allowances, the lessee may not
duplicate allowable transportation costs when it calculates an
allowance. For example, if the lessee includes GRI costs in its
operating costs under paragraph (b), it may not also include those
costs under paragraph (c).
Proposed paragraphs (e) through (h) contain the same requirements
as current 30 CFR 1206.157(b)(2)(i), (ii), and (iii), but we rewrite
the provisions in Plain Language and make them consistent with the
current Federal oil regulations.
Proposed paragraph (i) retains the requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.157(b)(2)(iv) regarding depreciation, but we rewrite those
provisions in Plain Language and make them consistent with the Federal
oil regulations. ONRR proposes to eliminate the reference to
transportation facilities first placed in service after March 1, 1988.
When ONRR published its Federal gas valuation regulations on January
15, 1988, it changed the requirements necessary to receive
transportation and processing allowances. In recognition that certain
transportation and processing facilities had been given approval prior
to those regulations' effective date (March 15, 1988), ONRR made the
new requirements apply only to facilities that were placed in service
on or after the effective date of those regulations. Now more than
twenty years later, ONRR believes that none of the facilities placed in
service before March 15, 1988, are still eligible for depreciation
under the requirements in effect prior to March 15, 1988. Therefore, we
propose to remove this outdated language from the proposed regulations.
Under paragraph (i)(3), ONRR proposes to revise the rate of return
from 1.3 times the Standard & Poor's BBB bond rate in current 30 CFR
1206.157(b)(2)(v) to the rate without a multiplier, in other words 1
times the BBB bond rate. We make the same change to Federal oil, so
please refer to our discussion of proposed Sec. 1206.112(i)(3).
1206.155 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
This section would contain essentially the same provisions as
current 30 CFR 1206.157(c)(1). However, ONRR proposes to add the term
``affiliate'' to paragraph (b). Under the new proposed valuation
provisions, which use an affiliate's arm's-length sales contract, ONRR
allows a transportation allowance to the arm's-length sales point and,
therefore, needs the associated transportation contracts. In addition,
ONRR proposes to eliminate the reference to allowances in effect prior
to March 1, 1988, under current 30 CFR 1206.157(c)(1)(iii). As stated
above, ONRR believes that none of facilities predating the 1988 rule
change are still eligible for depreciation under the requirements in
effect prior to March 15, 1988. Therefore, we are removing this
language from the proposed regulations.
1206.156 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
This section contains essentially the same provisions as current 30
CFR 1206.157(c)(2). In this proposed rule, ONRR eliminates the
reference in current 30 CFR 1206.157(c)(2)(v) to allowances in effect
prior to March 1, 1988.
1206.157 What interest or penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
Under proposed Sec. 1206.157, ONRR consolidates the penalty and
interest provisions for improper allowances. Currently, such provisions
are contained under both the general transportation and determination
of transportation allowances sections of the regulations. Proposed
paragraph (a)(1) slightly modifies current 30 CFR 1206.156(d) by using
the term ``unauthorized'' in the context of ``If ONRR determines that
you took an unauthorized transportation allowance, then you must pay
any additional royalties due. . . .'' However, this change would not
alter the meaning of the current provisions. Examples of unauthorized
transportation allowances include, but are not limited to, exceeding
the 50-percent limitation, including costs necessary to place the gas
into marketable condition, or including other costs that are not
integral to the transportation of lease production. Proposed paragraph
(a)(2) states that a lessee may be entitled to a credit with interest
if it understated its transportation allowance. This provision amends
current 30 CFR 1206.157(e) to comply with RSFA's provision that
entitles lessees to interest on overpayments (30 U.S.C. 1721(h)).
Proposed paragraph (b) states that, if the lessee deducts a
transportation allowance that exceeds 50 percent of the value of the
gas, residue gas, or gas plant products transported, the lessee must
pay late payment interest on the excess allowance amount taken from the
date that amount is taken until the date it paid the additional
royalties due. This changes the current requirement that interest is
calculated from the date the allowance is taken until the lessee files
a request for an exception. This change results from ONRR proposing to
eliminate allowance exceptions.
Proposed paragraph (c) restates current 30 CFR 1206.156(d).
1206.158 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
Section 1206.158 restates the requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.157(e), except we rewrite the provisions in Plain Language.
1206.159 What general processing allowances requirements apply to me?
Like the amendments to transportation allowances discussed above,
ONRR proposes to rewrite the current processing allowance regulations
at 30 CFR 1206.158 in Plain Language, make them consistent with Federal
oil, and reorganize them for clarity and visibility. We are not
planning to make any substantive changes in proposed paragraph (a)(1)
and paragraph (b); they will contain the same provisions as current 30
CFR 1206.158 (a) and (b). However, we
[[Page 627]]
propose to add a new provision under paragraph (a)(2) to make clear
that you do not need ONRR's approval before reporting a processing
allowance for costs that you incur for arm's-length or non-arm's-length
allowances. This is consistent with existing practice.
Proposed paragraph (c) continues the requirements of current 30 CFR
1206.158(c), with two substantive changes and one clarification to
current 30 CFR 1206.158(c)(1). Current paragraph 1206.158 (c)(1) states
that ``Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, the
processing allowance shall not be applied against the value of the
residue gas. Where there is no residue gas ONRR may designate an
appropriate gas plant product against which no allowance may be
applied.'' We are removing the second sentence because we do not
believe ONRR ever used this provision.
ONRR proposes to eliminate the exception under current 30 CFR
1206.158 (c)(3) allowing a lessee to request ONRR approval of a
processing allowance that exceeds 66\2/3\ percent of the value of the
plant products. We also propose to eliminate the provision allowing a
lessee to request an extraordinary processing cost allowance under
current 30 CFR 1206.158(d)(2). ONRR also proposes to terminate any
approvals for the exception under proposed paragraph (c)(3) and the
extraordinary cost processing allowance under proposed paragraph (c)(4)
as of the effective date of the rule. Thus, we propose not to
grandfather previously approved exceptions or extraordinary allowances.
ONRR proposes these changes because, as with transportation allowances,
ONRR believes the current 66\2/3\ percent limit on processing-related
costs is adequate in the vast majority of situations. To date, we only
have approved two extraordinary processing cost allowances. Given the
age of the plants and improvements in technology, ONRR believes such
extraordinary cost allowances no longer reflect current conditions.
Furthermore, ONRR believes the current 66\2/3\ percent limitation on
gas plant products ensures a fair return to the public.
Proposed paragraph (d) explains and clarifies that we continue to
disallow deductions for costs necessary to place gas into marketable
condition. ONRR proposes to retain the existing requirements of current
30 CFR 1206.158(d)(1) but proposes to recodify them as Sec.
1206.159(d)(1), (2), (3), and (4). Also, the proposed rule makes clear
that any cost a lessee incurs for stabilizing condensate or recovering
gas vapors from condensate or oil is disallowed. The methods industry
employs to perform these services are not within the proper definition
of ``processing'' under these regulations and are, in fact, costs
incurred to place the condensate or oil into marketable condition.
Likewise, we currently analyze whether hydrocarbon dew point controls
are actually functions that fall within the definition of
``processing'' under the regulations before qualifying for a processing
allowance against the value of the liquids recovered. In conjunction
with these efforts to clarify the costs that qualify as a processing
allowance, ONRR proposes to add Joule-Thomson Units (JT Units) used to
recover NGLs from gas to the definition of ``processing'' under
proposed Sec. 1206.20, regardless of the location of the JT Unit.
1206.160 How do I determine a processing allowance, if I have an arm's-
length processing contract?
ONRR proposes this new section, which is essentially the same as
current 30 CFR 1206.159(a), with no material modifications, except we
add a new paragraph (c) we discuss below. Like transportation
allowances, we are moving the requirements for non-arm's-length
processing allowances to a separate Sec. 1206.161. Because the
requirements for determining processing allowances under an arm's-
length contract are essentially the same as those for determining
transportation allowances under an arm's-length contract, we make the
same changes to processing allowances in this section as those we
propose for arm's-length transportation allowances. Refer to the
preamble discussion of Sec. 1206.153 for an explanation of the
changes.
We propose a new paragraph (c) that applies if you have no written
contract for arm's-length processing of gas. In that case, ONRR will
determine your processing allowance under Sec. 1206.144. You will have
to propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance using the
procedures in Sec. 1206.148(a) and may use that method until ONRR
issues a determination. This proposed paragraph only applies if there
is no contract for arm's-length processing. It does not apply if a
lessee performs its own processing. In that case, Sec. 1206.161
applies.
ONRR also proposes new Sec. 1206.161 through Sec. 1206.165 to
subpart D to codify and enhance current Federal gas valuation
practices.
1206.161 How do I determine a processing allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length processing contract?
This section contains the same requirements as current 30 CFR
1206.159(b). Because the requirements for determining processing
allowances under a non-arm's-length contract are essentially the same
as those for determining transportation allowances under a non-arm's-
length contract, we make the same changes to processing allowances in
this section as those we propose for non-arm's-length transportation
allowances. Refer to the preamble discussion of Sec. 1206.154 for an
explanation of the changes.
ONRR proposes one material change to the current regulatory
requirements. Under proposed paragraph (b)(4), we allow the lessee to
continue claiming a rate of return on the reasonable salvage value of a
processing plant after it is fully depreciated. For example, if the
plant had a salvage value of 5 percent, the lessee could claim a rate
of return on 5 percent of the plant value, even though we would allow
no further depreciation. See the discussion of reasonable salvage value
in proposed Sec. 1206.112(i)(1)(iii).
1206.162 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
processing contract?
1206.163 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
processing contract?
1206.164 What interest or penalties apply if I improperly report a
processing allowance?
1206.165 What reporting adjustments must I make for processing
allowances?
These four proposed sections are the same as the reporting-related
requirements in current 30 CFR 1206.159(c), (d), and (e). Also, they
are the same changes as those discussed above for transportation
allowances under Sec. Sec. 1206.155 through 1206.158.
Subpart F--Federal Coal
1206.250 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.250, but
we rewrite the current section in Plain Language and make it consistent
with the other product valuation regulations. The substantive
requirements remain unchanged.
1206.251 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.254,
1206.255, and 1206.260, but we rewrite the sections in Plain Language
and combine multiple sections into this proposed section. We do not
propose any substantive change. However, under proposed paragraph (e),
we clarify the calculation you will have
[[Page 628]]
to perform to allocate washed coal under current 30 CFR 1206.260 by
attributing the washed coal to the leases from which it was extracted.
Thus, proposed new paragraph (e) reads as set forth in the regulatory
text.
1206.252 How do I calculate royalty value for coal I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
Current 30 CFR 1206.256 contains valuation standards for Federal
coal leases having cents-per-ton royalty rates. The regulation we
propose eliminates any reference to the valuation of coal from these
leases because there are no longer any Federal cents-per-ton coal
leases. Therefore, this proposed Sec. 1206.252, and the rest of the
proposed regulations, provide lessees with instructions for valuing
coal from ad valorem Federal coal leases.
Consistent with the current Federal coal valuation regulations,
under the proposed regulations, a lessee generally values Federal coal
based on the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee from the first
arm's-length sale. However, like the proposed amendments to the Federal
gas rule we discuss above, we propose to eliminate the benchmarks for
valuation of non-arm's-length sales. We also propose to add the same
``default'' mechanism under Sec. 1206.254 discussed above. Please
refer to proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.141, 1206.142, and 1206.144 above for
an explanation of the proposed changes.
The benchmarks applicable to value coal in non-arm's-length or no-
sale situations have proven difficult to use in practice. In addition,
the first benchmark does not allow the use of comparable arm's-length
sales by the lessee or its affiliates, exacerbating the challenging
process of obtaining and comparing relevant arm's-length sales
contracts to value non-arm's-length sales. Furthermore, disputes arise
over which sales are comparable, particularly because of the inherent
ambiguity in applying the comparability factors.
ONRR is soliciting comments on how to simplify and improve the
valuation of coal disposed of in non-arm's-length transactions and no-
sale situations. We seek input on the merits of eliminating the
benchmarks for valuation of non-arm's-length sales and comments on the
following questions:
Should the royalty value of coal initially sold under non-
arm's-length conditions be based on the gross proceeds received from
the first arm's-length sale of that coal in situations where there is a
subsequent arm's-length sale?
If you are a coal lessee, will adoption of this
methodology substantively impact your current calculation and payment
of royalties on coal and how?
What other methodologies might ONRR use to determine the
royalty value of coal not sold at arm's length that we may not have
considered?
Under proposed paragraph (a), if the lessee sells coal to an
affiliate or another person under a non-arm's-length sales contract,
and the coal purchaser sells the coal under an arm's-length contract,
the lessee must value the coal based on the first arm's-length
contract, less applicable allowances, unless ONRR decides to value the
coal under Sec. 1206.254 (the new ``default'' provision). Please refer
to proposed Sec. 1206.141(b) above for an explanation of the proposed
change.
A lessee that is part of a corporation with affiliates that produce
coal and affiliates that consume the coal in an electrical generation
plant may have transactions to transfer coal without a sale. If the
affiliate consumes the coal to generate electricity, paragraph (a) of
this proposed section would not provide a valuation methodology.
Therefore, ONRR proposes paragraph (b) to explain how a lessee must
value the coal in this circumstance.
Under proposed paragraph (b)(1), if a lessee or its affiliate sells
electricity at arm's length, the royalty value is the sales value of
the electricity, less applicable allowances. In proposed paragraph
(b)(2), if a lessee or its affiliate did not sell electricity at arm's
length, ONRR will determine the royalty value of the coal under the new
``default'' valuation provision in Sec. 1206.254. In this situation, a
lessee must propose a valuation method to ONRR and may use that method
until we issue a determination on the lessee's proposal.
We also propose a new paragraph (c) to explain how to value coal
that a coal cooperative sells. Please refer to Sec. 1206.20 for the
definition of a coal cooperative. A coal cooperative generally operates
as a corporation, with members and owners associated for the purpose of
obtaining a long-term, secure source of coal. This proposed rule will
treat a coal cooperative and its members/owners as affiliated because
they operate without opposing economic interests. Their collective need
is to have a source of coal available to generate electric power and to
be able to purchase that coal at reasonable prices, and, if possible,
below-market prices. The coal cooperative's members are commonly
electric power generation companies, or electric utility, generation,
or transmission cooperatives. The coal cooperative may operate as a
coal lessee, operator, or payor of these and may or may not be
organized to make a profit. Coal cooperatives exist to avoid the
vagaries and potentially higher prices of the free market.
One mechanism that some members of coal cooperatives use to
maintain the lowest possible price for the coal mined and sold to other
members is to refrain from making a profit on such transactions among
members. A coal cooperative can underprice coal even when sales are
arm's length, all other costs being equal. Thus, the proposed
regulations include a new paragraph (c) to value coal sold in these
circumstances.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(1), for sales of coal between the coal
cooperative and coal cooperative members, if the coal is then sold at
arm's-length, we require the lessee to value the coal under paragraph
(a) of this section, regardless of the number of sales between the coal
cooperative members or the coal cooperative and its members. For
example, assume a coal cooperative sold its Federal coal to a coal
cooperative member, and that coal cooperative member sold its coal to
another coal cooperative member who then sold the coal at arm's-length.
In that case, under the proposed rule, the coal would be valued under
paragraph (a) of this section based on the first arm's-length sale.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2), for sales of coal between the coal
cooperative and coal cooperative members where the coal is consumed in
a power generation plant to generate electricity owned by the coal
cooperative or a coal cooperative member, we require a lessee to value
the coal under proposed paragraph (b) of this section, regardless of
the number of sales between coal cooperative members or between the
coal cooperative and its members. For example, assume a coal
cooperative sold its Federal coal to a coal cooperative member, and
that coal cooperative member sold its coal to another coal cooperative
member who then consumed the coal in its power generation plant and
sold the electricity it generated. In that case, under the proposed
rule, the coal would be valued under paragraph (b) of this section
based on the sales of the electricity, less any allowable deductions.
ONRR believes all sales between cooperative members are non-arm's-
length because they do not have opposing economic interests. However,
we treat sales to non-members of the cooperative like any other arm's-
length
[[Page 629]]
sale under paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) of this section. ONRR seeks
comments on this valuation proposal.
Proposed paragraph (d) states that if you are entitled to take a
washing allowance and transportation allowance for royalty purposes
under this section, the sum of the washing and transportation
allowances may never reduce the royalty value of the coal to zero. This
is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.258(a) and 1206.261(b), but we
rewrite these sections in Plain Language. Unlike the Federal oil and
gas rules, ONRR is not proposing to limit Federal and Indian coal
washing and transportation allowances to 50 percent of the value of the
coal. We specifically request comments as to whether we should limit
coal allowances to 50 percent of the value of the coal.
1206.253 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
1206.254 How will ONRR determine the value of my coal for royalty
purposes?
1206.255 What records must I keep to support my calculations of royalty
under this subpart?
1206.256 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.257 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring, or
other like process considered final?
1206.258 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
1206.259 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
ONRR proposes the same changes to Sec. Sec. 1206.253 through
1206.259 as those we propose for Federal gas valuation regulations
under Sec. Sec. 1206.143 through 1206.149. Please refer to those
proposed sections for an explanation of changes.
1206.260 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
Proposed Sec. 1206.260 retains the provisions in current 30 CFR
1206.261 and makes the Federal coal regulations consistent with the
Federal oil and gas regulations in this proposed rule. This section
also consolidates provisions applicable to both arm's-length and non-
arm's-length transportation in the current regulations, rather than
repeating those provisions in the respective sections for those
allowances. We also rewrite the current regulations in Plain Language
and discuss only substantive changes or additions to this section
below.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1) contains the same provision as current 30
CFR 1206.261(a) allowing you to take a deduction for the reasonable,
actual costs to transport coal from the lease to a point off the lease
or mine determined under Sec. Sec. 1206.261 or 1206.262, as
applicable. We propose a new provision under paragraph (a)(2) to make
clear that you do not need our approval before reporting a
transportation allowance for costs that you incur for arm's-length and
non-arm's-length transportation. This proposal is consistent with
existing practice. Proposed paragraph (b) would contain the remaining
current requirements in 30 CFR 1206.261(a) regarding when you may take
an allowance.
Proposed paragraph (c) explains when you cannot take an allowance.
A new provision in paragraph (c)(1) states that you cannot take an
allowance for transporting lease production that is not royalty
bearing. This new provision is consistent with the existing and
proposed Federal oil and gas regulations. Proposed paragraph (c)(2)
contains the current requirement in 30 CFR 1206.261(a)(2) that you
cannot take an allowance for in-mine movement of your coal. We also
propose a new provision in paragraph (c)(3) that would state you may
not deduct transportation costs to move a particular tonnage of
production for which you did not incur those costs. This codifies our
existing practice of only granting a transportation allowance if you
actually move coal and pay for that movement.
Proposed paragraph (d) is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.261(c)(3)
and permits you to claim a transportation allowance only when you sell
the coal and pay royalties.
We propose to add paragraph (e) to contain and consolidate current
requirements in 30 CFR 1206.261(c)(1), 1206.261(c)(2), and 1206.261(e)
about allocation of transportations costs. This paragraph requires
lessees to report their transportation costs on Form ONRR-4430 as a
cost per ton of clean coal transported. We also explain how to
calculate the cost per ton of clean coal transported.
In addition, we propose to add paragraph (f) to contain the
requirement in current Sec. 1206.262(a)(4) that you must express
arm's-length coal transportation allowances as a dollar-value
equivalent per ton of coal transported. We also make the provision
applicable to non-arm's-length transportation allowances, consistent
with existing practice. Under the proposed regulations, we further
explain that if you do not base your or your affiliate's payments for
transportation under a transportation contract on a dollar-per-unit
basis, you must convert the consideration you or your affiliate paid to
a dollar-value equivalent.
We propose to add paragraph (g), containing the same default
provision as that for the Federal oil and gas transportation
regulations discussed above under Sec. Sec. 1206.110(f) and
1206.152(g), respectively. This proposal includes moving the
requirements of current paragraphs 1206.262(a)(2) and 1206.262(a)(3)
regarding additional consideration, misconduct, and breach of the duty
to market to this new paragraph (g). We also propose to move the
requirements for non-arm's-length transportation allowances to a
separate Sec. 1206.262.
1206.261 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract or no written arm's-length
contract?
Proposed section 1206.261 explains how lessees must determine
transportation allowances under arm's-length transportation contracts.
These requirements are in current 30 CFR 1206.262(a)(1). However, we
rewrite this section in Plain Language and restructure it for
consistency with the Federal gas transportation allowance regulations
we discuss above in Sec. 1206.153.
We propose to add a new paragraph (c) that would apply if you have
no written contract for the arm's-length transportation of coal. In
that case, ONRR will determine your transportation allowance under
Sec. 1206.254. You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the
allowance using the procedures in Sec. 1206.258(a). You may use that
method to determine your allowance until ONRR issues a determination.
This paragraph does not apply if a lessee performs its own
transportation. Rather, proposed Sec. 1206.262, regarding non-arm's-
length transportation allowances, applies.
1206.262 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length transportation contract?
ONRR proposes to revise Sec. 1206.262 to explain how lessees must
determine transportation allowances under non-arm's-length
transportation contracts using paragraphs (a) through (k) of this
section. These requirements are in current 30 CFR 1206.262(b). We
rewrite the current requirements in Plain Language and restructure and
amend this section for consistency with the Federal gas transportation
allowance regulations we discuss above in Sec. 1206.154. We also make
several substantive changes discussed below.
[[Page 630]]
The current coal rule at 30 CFR 1206.262(b)(3) provides that a
lessee may request an exception from having to calculate actual costs
for non-arm's-length or no-contract transportation allowances. The
lessee may use the exception if there are Federal- or State-approved
transportation rates. We propose to eliminate the exception for the
following reasons: (1) No lessee has ever applied to use the exception;
(2) the Federal Government no longer sets or approves rail
transportation rates for coal; and (3) the administrative burden on
ONRR to determine approved rates for every State in which coal is
produced is too great.
The current coal rule at 30 CFR 1206.262(b)(2)(iv)(A) permits a
return on undepreciated capital investment in the transportation system
as one of the allowable costs a lessee may include in non-arm's-length
or no-contract transportation allowances. However, under the current
regulation, the return on investment ends after the capital costs are
depreciated to (or below) a reasonable salvage value. In proposed
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, we allow a lessee to continue to take
a return on the reasonable salvage value under paragraph (i) of this
section. Under proposed paragraph (i)(2), after you depreciated a
transportation system to its reasonable salvage value, you may continue
to include in the allowance calculation a cost equal to the reasonable
salvage value, multiplied by the Standard & Poor's BBB rate of return
allowed under paragraph (k) of this section. We propose this change to
make coal valuation regulations consistent with the Federal oil
valuation amendments in proposed Sec. 1206.112(b)(3)(ii) and the
Federal gas valuation amendments in proposed Sec. 1206.154(i)(1)(iii)
(current Federal gas valuation regulation at Sec. 1206.157(g)).
1206.263 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.264 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.265 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
1206.266 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
ONRR proposes the same revisions to Sec. Sec. 1206.263 through
1206.265 as those we propose for Federal gas valuation regulations
under Sec. Sec. 1206.155 through 1206.157, with two exceptions. ONRR
also proposes to add Sec. 1206.266 to correspond with Sec. 1206.158.
Please refer to those sections for an explanation of the proposed
changes.
The first exception is that these sections keep the same reporting
requirements as current 30 CFR 1206.262(c), 1206.262(d), and
1206.262(e). In addition, proposed Sec. 1206.265 (b)(1) replaces
current 30 CFR 1206.262(d)(1) regarding assessments if you improperly
net a transportation allowance against the sales value of the coal
instead of reporting the allowance as a separate entry on Form ONRR-
4430. Under this proposed regulation, ONRR eliminates assessments
because ONRR is now authorized to assess civil penalties for solid
mineral leases under FOGRMA, 30 U.S.C. 1719 and 30 U.S.C. 1720a.
Penalties are a more effective enforcement mechanism to ensure lessee
compliance with reporting requirements because ONRR can assess civil
penalties that are significantly higher than the maximum assessment the
current regulation authorizes.
1206.267 What general washing allowance requirements apply to me?
ONRR proposes to add this section to contain the requirements of
current 30 CFR 1206.258. This proposal makes the Federal coal valuation
regulations consistent with Federal oil and gas valuations regulations,
and consolidates provisions applicable to both arm's-length and non-
arm's-length washing in the current valuation regulations, rather than
repeating those provisions in the respective sections explaining those
allowances. We also rewrite the current valuation regulations in Plain
Language. We only discuss any substantive changes or additions to this
section below.
Proposed paragraph (a) contains the same information as current 30
CFR 1206.258(a) allowing you to deduct the reasonable, actual costs to
wash coal if you determine the value of your coal under proposed Sec.
1206.252. We also propose a new provision under paragraph (a)(2) to
make clear you do not need ONRR's approval before reporting a washing
allowance for costs that you incur consistent with existing practice.
Proposed paragraph (b) states what you cannot claim when you take a
washing allowance. Paragraph (b)(1) of this section states that you
cannot take an allowance for washing lease production that is not
royalty-bearing. This new provision is consistent with the current and
proposed Federal oil and gas valuation regulations and existing
practices for coal valuation. Paragraph (b)(2) contains the current
prohibition in 30 CFR 1206.258(c) that you cannot disproportionately
allocate washing costs to Federal leases. New paragraph (b)(2) contains
the allocation of washing allowance requirements under current 30 CFR
1206.260. However, new paragraph (b)(2) clarifies how to allocate
washing costs by stating that you must allocate washing costs to washed
coal attributable to each Federal lease by multiplying the input ratio,
which you determine under proposed Sec. 1206.251(e)(2)(i), by the
total allowable costs.
Proposed paragraph (c) contains the requirement of current 30 CFR
1206.259(a)(4) that you must express arm's-length coal washing
allowances as a dollar-value equivalent per ton of coal washed. We also
apply that provision to non-arm's-length washing allowances and make
the section consistent with existing practices. In addition, under this
proposed paragraph, we state that, if you do not base your or your
affiliate's payments for washing under an arm's-length contract on a
dollar-per-unit basis, you have to convert the consideration you or
your affiliate pay to a dollar-value equivalent.
We propose to add a new paragraph (d) containing the same default
provision as that for the Federal oil, gas, and coal transportation
regulations we discuss above under proposed Sec. Sec. 1206.110(f),
1206.152(g), and Sec. 1206.260(g), respectively.
Proposed new paragraph (e) would contain the same provision as
current 30 CFR 1206.258(e) that you may only claim a washing allowance
when you sell the washed coal and report and pay royalties.
1206.268 How do I determine washing allowances if I have an arm's-
length washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
ONRR proposes to add this section to contain the requirements under
current 30 CFR 1206.259(a)(1), but we rewrite this section in Plain
Language and restructure this section for consistency with the proposed
Federal gas transportation allowance regulations we discussed above in
Sec. 1206.153. This proposal includes moving the requirements of
current Sec. Sec. 1206.259(a)(2) and 1206.259(a)(3) regarding
additional consideration, misconduct, and breach of the duty to market
to the proposed Sec. 1206.267(d) we discussed above. We would move the
requirements for non-arm's-length washing allowances to Sec. 1206.269.
We propose to add a new paragraph (c) that applies if you have no
written contract for the arm's-length washing of coal. In that case,
ONRR may determine
[[Page 631]]
your washing allowance under Sec. 1206.254. You must propose to ONRR a
method to determine the allowance using the procedures in Sec.
1206.258(a). You may use that method to determine your allowance until
ONRR issues a determination. This paragraph would not apply if a lessee
performs its own washing. Rather, Sec. 1206.269 regarding non-arm's-
length washing allowances applies.
1206.269 How do I determine washing allowances if I have a non-arm's-
length washing contract?
ONRR proposes to add new Sec. 1206.269 to explain how lessees must
determine a washing allowance under a non-arm's-length transportation
contract using paragraphs (a) through (k) of this section. These
requirements are in current 30 CFR 1206.259(b). We rewrite the current
requirements in Plain Language and restructure, add, and amend this
section for consistency with the Federal gas and coal transportation
allowance regulations proposed above in Sec. Sec. 1206.154 and
1206.262. We also propose to make several substantive changes we
discuss below.
The current coal rule at 30 CFR 1206.259(b)(2)(iv)(A) permits a
return on undepreciated capital investment in the wash plant as one of
the allowable costs a lessee may include in non-arm's-length or no-
contract transportation allowances. However, under the current
regulation, the return on investment ends after the capital costs are
depreciated to (or below) a reasonable salvage value. In proposed
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, we allow lessees to continue to take
a return on the reasonable salvage value under paragraph (i) of this
section. Under proposed paragraph (i)(2), after you depreciated a wash
plant to its reasonable salvage value, you may continue to include in
the allowance calculation a cost equal to the reasonable salvage value
multiplied by the Standard & Poor's BBB rate of return allowed under
paragraph (k) of this section. We propose this change in order to make
coal valuation regulations consistent with the Federal oil valuation
amendments in proposed Sec. 1206.112(b)(3)(ii) the Federal gas
valuation amendments in proposed Sec. 1206.154(i)(1)(iii) (current
Federal gas valuation regulation at 30 CFR 1206.157(g)), and the
Federal coal valuation regulation amendments proposed in Sec. 1206.262
(b)(4) and in paragraph (i)(2) of this section.
1206.270 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
washing contract?
1206.271 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
washing contract?
1206.272 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
washing allowance?
1206.273 What reporting adjustments must I make for washing allowances?
ONRR proposes to add Sec. Sec. 1206.270 through 1206.273, which
are the same as we propose for Federal gas valuation regulations under
Sec. Sec. 1206.155 through 1206.158, with two exceptions. These two
exceptions are the same as we propose in Sec. Sec. 1206.263 through
1206.266. Please refer to those sections for an explanation of the
proposed changes.
Subpart J--Indian Coal
1206.450 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
This section would be the same as current 30 CFR 1206.450. We
rewrite the current section in Plain Language and make this section
consistent with the other product valuation regulations. As we
explained above in Sec. 1206.20, we replace the term ``Indian
allottee'' with ``individual Indian mineral owner.'' However, the
substantive requirements remain unchanged.
1206.451 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
This proposed section is the same as current 30 CFR 1206.453,
1206.454, and 1206.459, except that we rewrite the sections in Plain
Language and combine multiple current sections into this proposed
section. We are not proposing any substantive change.
1206.452 How do I calculate royalty value for coal I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
1206.453 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
1206.454 How will ONRR determine the value of my coal for royalty
purposes?
1206.455 What records must I keep to support my calculations of royalty
under this subpart?
1206.456 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.457 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring, or
other like process considered final?
1206.458 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
1206.459 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
ONRR proposes the same changes to Sec. Sec. 1206.452 through
1206.459 as those we proposed for Federal coal valuation regulations
under Sec. Sec. 1206.252 through 1206.259. Please refer to those
proposed sections for an explanation of the changes.
1206.460 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
We propose the same changes to this section as those we propose for
Federal coal under Sec. 1206.260, with two exceptions. Please refer to
that section for an explanation of the proposed changes.
For Indian coal under current 30 CFR 1206.461(a)(1), a lessee must
submit Form ONRR-4293, Coal Transportation Allowance Report, prior to
taking an allowance. This provision is not in either the current or
proposed Federal coal valuation regulations. However, ONRR proposes to
retain this requirement for coal produced from Indian leases as part of
our trust responsibility. This form submittal ensures that we continue
the oversight and controls necessary on Indian leases.
The current Indian coal regulation at 30 CFR 1206.461(a)(1) also
provide that a lessee who does not timely file Form ONRR-4293 may claim
a transportation allowance retroactively for a period of not more than
3 months prior to the first day of the month that ONRR receives the
lessee's Form ONRR-4293 ``unless ONRR approves a longer period upon a
showing of good cause by the lessee.'' We propose to remove the good
cause exception. We have found this exception is difficult to
administer and is not applicable. See Alexander Energy Corp., 153 IBLA
238 (2000), Union Oil
[[Page 632]]
Company of California, 167 IBLA 263 (2005).
In addition, current 30 CFR 1206.461(c)(1)(vi) provides that ONRR
will allow non-arm's-length contract or no written arm's-length
contract-based transportation allowances in effect at the time these
regulations become effective, to continue until such allowances
terminate. ONRR eliminated this provision for Federal coal leases in
its 1996 Federal coal amendments but left this intact for Indian leases
(61 FR 5481 (1996)). To be consistent, we propose to remove this
provision. ONRR also eliminated this provision for Federal gas leases
(70 FR 11869). Therefore, we propose to add a new paragraph (a)(3)
stating ``You may not use a transportation allowance that was in effect
before the effective date of the final rule. You must use the
provisions of this subpart to determine your transportation
allowance.''
1206.461 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract or no written arm's-length
contract?
ONRR proposes the same changes to this section as we propose for
Federal coal under Sec. 1206.261. Please refer to that section for an
explanation of the proposed changes.
1206.462 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length transportation contract?
We propose the same changes to this section as we propose for
Federal coal under Sec. 1206.262, with one exception discussed below.
Please refer to Sec. 1206.262 for an explanation of the proposed
changes.
For Federal coal under proposed Sec. 1206.262, we allow a lessee
to take a return on the reasonable salvage value of a transportation
system. We are not proposing to make this change to Indian coal because
we believe it would reduce the return to the Indian lessor while not
providing a benefit to them. It would therefore not be in the best
interest of the Indian lessor and be inconsistent with our trust
responsibility.
1206.463 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
We propose to make the same changes to this section as we propose
for Federal coal under Sec. 1206.263 with one exception. Please refer
to Sec. 1206.263 for an explanation of the proposed changes. We also
propose substantive changes to current 30 CFR 1206.461(c) regarding
reporting arm's-length transportation allowances.
Unlike the Federal coal regulation, this proposed Indian coal
regulation would retain the requirement for a lessee to submit Form
ONRR-4293 prior to taking a transportation allowance. These same
provisions are in current 30 CFR 1206.458(c). Form submittal is not a
requirement for Federal leases, but the form submittal ensures we
continue the oversight and controls necessary on Indian leases.
In addition to the changes we make to the reporting requirements
under this section, consistent with the Federal coal valuation
regulations, we propose to eliminate three provisions in the current
Indian coal regulations. First, under the current 30 CFR
1206.461(c)(1)(iii), a lessee may request special reporting procedures
in unique circumstances. ONRR eliminated this provision for Federal
coal leases in its 1996 Federal coal amendments but left it intact for
Indian leases. We do not believe any lessee has ever used this
provision. Therefore, we propose to remove this provision.
Second, the current coal regulation under 30 CFR 1206.461(c)(1)(vi)
states ONRR may establish coal transportation allowance reporting
requirements for individual leases different from those specified in
this subpart to provide more effective administration. ONRR eliminated
this provision for Federal coal leases in its 1996 Federal coal
amendments but left it intact for Indian leases. We do not believe ONRR
has ever used this provision. Therefore, we propose to remove this
provision.
Finally, current 30 CFR 1206.461(c)(1)(vi) provides that ONRR will
allow non-arm's-length contract or no arm's-length contract-based
transportation allowances that are in effect at the time these
regulations become effective to continue until such allowances
terminate. We propose to eliminate this provision and to replace it
with a new Sec. 1206.460(a)(3) we discuss above.
1206.464 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section as those we
propose for section Sec. Sec. 1206.264 and 1206.463. Please refer to
those proposed sections for an explanation of changes.
1206.465 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section as those we
propose for Sec. 1206.265. Proposed paragraph (b) of this section
prohibits the netting of transportation costs from gross proceeds
received for a particular sale. When eligible to take a transportation
allowance, a lessee must report gross proceeds without a deduction for
transportation costs, and may simultaneously claim a transportation
allowance for the cost of transporting the royalty fraction of Indian
coal sold. Current Indian coal valuation regulations do not contain
this provision. ONRR considers the change to be an enhancement to the
Indian coal regulations that is already in the current Federal coal
valuation regulations at 30 CFR 1206.262(d).
1206.466 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
We propose the same amendments to this section we propose for Sec.
1206.266. Please refer to the proposed section for an explanation of
the changes.
1206.467 What general washing allowance requirements apply to me?
We propose the same amendments to this section we propose for
Sec. Sec. 1206.267 and 1206.460. However, we propose to maintain the
current requirement that a lessee must submit Form ONRR-4292, Coal
Washing Allowance Report, prior to taking a washing allowance. Please
refer to Sec. Sec. 1206.267 and 1206.460 for an explanation of the
changes.
1206.468 How do I determine a washing allowance if I have an arm's-
length washing contract or no written arm's length contract?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section we propose
for Sec. Sec. 1206.268 and 1206.461. Please refer to Sec. Sec.
1206.268 and 1206.461 for an explanation of the changes.
1206.469 How do I determine a washing allowance if I have a non-arm's-
length washing contract?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section we propose
for Sec. Sec. 1206.269 and 1206.462, with one exception we discuss
below. Please refer to Sec. Sec. 1206.269 and 1206.462 for an
explanation of the changes.
For Federal coal under proposed Sec. 1206.269, we propose to allow
a lessee to continually take a return on the reasonable salvage value
of a wash plant. We do not propose to make this change to Indian coal
because we believe it would reduce the return to the Indian lessor
while not providing a benefit to them. It would therefore not be in the
best interest of the Indian lessor and be inconsistent with our trust
responsibility.
[[Page 633]]
1206.470 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
washing contract?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section we propose
for Sec. Sec. 1206.270 and 1206.463. Please refer to Sec. Sec.
1206.270 and 1206.463 for an explanation of the changes.
1206.471 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
washing contract?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section we propose
for Sec. Sec. 1206.271 and 1206.464. Please refer to Sec. Sec.
1206.271 and 1206.464 for an explanation of changes.
1206.472 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
washing allowance?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section we propose
for Sec. Sec. 1206.272 and 1206.465. Please refer to Sec. Sec.
1206.272 and 1206.465 for an explanation of changes.
1206.473 What reporting adjustments must I make for washing allowances?
We propose to make the same amendments to this section we propose
for Sec. Sec. 1206.273 and 1206.466. Please refer to Sec. Sec.
1206.273 and 1206.466 for an explanation of changes.
III. Procedural Matters
1. Summary Cost and Royalty Impact Data
We have summarized estimated costs and benefits the proposed rule
may have on potentially affected groups: Industry, the Federal
Government, Indian lessors, and State and local governments. All of the
proposed amendments that have cost impacts would result in increased
royalty collections. The sum of the proposed amendments that have cost
benefits are due to administrative cost savings to industry, not a
decrease in royalties due. The net impact of the proposed amendments is
an estimated annual increase in royalty collections of between $72.9
million and $87.3 million. This net impact represents a slight increase
of between 0.8 percent and 1.0 percent of the total Federal oil, gas,
and coal royalties ONRR collected in 2010. We also estimate that
industry would experience reduced annual administrative costs of $3.61
million.
Please note that, unless otherwise indicated, numbers in the
following tables are rounded to three significant digits.
A. Industry
The table below lists ONRR's low, mid-range, and high estimates of
the costs, by component, industry would incur in the first year.
Industry would incur these costs in the same amount each year
thereafter.
Summary of Royalty Impacts to Industry
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule provision Low Mid High
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gas--replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale................................... $0 $2,010,000 $4,030,000
Index.............................................. 11,300,000 11,300,000 11,300,000
NGLs--replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale................................... 0 256,000 510,000
Index.............................................. 1,200,000 1,200,000 1,200,000
Gas transportation limited to 50%...................... 4,170,000 4,170,000 4,170,000
Processing allowance limited to 66\2/3\%............... 5,440,000 5,440,000 5,440,000
POP contracts limited to 66\2/3\% processing allowance. 0 0 0
Extraordinary processing allowance..................... 18,500,000 18,500,000 18,500,000
BBB bond rate change for gas transportation............ 1,640,000 1,640,000 1,640,000
Eliminate deepwater gathering.......................... 17,400,000 20,500,000 23,600,000
Oil Transportation limited to 50%...................... 6,430,000 6,430,000 6,430,000
Oil and gas line losses................................ 4,570,000 4,570,000 4,570,000
Oil line fill.......................................... 978,000 1,710,000 2,450,000
BBB bond rate change for oil transportation............ 2,380,000 2,380,000 2,380,000
Coal--non-arm's length netback & coop sales............ (1,060,000) 0 1,060,000
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 72,900,000 80,100,000 87,300,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Totals from this table and others in this analysis may not add due to rounding.
ONRR identified two proposed rule changes that would benefit
industry by reducing their administrative costs. The benefits industry
would realize for each of these components are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule provision Benefit
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Replace benchmarks--Gas & NGLs....................... $247,000
Eliminate deepwater gathering........................ 3,360,000
------------------
Total............................................ 3,610,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The table below lists the overall economic impact to industry from
the proposed changes, based on the mid-range estimate of costs:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual (cost)/
Description benefit amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost--All Rule Provisions............................ ($80,100,000)
Benefit--Administrative Savings...................... 3,610,000
Net Cost or Benefit to Industry...................... (76,500,000)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost--Using First Arm's-Length Sale To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal Unprocessed Gas, Residue Gas, and Coalbed Methane
As discussed above, we propose replacing the current benchmarks in
30 CFR 1206.152(c) (unprocessed gas) and 1206.152(c) (processed gas)
with a methodology that uses the gross proceeds under the lessee's
affiliate's first arm's-length sale to value gas for royalty purposes.
The lessee also would have the option to elect to pay royalties based
on a value using the monthly high index price, less a standard
deduction for transportation.
To perform this economic analysis, ONRR first extracted royalty
data that we collected on residue gas, unprocessed gas, and coalbed
methane (product codes 03, 04, 39, respectively) for calendar year
2010. We chose calendar year 2010 because the Royalty-in-Kind (RIK)
volumes were minimal due to the 2010 termination of the RIK program. In
previous years, RIK volumes were substantial. Data from RIK production
is not representative of industry sales, so we excluded any
[[Page 634]]
remaining RIK volumes from our analysis. We excluded calendar year 2011
because lessees are still adjusting reports for that year and the data
reported is still going through ONRR's edits.
We then extracted gas royalty data for non-arm's-length
transactions reported with a sales type code of NARM. We also extracted
gas royalty data for sales type code POOL, because royalty reporters
may also use this code to report non-arm's-length transactions. Based
on ONRR's experience auditing transactions that use sales type code
POOL, we know that only a relatively small portion of them are non-
arm's length. Therefore, we used only 10 percent of the POOL volumes in
our economic analysis of the volumes of gas sold non-arm's length.
Based on ONRR's experience auditing production sold under non-
arm's-length contracts, we believe industry would incur a royalty
increase in the range of 0 to 5 cents per MMBtu under our proposal to
use the affiliate's first arm's-length resale to value gas production
for royalty purposes. ONRR created a range of potential royalty
increases by assuming no royalty increase for the low estimate, 2.5
cents per MMBtu for the mid-range estimate, and 5 cents per MMBtu for
the high estimate. We then multiplied the NARM volume and 10 percent of
the POOL volume reported to ONRR in 2010 by the potential royalty
increases.
The results provided below are an estimated cost to industry due to
an annual royalty increase of between zero and approximately $8
million. We reduced this estimate by one-half to $4.03 million,
assuming 50 percent of the non-arm's-length lessees would choose this
option.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Royalty increase ($)
2010 MMBtu (non- -----------------------------------------------
rounded) Mid (2.5
Low (0 cents) cents) High (5 cents)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NAL Volume.................................... 149,348,561 $0 $3,730,000 $7,470,000
10% of POOL Volume............................ 11,606,523 0 290,000 580,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Total..................................... 160,955,084 0 4,020,000 8,050,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50% of lessees choose this option 0 2,010,000 4,030,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost--Using Index Price Option To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal Unprocessed Gas, Residue Gas, and Coalbed Methane
To estimate the royalty impact of the index-based option, we
calculated a monthly weighted average price net of transportation using
NARM and 10 percent of the POOL gas royalty data from six major
geographic areas with active index prices--the Green River Basin, San
Juan Basin, Piceance and Uinta Basins, Powder River and Wind River
Basins, Permian Basin, and Offshore Gulf of Mexico (GOM). These six
areas account for approximately 95 percent of all Federal gas produced.
To calculate the estimated impact, we performed the following steps:
(1) Identified the Platts Inside FERC highest reported monthly
price for the index price applicable to each area--Northwest Pipeline
Rockies for Green River, El Paso San Juan for San Juan, Northwest
Pipeline Rockies for Piceance and Uinta, Colorado Interstate Gas for
Powder River and Wind River, El Paso Permian for Permian, and Henry Hub
for GOM.
(2) Subtracted the transportation deduction we specified in the
proposed rule from the highest index price that we identified in step
(1).
(3) Subtracted the average monthly net royalty price reported to us
for unprocessed gas from the highest index price for the same month we
calculated in step (2).
(4) Multiplied the royalty volume by the monthly difference that we
calculated in step (3) to calculate a monthly royalty difference for
each region.
(5) Totaled the difference we calculated in step (4) for the
regions.
Although the index-based methodology resulted in an annual increase
in royalties due, the current average royalty prices reported to us
were higher than the index-based option for 3 months in 2010.
ONRR estimates the cost to industry due to this change would be an
increase in royalty collections of approximately $11.3 million
annually. This estimate represents a small average increase of
approximately 3.6 percent or 14 cents per MMBtu, based on an annual
royalty volume of 160,955,084 MMBtu (for NARM and 10 percent POOL
reported sales type codes). Because this is the first time we have
offered this option, we don't know how many payors will choose it. For
purposes of this analysis, we are assuming that 50 percent of lessees
with non-arm's-length sales would choose this option and, therefore,
have reduced this estimate by one-half. We would like to know from
commenters if this 50-percent assumption is reasonable.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010 Index analysis GOM gas Other gas Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current Royalties (rounded to the nearest dollar)......... $167,291,148 $435,222,354 $602,513,502
Royalty under Index Option................................ 180,000,000 445,000,000 625,000,000
Difference................................................ 12,700,000 9,780,000 22,500,000
Per Unit Uplift ($/MMBtu)................................. 0.297 0.083 0.140
% change.................................................. 7.06 2.20 3.60
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50% of lessees choose this option $11,300,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 635]]
Cost--Using First Arm's-Length Sale To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal NGLs
Like the valuation changes we discussed above, for Federal
unprocessed, residue, and coalbed methane gas valuation changes, the
proposed rule would value processed Federal NGLs based on the first
arm's-length sale rather than the current benchmarks. The lessee would
also have the option to pay royalties using an index price value
derived from an NGL commercial price bulletin less a theoretical
processing allowance that includes transportation and fractionation of
the NGLs. We again used the 2010 NARM and POOL NGL data reported to
ONRR for this analysis.
We performed the same analysis for valuation using the first arm's-
length sale for Federal unprocessed, residue, and coalbed methane gas,
as we discussed above. We identified the non-arm's-length volumes that
would qualify for this option (for NARM and 10 percent POOL reported
sales type codes) and estimated a cents-per-gallon royalty increase.
Based on our experience, we believe that the NGLs resale margin is,
similar to gas, relatively small, ranging from zero to 3 cents per
gallon. Thus, our estimated royalty increase is zero for the low, 1.5
cents per gallon for the mid-range, and 3 cents per gallon for the high
range. The results provided below show a mid-range royalty increase of
$256,000 using these assumptions, and, again, we reduced them by one-
half under the assumption that 50 percent of the lessees would choose
this option. Again, we would ask for comments on the reasonableness of
this 50-percent assumption.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010 Gallons Royalty increase ($)
(rounded to the -----------------------------------------------------
nearest gallon) Low (0 cents) Mid (1.5 cents) High (3 cents)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NAL Volume.............................. 6,170,341 $0 $92,600 $185,000
10% of POOL Volume...................... 27,913,486 0 419,000 837,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................... 34,083,827 0 512,000 1,020,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50% of lessees choose this option 0 256,000 510,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost--Using Index Price Option To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal NGLs
Like the Federal unprocessed, residue, and coalbed methane gas
changes we discuss above, lessees also would have the option to pay
royalties on Federal NGLs using an index-based value less a theoretical
processing allowance that includes transportation and fractionation. We
used the same 2010 NARM and POOL transaction data for NGLs for this
analysis. We were unable to compare NGLs prices reported on the Form
ONRR-2014 to those in commercial price bulletins because prices lessees
report on the Form ONRR-2014 are one rolled-up price for all NGLs, but
the bulletins price each NGLs product (such as ethane and propane)
separately. Therefore, we base our analysis on the royalty changes that
would result from the theoretical processing allowance proscribed under
this new option.
We chose a conservative number as a proxy for the processing
allowance deduction that we would allow for this index option. To
determine the cost of this option for NGLs, we calculated the
difference between the average processing allowance reported on the
Form ONRR-2014 and the proxy allowance we would allow under this
option. That difference equaled an increase in value of approximately 7
cents per gallon. We then multiplied the total NAL volume of 34,083,827
gallons reported to us by the 7 cents per gallon, for an estimated
royalty increase of $2.4 million. We reduced this number by one-half
under the assumption that 50 percent of lessees would choose this
option, resulting in a total cost to industry of $1.2 million. Again,
we would ask for comments on the reasonableness of this 50-percent
assumption.
Benefit--Using Index Price Option To Value Non-Arm's-Length Federal
Unprocessed Gas, Residue Gas, Coalbed Methane, and NGLs
ONRR expects that industry would benefit by realizing
administrative savings if they choose to use the index-based option to
value non-arm's-length sales of Federal unprocessed gas, residue gas,
coalbed methane, and NGLs. Lessees would know the price to use to value
their production, saving the time it currently takes to calculate the
correct price based on the current benchmarks. They would also save
time using the ONRR-specified transportation rate for gas and the ONRR-
specified processing allowance for NGLs, rather than having to
calculate those values themselves.
Of the lessees that we estimate would use this option, we estimate
the index-based option would shorten the time burden per line reported
by 50 percent to 1.5 minutes for lines industry electronically submits
and 3.5 minutes for lines they manually submit. We used tables from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (www.bls.gov/oes132011.htm) to estimate the
hourly cost for industry accountants in a metropolitan area. We added a
multiplier of 1.4 for industry benefits. The industry labor cost factor
for accountants would be approximately $50.53 per hour = $36.09 [mean
hourly wage] x 1.4 [benefits cost factor]. Using a labor cost factor of
$50.53 per hour, we estimate the annual administrative benefit to
industry would be approximately $247,000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated lines
Time burden per reported using Annual burden
line reported index option hours
(50%)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Electronic Reporting (99%)................................ 1.5 min 190,872 4,772
Manual Reporting (1%)..................................... 3.5 min 1,928 112
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Industry Labor Cost/hour.................................. ................ ................ $50.53
-----------------
[[Page 636]]
Total Benefit to Industry............................. ................ ................ $247,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost--Elimination of Transportation Allowances in Excess of 50 Percent
of the Value of Federal Gas
The current Federal gas valuation regulations limit lessees'
transportation allowances to 50 percent of the value of the gas unless
they request and receive approval to exceed that limit. The proposed
rule would eliminate the lessees' ability to exceed that limit. To
estimate the costs associated with this change, we first identified all
calendar year 2010 reported gas transportation allowances rates that
exceeded the 50-percent limit. We then adjusted those allowances down
to the 50-percent limit and totaled that value to estimate the economic
impact of this provision. The result was an annual estimated cost to
industry of $4.17 million in additional royalties.
Cost--Elimination of Transportation Allowances in Excess of 50 Percent
of the Value of Federal Oil
The current Federal oil valuation regulations limit lessees'
transportation allowances to 50 percent of the value of the oil unless
they request and receive approval to exceed that limit. The proposed
rule would eliminate the lessees' ability to exceed that limit. To
estimate the costs associated with this change, we first identified all
calendar year 2010 reported oil transportation allowance rates that
exceeded the 50-percent limit. We then adjusted those allowances down
to the 50-percent limit and totaled that value to estimate the economic
impact of this provision. The result was an annual estimated cost to
industry of $6.43 million in additional royalties.
Cost--Elimination of Processing Allowances in Excess of 66\2/3\ Percent
of the Value of the NGLs for Federal Gas
The current Federal gas valuation regulations limit lessees'
processing allowances to 66\2/3\ percent of the value of the NGLs
unless they request and receive approval to exceed that limit. The
proposed rule would eliminate the lessees' ability to exceed that
limit. To estimate the cost to industry associated with this change, we
first identified all calendar year 2010 reported processing allowances
greater than 66\2/3\ percent. We then adjusted those allowances down to
the 66\2/3\-percent limit and totaled that value to estimate the
economic impact of this provision. The result was an annual estimated
cost to industry of $5.44 million in additional royalties.
Cost--POP Contracts now Subject to the 66\2/3\ Percent Processing
Allowance Limit for Federal Gas
Lessees with POP contracts currently pay royalties based on their
gross proceeds as long as they pay a minimum value equal to 100 percent
of the residue gas. Under the proposed rule, we also would not allow
lessees with POP contracts to deduct more than the 66\2/3\ percent of
the value of the NGLs. For example, a lessee with a 70-percent POP
contract receives 70 percent of the value of the residue gas and 70
percent of the value of the NGLs. The 30 percent of each product the
lessee gives up to the processing plant in the past could not, when
combined, exceed an equivalent value of 100 percent of the NGLs' value.
Under the proposed rule, the combined value of each product the lessee
gives up to the processing plant cannot exceed two-thirds of the NGLs'
value.
Lessees report POP contracts to ONRR using sales type code APOP for
arm's-length POP contracts and NPOP for non-arm's-length POP contracts.
Because lessees report APOP sales as unprocessed gas, there are no
reported processing allowances for us to analyze and we cannot
determine the breakout between residue gas and NGLs. Lessees do report
residue gas and NGLs separately for NPOPs. However, NPOP volumes
constitute only 0.02 percent of all the natural gas royalty volumes
reported to ONRR. We deemed the NPOP volume to be too low to adequately
assess the impact of this provision on both APOP and NPOP contracts.
Therefore, we decided to examine all reported calendar year 2010
onshore residue gas and NGLs royalty data and assumed it was processed
and that lessees paid royalties as if they sold the residue gas and
NGLs under a POP contract. We restricted our analysis to residue gas
and NGLs volumes produced onshore because we are not aware of any
offshore POP contracts. We first totaled the residue gas and NGLs'
royalty value for calendar year 2010 for all onshore royalties. We then
assumed that these royalties were subject to a 70-percent POP contract.
Based on our experience, a 70/30 split is typical for POP contracts. We
calculated 30 percent of both the value of residue gas and NGLs to
approximate a theoretical 30-percent processing deduction. We then
compared the 30-percent total of residue gas and NGLs values to 66\2/3\
percent of the NGLs value (the maximum allowance under the proposed
rule). The table below summarizes these calculations which we rounded
to the nearest dollar:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010 Royalty
value 70% 30%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residue Gas............................................... $602,194,031 $421,535,822 $180,658,209
NGLs...................................................... 506,818,440 354,772,908 152,045,532
-----------------------------------------------------
Total................................................. 1,109,012,471 776,308,730 332,703,741
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
66.67% Limit.............................................. 337,878,960 (506,818,440 x \2/3\)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our analysis shows that the theoretical processing deduction for 30
percent of the value of residue gas and NGLs ($333 million) under our
assumed onshore POP contract allowance would not exceed the 66\2/3\ cap
($338 million) under the proposed rule and, thus, we estimate that this
change would be revenue neutral.
[[Page 637]]
Cost--Termination of Policy Allowing Transportation Allowances for
Deepwater Gathering Systems for Federal Oil and Gas
The Deep Water Policy we discuss above allows companies to deduct
certain expenses for subsea gathering from their royalty payments, even
though those costs do not meet ONRR's definition of transportation. The
proposed rule would rescind and supersede the Deep Water Policy, and
lessees would have to pay royalties under our proposed valuation
regulations applicable to Federal oil and gas transportation allowances
prospectively. To analyze the cost impact to industry of rescinding
this policy, we used data from BSEE's Arc GIS TIMS (Technical
Information Management System) database to estimate that 113 subsea
pipeline segments serving 108 leases currently qualify for an allowance
under the policy. We assumed all segments were the same--in other
words, we did not take into account the size, length, or type of
pipeline. We also considered only pipeline segments that were in active
status and leases in producing status for our analysis. To determine a
range (shown in the tables below as low, mid, and high estimates) for
the cost to industry, ONRR estimated a 15-percent error rate in our
identification of the 113 eligible pipeline segments, resulting in a
range of 96 to 130 eligible pipeline segments.
Historical ONRR audit data is available for 13 subsea gathering
segments serving 15 leases covering time periods from 1999 through
2010. We used this data to determine an average initial capital
investment in pipeline segments. We used the initial capital investment
amount to calculate depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital
investment (ROI) for the eligible pipeline segments. We calculated
depreciation using a straight-line depreciation schedule based on a 20-
year useful life of the pipeline. We calculated ROI using 1.0 times the
average BBB Bond rate for January 2012, which was the most recent full
month of data when we performed this analysis. We based the
calculations for depreciation and ROI on the first year a pipeline was
in service.
From the same audit data, we calculated an average annual operating
and maintenance (O&M) cost. We increased the O&M cost by 12 percent to
account for overhead expenses. Based on experience and audit data, we
assumed 12 percent is a reasonable increase for overhead. We then
decreased the total annual O&M cost per pipeline segment by 9 percent
because an average of 9 percent of offshore wellhead oil and gas
production is water, which is not royalty bearing. Finally, we used an
average royalty rate of 14 percent, which is the volume weighted
average royalty rate for all non-Section 6 leases in the GOM. Based on
these calculations, the average annual allowance per pipeline segment
is approximately $226,000. This represents the estimated amount per
pipeline segment ONRR will no longer allow a lessee to take as a
transportation allowance based on our rescission of the Deep Water
Policy in this proposed rulemaking.
The total cost to industry would be the $226,000 annual allowance
per pipeline segment that we would disallow under this proposed
rulemaking times the number of eligible segments. To calculate a range
for the total cost, we multiplied the average annual allowance by the
low (96), mid (113), and high (130) number of eligible segments. The
low, mid, and high annual allowance estimates we would disallow are
$21.8 million, $25.6 million, and $29.5 million, respectively.
Of currently eligible leases, 42 out of 108, or about 40 percent,
qualify for deep water royalty relief. However, due to varying lease
terms, royalty relief programs, price thresholds, volume thresholds,
and other factors, ONRR estimated that only half of the 42 leases
eligible for royalty relief (20 percent) actually received royalty
relief. Therefore, we decreased the low, mid, and high estimated annual
cost to industry by 20 percent. The table below shows the estimated
royalty impact of this section of the proposed rule based on the
allowances we would no longer allow under this proposed rule.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low Mid High
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Royalty Impact............................... $17,400,000 $20,500,000 $23,600,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefit--Termination of Policy Allowing Transportation Allowances for
Deepwater Gathering Systems for Offshore Federal Oil and Gas
ONRR estimates the elimination of transportation allowances for
deepwater gathering systems would provide industry with an
administrative benefit because they would no longer have to perform
this calculation. We believe the cost to perform this calculation is
significant because industry has often hired outside consultants to
calculate their subsea transportation allowances. Using this
information, we estimated each company with leases eligible for
transportation allowances for deepwater gathering systems would
allocate one full-time FTE annually to perform this calculation, if
they use consultants or perform the calculation in-house. We used the
Bureau of Labor Statistics to estimate the hourly cost for industry
accountants in a metropolitan area [$36.09 mean hourly wage] with a
multiplier of 1.4 for industry benefits to equal approximately $50.53
per hour [$36.09 x 1.4]. Using this labor cost per hour, we estimate
the annual administrative benefit to industry would be approximately
$3,360,000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual burden Companies Estimated
hours per Industry labor reporting benefit to
company cost/hour eligible leases industry
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deepwater Gathering......................... 2,080 $50.53 32 $3,360,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost--Elimination of Extraordinary Cost Gas Processing Allowances for
Federal Gas
As we discuss above, we are proposing to eliminate the provision in
our current regulations that allow a lessee to request an extraordinary
processing cost allowance and to terminate any extraordinary cost
processing allowances we previously granted. We have granted two such
approvals in the past, so we know the lease universe that is claiming
this allowance and were able to retrieve the processing allowance data
lessees
[[Page 638]]
deducted from the value of residue gas produced from the leases. We
then calculated the annual total processing allowance lessees have
claimed for 2007 through 2010 for the leases at issue. We then averaged
the yearly totals for those 4 years to estimate an annual cost to
industry of $18.5 million in increased royalties.
Cost--Decrease Rate of Return Used to Calculate Non-Arm's Length
Transportation Allowances from 1.3 to 1 Times the Standard and Poor's
BBB Bond for Federal Oil and Gas
For Federal oil transportation, ONRR does not maintain or request
data identifying if transportation allowances are arm's length or non-
arm's length. However, based on our experience, we believe that a large
portion of GOM oil is transported through lessee-owned pipelines. In
addition, many onshore transportation allowances include costs of
trucking and rail and, most likely, this change would not impact those.
Therefore, to calculate the costs associated with this change, we
assumed that 50 percent of the GOM transportation allowances are non-
arm's length and 10 percent of transportation allowances everywhere
else (onshore and offshore other than the GOM) are non-arm's length. We
also assumed that, over the life of the pipeline, allowance rates are
made up of one-third rate of return on undepreciated capital
investment, one-third depreciation expenses, and one-third operation,
maintenance, and overhead expenses. These are the same assumptions we
made when analyzing changes to both the Federal oil and Federal gas
valuation rules in 2004.
In 2010, the total oil transportation allowances Federal lessees
deducted were approximately $60 million from the GOM and $11 million
from everywhere else. Based on these totals and our assumptions about
the allowance components, the portion of the non-arm's-length
allowances attributable to the rate of return would be approximately
$10,000,000 for the GOM ($60,000,000 x \1/3\ x 50%) and $367,000
($11,000,000 x \1/3\ x 10%) for the rest of the country. Therefore, we
estimate that decreasing the basis for the rate of return by 23 percent
could result in decreased yearly oil transportation allowance
deductions of approximately $2,380,000 ($10,367,000 x 0.23). Thus, we
estimate the net cost to industry as a result of this change would be
an approximately $2,380,000 increase in royalties due.
With respect to Federal gas, like oil, ONRR does not maintain or
request information on whether gas transportation allowances are arm's
length or non-arm's length. However, unlike oil, we believe that it is
not common for GOM gas to be transported through lessee-owned
pipelines. Therefore, we assumed that only 10 percent of all gas
transportation allowances are non-arm's length and made no distinction
between the GOM and everywhere else. All other assumptions for natural
gas are the same as those we made for oil above.
In 2010, the total gas transportation allowances Federal lessees
deducted were approximately $214 million. Based on that total and our
assumptions regarding the makeup of the allowance components, the
portion of the non-arm's-length allowances attributable to the rate of
return would be approximately $7.13 million ($214,000,000 x \1/3\ x
10%). Therefore, we estimate that decreasing the basis for the rate of
return by 23 percent could result in decreased yearly gas
transportation allowance deductions of approximately $1.64 million
($7.13 million x 0.23). That is, the net increased cost to industry,
based on this change, would be approximately $1,640,000 in additional
royalties.
Cost--Allow a Rate of Return on Reasonable Salvage Value for Federal
Oil, Gas, and Coal
For Federal oil and gas, after a transportation system or a
processing plant has been depreciated to its reasonable salvage value,
we propose to allow a lessee a return on that reasonable salvage value
of the transportation system or processing plant as long as the lessee
uses that system or plant for its Federal oil or gas production. We
estimate the economic impact on industry would be small because we
would continue the requirements of the current regulations that a
lessee must base depreciation of a system or plant upon the useful life
of the equipment or the expected life of the reserves served by the
system or plant. Thus, when properly established, the depreciation
schedule should reflect the useful life of the system or plant, and
ONRR would not expect a lessee to continue to use a system or plant for
periods significantly longer than the period reflected by the
depreciation schedule the lessee established for royalty purposes. This
assumption is true especially if the lessee did not make additional
capital expenditures that extended the life of the system or plant. In
that case, the lessee should have extended the depreciation schedule to
reflect the extended life of the system or plant, and, possibly, the
salvage value, itself. In other words, we believe the vast majority of
systems would not be depreciated to salvage value while royalty is
being paid because the system still has a useful life while production
occurs. Thus, we do not believe there would be any costs to industry
associated with this change.
With respect to Federal coal, we believe that the royalty impact
for coal would be equally small for the same reasons we mention above.
Cost--Disallow Line Loss as a Component of Arm's-Length and Non-Arm's-
Length Oil and Gas Transportation
ONRR also proposes to eliminate the current regulatory provision
allowing a lessee to deduct costs of pipeline losses, both actual and
theoretical, when calculating non-arm's-length transportation
allowances. For this analysis, we assumed that pipeline losses are 0.2
percent of the volume transported through the pipeline, based on a
survey of pipeline tariff. This 0.2 percent of the volume transported
also equates to 0.2 percent of the value of the Federal royalty volume
of oil and gas production transported.
For Federal oil produced in calendar year 2010, the total value of
the Federal royalty volume subject to transportation allowances was
$3,796,827,823 in the GOM and $1,204,177,633 everywhere else. Using our
previous assumption that 50 percent of GOM and 10 percent of everywhere
else's transportation allowances are non-arm's length, we estimated
that the value of the line loss would be $4.04 million, as we detailed
in the table below. Therefore, the annual cost to industry would be
approximately $4.04 million in additional royalties.
[[Page 639]]
Oil Line Loss Royalty Impact
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Line loss (%) Royalty increase
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50% of GOM royalty value............................ $1,898,413,912 0.2 $3,800,000
10% of everywhere else royalty value................ 120,417,763 0.2 241,000
-----------------------------------------------------------
Total........................................... .................. .................. 4,040,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For Federal gas produced in calendar year 2010, the royalty value
of the Federal gas royalty volume subject to transportation allowances
was $2,656,843,158. Using our previous assumption that 10 percent of
Federal gas transportation allowances are non-arm's length, we
estimated the value of the line loss would be $530,000. Therefore, the
annual cost to industry would be approximately $530,000 in increased
royalties.
Gas Line Loss Royalty Impact
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Line loss (%) Royalty increase
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10% of royalty value................................ $265,684,316 0.2 $531,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The total estimated royalty increase for both oil and gas due to
this change would be $4.57 million [$4,040,000 (oil) plus $531,000
(gas) = $4,570,000].
Cost--Disallow Line Fill as a Component of Non-Arm's-Length Oil
Transportation Allowances
We estimated that oil line fill costs ranged from a low $0.02 to a
high of $0.05 per barrel, with a mid-range of $0.035. These are the
same estimates we made in our 2004 oil valuation rule when we made a
change to allow this component as a cost of oil transportation, and we
believe these cost estimates are still valid. We restricted our
analysis to only oil production from the GOM because we believe that
including line fill as a component of transportation allowances is
uncommon everywhere else. We then applied these estimates to the total
2010 GOM Federal oil royalty volume of 48,910,000 barrels to estimate
the range of reduced transportation costs included in allowance
calculations, as we detail in the table below.
Line Fill Royalty Impact Estimate
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low Mid High
-----------------------------------------------------------
2010 Federal GOM Royalty Oil Volume (barrels) ($0.035 per
($0.02 per barrel) barrel) ($0.05 per barrel)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
48,910,000.......................................... $978,000 $1,710,000 $2,450,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In other words, based on this analysis, the proposed rule would not
allow lessees to include the amounts in the table above as a component
of their transportation allowance.
Cost--Depreciating Oil Pipeline Assets Only Once
ONRR proposes to allow depreciation of oil pipeline assets only one
time. Under our current valuation regulations for Federal oil, if an
oil pipeline is sold, ONRR allows the purchasing company to include the
purchase price to establish a new depreciation schedule and, in
essence, depreciate the same piece of pipe twice or more if it is sold
again. Under this proposed rulemaking, we would allow depreciation only
once. In theory, this change could result in additional royalties.
However, based on our experience monitoring the oil markets, we believe
that the sale of oil pipeline assets is rare, and we are not aware of
any such sales in the last 5 calendar years. We are also not aware of
any planned future sales of oil pipelines that this proposed rule
change would impact. Therefore, although ONRR believes that there will
be a cost to industry under this proposal, we cannot quantify the cost
at this time.
Cost--Using First Arm's-Length Sale To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal Coal and Sales of Federal Coal Between Coal Cooperatives and
Coal Cooperative Members and Between Coal Cooperative Members
We discuss this cost in the next section.
Cost--Using Sales of Electricity To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal Coal and Sales of Federal Coal Between Coal Cooperatives and
Coal Cooperative Members and Between Coal Cooperative Members
In ONRR's experience, non-arm's-length sales of Federal coal that
is then resold at arm's length are rare. Under the current valuation
regulations, such sales result in royalty values equivalent to values
that result under the proposed regulation at Sec. 1206.252(a) based on
arm's-length resale prices. Thus, ONRR estimates that there will be no
royalty effect for these types of sales. In other words, there is no
cost to lessees who produce Federal coal due to this valuation change
in the proposed rule.
The remaining non-arm's-length dispositions of Federal coal
(including lessees, their affiliates, coal cooperatives, and members of
coal cooperatives) are when the lessee, its affiliate, coal
cooperatives, or members of coal cooperatives consume(s) the Federal
coal produced to generate electricity. These dispositions typically
constitute from about one to two percent of royalties paid on Federal
coal produced.
Under the proposed rule, a lessee, its affiliates, a coal
cooperative, and a member of a coal cooperative generally would base
the royalty value of such sales on the sales value of the electricity,
less costs to generate and, in some cases, transmit the electricity to
the buyers, and less applicable coal washing and transportation costs.
ONRR has limited experience determining lease product royalty values
using the
[[Page 640]]
methodology under proposed Sec. 1206.252(b)(1). Therefore, to perform
an economic analysis, ONRR first determined the average royalties paid
to ONRR in calendar years 2009 through 2011 for these Federal coal
dispositions. Based on our experience with other dispositions of
Federal coal, ONRR estimated that, at most, royalty values under the
proposed rule would increase or decrease by 10 percent, compared to
royalty values we determined under current regulations. Using these
assumptions, ONRR estimated the annual average royalty impact and,
thus, the cost or benefit to industry from the proposed rule.
Our methodology is the same for estimating the royalty impact of
using sales of electricity to value non-arm's-length sales of Federal
coal, sales of Federal coal between coal cooperatives and coal
cooperative members, and sales between coal cooperative members.
Therefore, the estimated royalty impact would be a combined figure
covering all such valuation of Federal coal under the proposed rule.
Accordingly, ONRR estimates the combined average annual royalty impacts
for these coal dispositions would range from a royalty decrease of
$1.06 million (benefit) to a royalty increase of $1.06 million (cost).
ONRR requests comments on its estimates of the cost regarding
valuation of these dispositions of Federal coal under the proposed
rule. In particular, we seek information on the costs of electric power
generation and transmission and whether the proposed rule would result
in royalty increases or decreases.
Cost--Using Default Provision To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Federal Coal in Lieu of Sales of Electricity
If ONRR were unable to establish royalty values of Federal coal
using the sales value of electricity generated from coal produced,
royalty value would be based on a method the lessee proposes under
Sec. 1206.252(b)(2)(i), which ONRR approves, or on a method that ONRR
determines under Sec. 1206.254. In either case, ONRR would accept or
would assign a royalty value that would approximate the market value of
the coal. Whether valuing under Sec. Sec. 1206.252(b)(2)(i) or
1206.254, the lessee and ONRR would employ a valuation method that uses
or approximates market value. Current coal valuation regulations also
attempt to provide royalty values that would approximate the market
value of this coal. Thus, given the low percentage of non-arm's-length
dispositions of Federal coal and the use of market-based methods to
determine royalty value under the current regulations and the proposed
rule, if valuation does not follow Sec. 1206.252(a) or Sec.
1206.252(b)(1), ONRR estimates that the royalty effect of the proposed
rule on lessees of Federal coal would be nominal.
Cost--Using First Arm's-Length Sale To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Indian Coal
Currently, lessees of Indian coal sell their entire production at
arm's-length so this proposed change would have no cost impact on
lessees of Indian coal.
Cost--Using Sales of Electricity To Value Non-Arm's-Length Sales of
Indian Coal
Currently, lessees of Indian coal sell their entire production at
arm's-length so this proposed change would have no cost impact on
lessees of Indian coal.
Cost--Using First Arm's-Length Sale To Value Sales of Indian Coal
Between Coal Cooperative Members
Currently, no coal cooperatives are lessees of Indian coal, so we
do not expect there to be any royalty impact as a result of the
proposed rule change.
Cost--DOI Use of Default Provision To Value Federal Oil, Gas, or Coal
and Indian Coal
As we discussed above, we propose to add a ``default provision''
that addresses valuation when the Secretary cannot determine the value
of production because of a variety of factors, or the Secretary
determined the value is wrong for a multitude of reasons (for example,
misconduct). In those cases, the Secretary would exercise his/her
authority, and considerable discretion, to establish the reasonable
value of production using a variety of discretionary factors and any
other information the Secretary believes is appropriate. This default
provision covers all products (Federal oil, gas and coal, and Indian
coal) and all pertinent valuation factors (sales, transportation,
processing, and washing).
Based on our experience, ONRR believes it would rarely use the
default option. We also believe that assigning a royalty impact figure
to any of the default provisions is speculative because (1) each
instance would be case-specific, (2) we cannot anticipate when we would
use the option, and (3) we cannot anticipate the value we would require
companies to pay. Additionally, we believe the royalty impact would be
relatively small because the default provisions would always establish
a reasonable value of production using market-based transaction data,
which has always been the basis for our royalty valuation rules in the
first instance.
B. State and Local Governments
This proposed rule would not impose any additional burden on local
governments. ONRR estimates that the States this rule impacts would
receive an overall increase in royalties as follows:
States receiving revenues for offshore Outer Continental Shelf
Lands Act Section 8(g) leases would share in a portion of the increased
royalties resulting from this proposed rule, as would States receiving
revenues from onshore Federal lands. Based on the ratio of Federal
revenues disbursed to States for section 8(g) leases and onshore States
we detail in the table below, ONRR assumed the same proportion of
revenue increases for each proposal that would impact those State
revenues for most of the provisions.
Royalty Distributions by Lease Type
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Onshore Offshore 8(g)
(%) (%) (%)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fed......................................... 50 100 73
State....................................... 50 0 0
State (8g).................................. 0 0 27
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some provisions, such as deepwater gathering allowances, affect
only Federal revenues, while others, such as the extraordinary
processing allowance, affect only onshore States and Federal revenues.
The table summarizing the State and local government royalty increases
we provide in section E details these differences.
The State distribution for offshore royalties would increase at
some point in time because of the provisions of the Gulf of Mexico
Energy Security Act of 2006 (GOMESA) (Pub. Law No. 109-432, 120 Stat.
2922). Section 105 of GOMESA provides Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) oil
and gas revenue sharing provisions for the four Gulf producing States
(Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas) and their eligible coastal
political subdivisions. Through fiscal year 2016, the only shareable
qualified revenues originate from leases issued within two small
geographic areas. Beginning in fiscal year 2017, qualified revenues
originating from leases issued since the passing of GOMESA located
within the balance of the GOM acreage will also become shareable. The
majority of these leases are not yet producing. The time necessary to
start production operations and to produce royalty-bearing quantities
varies from
[[Page 641]]
lease to lease, and these factors directly influence how the
distribution of offshore royalties will change over time. None of the
leases in these frontier areas have begun producing, and we believe it
is speculative to anticipate when they will begin producing royalty-
bearing quantities and impact the distribution of revenues to States.
C. Indian Lessors
ONRR estimates that the proposed changes to the coal regulations
that apply to Indian lessors would have no impact on their royalties.
D. Federal Government
The impact to the Federal Government, like the States, would be a
net overall increase in royalties as a result of these proposed
changes. In fact, the royalty increase anticipated by the Federal
Government would be the difference between the total royalty increase
from industry and the royalty increase affecting the States. The net
yearly impact on the Federal Government would be approximately $61.8
million we detail in section E.
E. Summary of Royalty Impacts and Costs to Industry, State and Local
Governments, Indian Lessors, and the Federal Government.
In the table below, the negative values in the Industry column
represent their estimated royalty increases, while the positive values
in the other columns represent the increase in royalty receipts by each
affected group. For purposes of this summary table, we assumed that the
average for royalty increases is the midpoint of our range.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule provision Industry Federal State State 8(g)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gas--replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale............................ ($2,010,000) $1,390,000 $605,000 $13,500
Index....................................... (11,300,000) 7,820,000 3,400,000 75,700
NGLs--replace benchmarks
Affiliate Resale............................ (256,000) 191,000 63,000 1,850
Index....................................... (1,200,000) 896,000 295,000 8,650
Gas transportation limited to 50%............... (4,170,000) 2,890,000 1,260,000 27,900
Processing allowance limited to 66\2/3\ %....... (5,440,000) 4,060,000 1,340,000 39,200
POP contracts limited to 66\2/3\ %.............. 0 0 0 0
Extraordinary processing allowance.............. (18,500,000) 9,250,000 9,250,000 0
BBB bond rate change for gas transportation..... (1,640,000) 1,140,000 494,000 11,000
Eliminate deepwater gathering................... (20,500,000) 20,500,000 0 0
Oil Transportation limited to 50%............... (6,430,000) 5,810,000 594,000 27,100
Oil and gas line losses......................... (4,570,000) 4,130,000 422,000 19,200
Oil line fill................................... (1,710,000) 1,540,000 158,000 7,190
BBB bond rate change for oil transportation..... (2,380,000) 2,150,000 220,000 10,000
Coal--non-arm's length netback & coop sales..... 0 0 0 0
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... (80,100,000) 61,800,000 18,100,000 241,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866)
This document is a significant rule, and the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) has reviewed this proposed rule under Executive Order
12866. We made the assessments that E.O. 12866 requires, and we provide
the results below.
a. This proposed rule would not have an effect of $100 million or
more on the economy. It would not adversely affect in a material way
the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or state, local, or tribal governments or
communities. The Summary of Royalty Impacts table, in item 1 above,
demonstrates that the economic impact on industry, State and local
governments, and the Federal Government would be well below the $100
million threshold the Federal Government uses to define a rule as
having a significant impact on the economy.
b. This proposed rule would not create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action another agency has taken or planned.
ONRR is the only agency that promulgates rules for royalty valuation on
Federal oil and gas leases and Federal and Indian coal leases.
c. This proposed rule would not alter the budgetary effects of
entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights or
obligations of their recipients. The scope of this proposed rule does
not have a material impact in any of these areas.
d. This proposed rule would raise novel legal or policy issues but
would simplify the valuation regulations, thus reducing the possibility
of impacts as a result of any novel legal and policy issues.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Interior certifies that this proposed rule
would not have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of
small entities under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.); see item 1 above for analysis.
4. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
This proposed rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. This proposed rule:
a. Would not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million
or more. We estimate the maximum effect would be $87,300,000. See item
1 above.
b. Would not cause a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government
agencies, or geographic regions. See item 1 above.
c. Would not have significant adverse effects on competition,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of
U.S.-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises. This
proposed rule would be to the benefit of U.S.-based enterprises and
would be a result of suggestions made through the Royalty Policy
Committee made up, in part, of industry representatives.
5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This proposed rule would not impose an unfunded mandate on state,
local, or tribal governments, or the private sector of more than $100
million per year. This proposed rule would not have a significant or
unique effect on State, local, or tribal governments, or the private
sector. Therefore, we are not providing a statement containing the
information that the Unfunded
[[Page 642]]
Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) requires. See item 1 above.
6. Takings Implication Assessment (E.O. 12630)
Under the criteria in E.O. 12630, this proposed rule would not have
significant takings implications. This proposed rule would apply to
Federal oil, Federal gas, Federal coal, and Indian coal leases only.
This proposed rule would not be a governmental action capable of
interference with constitutionally protected property rights. This
proposed rule does not require a Takings Implication Assessment.
7. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13132, this proposed rule would not have
sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment. The management of Federal oil leases, Federal
gas leases, and Federal and Indian coal leases is the responsibility of
the Secretary of the Interior. This proposed rule would not impose
administrative costs on States or local governments. Therefore, this
proposed rule would not require a Federalism Assessment.
8. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This proposed rule would comply with the requirements of E.O.
12988, for the reasons we outline in the following paragraphs.
The proposed rule would meet the criteria of section 3(a), which
requires that we write and review all regulations to eliminate errors
and ambiguity in order to minimize litigation.
The proposed rule would meet the criteria of section 3(b)(2), which
requires that we write all regulations in clear language with clear
legal standards.
9. Consultation with Indian Tribes (E.O. 13175)
Under the criteria in E.O. 13175, we evaluated this proposed rule
and determined it would have potential effects on federally recognized
Indian tribes. Specifically, this rule would change the valuation
methodology for coal produced from Indian leases as discussed above.
Accordingly:
(a) We consulted with the affected tribes on a government-to-
government basis.
(b) We will fully consider tribal views in the final rule.
10. Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule also refers to, but does not change, the
information collection requirements that OMB already approved under OMB
Control Numbers 1012-0004, 1012-0005, and 1012-0010. Since the proposed
rule is reorganizing our current regulations, please refer to the
Derivations Table in Section III for specifics. The corresponding
information collection burden tables will be updated during their
normal renewal cycle. See 5 CFR 1320.4(a)(2).
11. National Environmental Policy Act
This proposed rule would not constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the human environment. A
detailed statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) is not required because this rule is categorically excluded
under: ``(i) Policies, directives, regulations, and guidelines: that
are of an administrative, financial, legal, technical, or procedural
nature.'' See 43 CFR 46.210(i) and the DOI Departmental Manual, part
516, section 15.4.D. We also have determined that this rule is not
involved in any of the extraordinary circumstances listed in 43 CFR
46.215 that would require further analysis under NEPA. The procedural
changes resulting from these amendments would have no consequences with
respect to the physical environment. This proposed rule would not alter
in any material way natural resource exploration, production, or
transportation.
12. Data Quality Act
In developing this proposed rule, we did not conduct or use a
study, experiment, or survey requiring peer review under the Data
Quality Act (Pub. L. 106-554), also known as the Information Quality
Act. The Department of the Interior has issued guidance regarding the
quality of information that it relies on for regulatory decisions. This
guidance is available on DOI's Web site at www.doi.gov/ocio/iq.html.
13. Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)
This proposed rule would not be a significant energy action under
the definition in E.O. 13211, and, therefore, would not require a
Statement of Energy Effects.
14. Clarity of this Regulation
Executive Orders 12866 and 12988 and the Presidential Memorandum of
June 1, 1998, require us to write all rules in Plain Language. This
means that each rule that we publish must: (a) Have logical
organization; (b) use the active voice to address readers directly; (c)
use clear language rather than jargon; (d) use short sections and
sentences; and (e) use lists and tables wherever possible.
If you feel that we have not met these requirements, send your
comments to armand.southall@onrr.gov. To better help us revise the
rule, make your comments as specific as possible. For example, you
should tell us the numbers of the sections or paragraphs that you think
we wrote unclearly, which sections or sentences are too long, the
sections where you feel lists or tables would be useful, etc.
15. Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us, in your comment, to withhold your personal identifying
information from public view, we cannot guarantee that we will be able
to do so.
List of Subjects in 30 CFR Parts 1202 and 1206
Coal, Continental shelf, Government contracts, Indian lands,
Mineral royalties, Natural gas, Petroleum, Public lands--mineral
resources, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: December 18, 2014.
Kris Sarri,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and Budget.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Office of Natural
Resources Revenue proposes to amend 30 CFR parts 1202 and 1206 as set
forth below:
PART 1202--ROYALTIES
0
1. The authority citation for part 1202 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 et seq., 25 U.S.C. 396 et seq., 396a et
seq., 2101 et seq.; 30 U.S.C. 181 et seq., 351 et seq., 1001 et
seq.,1701 et seq.; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C. 1301 et seq.,1331 et
seq., and 1801 et seq.
Subpart B--Oil, Gas, and OCS Sulfur, General
0
2. In Sec. 1202.51,revise paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 1202.51 Scope and definitions.
* * * * *
(b) The d[eacute]finitions in Sec. 1206.20 of this chapter are
applicable to subparts B, C, D, and J of this part.
[[Page 643]]
Subpart F--Coal
0
3. Add Sec. 1202.251 to subpart F to read as follows:
Sec. 1202.251 What coal is subject to royalties?
(a) All coal (except coal unavoidably lost as determined by BLM
under 43 CFR part 3400) from a Federal or Indian lease is subject to
royalty. This includes coal used, sold, or otherwise disposed of by you
on or off the lease.
(b) If you receive compensation for unavoidably lost coal through
insurance coverage or other arrangements, you must pay royalties at the
rate specified in the lease on the amount of compensation you receive
for the coal. No royalty is due on insurance compensation you received
for other losses.
(c) If you rework waste piles or slurry ponds to recover coal, you
must pay royalty at the rate specified in the lease at the time you
use, sell, or otherwise finally dispose of the recovered coal.
(1) The applicable royalty rate depends on the production method
you used to initially mine the coal contained in the waste pile or
slurry pond (i.e., underground mining method or surface mining method).
(2) You must allocate coal in waste pits or slurry ponds you
initially mined from Federal or Indian leases to those Federal or
Indian leases regardless of whether it is stored on Federal or Indian
lands.
(3)You must maintain accurate records demonstrating how to allocate
the coal in the waste pit or slurry pond to each individual Federal or
Indian coal lease.
PART 1206--PRODUCT VALUATION
0
4. The authority citation for part 1206 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 et seq., 25 U.S.C. 396 et seq., 396a et
seq., 2101 et seq.; 30 U.S.C. 181 et seq., 351 et seq., 1001 et
seq., 1701 et seq.; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 43 U.S.C. 1301 et seq., 1331 et
seq., and 1801 et seq.
0
5. Revise subpart A to read as follows:
Subpart A--General Provisions and Definitions
Sec.
1206.10 Has the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approved the
information collection requirements in this part?
1206.20 What definitions apply to this part?
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 1206.10 Has the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approved
the information collection requirements in this part?
OMB has approved the information collection requirement contained
in this part under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. See 30 CFR part 1210 for
details concerning the estimated reporting burden and how to comment on
the accuracy of the burden estimate.
Sec. 1206.20 What definitions apply to this part?
Ad valorem lease means a lease where the royalty due to the lessor
is based upon a percentage of the amount or value of the coal.
Affiliate means a person who controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with another person. For purposes of this subpart:
(1) Ownership or common ownership of more than 50 percent of the
voting securities, or instruments of ownership, or other forms of
ownership, of another person constitutes control. Ownership of less
than 10 percent constitutes a presumption of noncontrol that ONRR may
rebut.
(2) If there is ownership or common ownership of 10 through 50
percent of the voting securities or instruments of ownership, or other
forms of ownership, of another person, ONRR will consider the following
factors to determine if there is control under the circumstances of a
particular case:
(i) The extent to which there are common officers or directors;
(ii) With respect to the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership: the percentage of ownership or
common ownership, the relative percentage of ownership or common
ownership compared to the percentage(s) of ownership by other persons,
if a person is the greatest single owner, or if there is an opposing
voting bloc of greater ownership;
(iii) Operation of a lease, plant, pipeline, or other facility;
(iv) The extent of participation by other owners in operations and
day-to-day management of a lease, plant, or other facility; and
(v) Other evidence of power to exercise control over or common
control with another person.
(3) Regardless of any percentage of ownership or common ownership,
relatives, either by blood or marriage, are affiliates.
ANS means Alaska North Slope (ANS).
Area means a geographic region at least as large as the limits of
an oil and/or gas field, in which oil and/or gas lease products have
similar quality and economic characteristics. Area boundaries are not
officially designated and the areas are not necessarily named.
Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement between
independent persons who are not affiliates and who have opposing
economic interests regarding that contract. To be considered arm's
length for any production month, a contract must satisfy this
definition for that month, as well as when the contract was executed.
Audit means an examination, conducted under the generally accepted
Governmental Auditing Standards, of royalty reporting and payment
compliance activities of lessees, designees or other persons who pay
royalties, rents, or bonuses on Federal leases or Indian leases.
BIA means the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior.
BLM means the Bureau of Land Management, Department of the
Interior.
BOEM means the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Department of the
Interior.
BSEE means the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement,
Department of the Interior.
Coal means coal of all ranks from lignite through anthracite.
Coal cooperative means an entity organized to provide coal or coal-
related services to the entity's members (who may also be owners of the
entity), partners, and others. The entity's members are commonly
electric power generation companies, electric utilities, and electric
generation and transmission cooperatives. The entity may operate as a
coal lessee, operator, payor, or affiliate of these, and may or may not
be organized to make a profit.
Coal washing means any treatment to remove impurities from coal.
Coal washing may include, but is not limited to, operations such as
flotation, air, water, or heavy media separation; drying; and related
handling (or combination thereof).
Compression means the process of raising the pressure of gas.
Condensate means liquid hydrocarbons (normally exceeding 40 degrees
of API gravity) recovered at the surface without processing. Condensate
is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons resulting from condensation of
petroleum hydrocarbons existing initially in a gaseous phase in an
underground reservoir.
Constraint means a reduction in, or elimination of, gas flow,
deliveries or sales required by the delivery system.
Contract means any oral or written agreement, including amendments
or revisions, between two or more persons, that is enforceable by law
and that with due consideration creates an obligation.
[[Page 644]]
Designee means the person the lessee designates to report and pay
the lessee's royalties for a lease.
Exchange agreement means an agreement where one person agrees to
deliver oil to another person at a specified location in exchange for
oil deliveries at another location. Exchange agreements may or may not
specify prices for the oil involved. They frequently specify dollar
amounts reflecting location, quality, or other differentials. Exchange
agreements include buy/sell agreements, which specify prices to be paid
at each exchange point and may appear to be two separate sales within
the same agreement. Examples of other types of exchange agreements
include, but are not limited to, exchanges of produced oil for specific
types of crude oil (e.g., West Texas Intermediate); exchanges of
produced oil for other crude oil at other locations (Location Trades);
exchanges of produced oil for other grades of oil (Grade Trades); and
multi-party exchanges.
FERC means Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
Field means a geographic region situated over one or more
subsurface oil and gas reservoirs and encompassing at least the
outermost boundaries of all oil and gas accumulations known within
those reservoirs, vertically projected to the land surface. State oil
and gas regulatory agencies usually name onshore fields and designate
their official boundaries. BOEM names and designates boundaries of OCS
fields.
Gas means any fluid, either combustible or noncombustible,
hydrocarbon or nonhydrocarbon, which is extracted from a reservoir and
which has neither independent shape nor volume, but tends to expand
indefinitely. It is a substance that exists in a gaseous or rarefied
state under standard temperature and pressure conditions.
Gas plant products means separate marketable elements, compounds,
or mixtures, whether in liquid, gaseous, or solid form, resulting from
processing gas, excluding residue gas.
Gathering means the movement of lease production to a central
accumulation or treatment point on the lease, unit, or communitized
area, or to a central accumulation or treatment point off the lease,
unit, or communitized area that BLM or BSEE approves for onshore and
offshore leases, respectively, including any movement of bulk
production from the wellhead to a platform offshore.
Geographic region means, for Federal gas, an area at least as large
as the defined limits of an oil and or gas field in which oil and/or
gas lease products have similar quality and economic characteristics.
Gross proceeds means the total monies and other consideration
accruing for the disposition of any of the following:
(1) Oil. Gross proceeds also include, but are not limited to, the
following examples:
(i) Payments for services such as dehydration, marketing,
measurement, or gathering which the lessee must perform at no cost to
the Federal Government;
(ii) The value of services, such as salt water disposal, that the
producer normally performs but that the buyer performs on the
producer's behalf;
(iii) Reimbursements for harboring or terminalling fees, royalties,
and any other reimbursements;
(iv) Tax reimbursements, even though the Federal royalty interest
may be exempt from taxation;
(v) Payments made to reduce or buy down the purchase price of oil
produced in later periods, by allocating such payments over the
production whose price the payment reduces and including the allocated
amounts as proceeds for the production as it occurs; and
(vi) Monies and all other consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled but does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts;
(2) Gas, residue gas, and gas plant products. Gross proceeds also
include, but are not limited to, the following examples:
(i) Payments for services such as dehydration, marketing,
measurement, or gathering that the lessee must perform at no cost to
the Federal Government;
(ii) Reimbursements for royalties, fees, and any other
reimbursements;
(iii) Tax reimbursements, even though the Federal royalty interest
may be exempt from taxation; and
(iv) Monies and all other consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled, but does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts; or
(3) Coal. Gross proceeds also include, but are not limited to, the
following examples:
(i) Payments for services such as crushing, sizing, screening,
storing, mixing, loading, treatment with substances including chemicals
or oil, and other preparation of the coal that the lessee must perform
at no cost to the Federal Government or Indian lessor;
(ii) Reimbursements for royalties, fees, and any other
reimbursements;
(iii) Tax reimbursements even though the Federal or Indian royalty
interest may be exempt from taxation; and
(iv) Monies and all other consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled, but does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts.
Index means:
(1) For gas, the calculated composite price ($/MMBtu) of spot
market sales a publication that meets ONRR-established criteria for
acceptability at the index pricing point publishes; or
(2) For oil, the calculated composite price ($/barrel) of spot
market sales a publication that meets ONRR-established criteria for
acceptability at the index pricing point publishes.
Index pricing point means any point on a pipeline for which there
is an index, which ONRR-approved publications may refer to as a trading
location.
Index zone means a field or an area with an active spot market and
published indices applicable to that field or an area that is
acceptable to ONRR under Sec. 1206.141(d)(1).
Indian Tribe means any Indian Tribe, band, nation, pueblo,
community, rancheria, colony, or other group of Indians for which any
minerals or interest in minerals is held in trust by the United States
or that is subject to Federal restriction against alienation.
Individual Indian mineral owner means any Indian for whom minerals
or an interest in minerals is held in trust by the United States or who
holds title subject to Federal restriction against alienation.
Keepwhole contract means a processing agreement under which the
processor delivers to the lessee a quantity of gas after processing
equivalent to the quantity of gas the processor received from the
lessee prior to processing, normally based on heat content, less gas
used as plant fuel and gas unaccounted for and/or lost. This includes
but is not limited to agreements under which the processor retains all
NGLs it recovered from the lessee's gas.
Lease means any contract, profit-sharing arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States
under any mineral leasing law, including the Indian Mineral Development
Act, 25 U.S.C. 2101-2108, that authorizes exploration for, extraction
of, or removal of lease products, or the geographical area covered by
that authorization, whichever is required by the context.
Lease products mean any leased minerals, attributable to,
originating
[[Page 645]]
from, or allocated to a lease or produced in association with a lease.
Lessee means any person to whom the United States, an Indian tribe,
and/or individual Indian mineral owner issues a lease, and any person
who has been assigned all or a part of record title, operating rights,
or an obligation to make royalty or other payments required by the
lease. This includes:
(1) Any person who has an interest in a lease; and
(2) In the case of leases for Indian coal or Federal coal, an
operator, payor, or other person with no lease interest who makes
royalty payments on the lessee's behalf.
Like quality means similar chemical and physical characteristics.
Location differential means an amount paid or received (whether in
money or in barrels of oil) under an exchange agreement that results
from differences in location between oil delivered in exchange and oil
received in the exchange. A location differential may represent all or
part of the difference between the price received for oil delivered and
the price paid for oil received under a buy/sell exchange agreement.
Market center means a major point ONRR recognizes for oil sales,
refining, or transshipment. Market centers generally are locations
where ONRR-approved publications publish oil spot prices.
Marketable condition means lease products which are sufficiently
free from impurities and otherwise in a condition that they will be
accepted by a purchaser under a sales contract typical for the field or
area for Federal oil and gas, and region for Federal and Indian coal.
Mine means an underground or surface excavation or series of
excavations and the surface or underground support facilities that
contribute directly or indirectly to mining, production, preparation,
and handling of lease products.
Misconduct means any failure to perform a duty owed to the United
States under a statute, regulation, or lease, or unlawful or improper
behavior, regardless of the mental state of the lessee or any
individual employed by or associated with the lessee.
Net output means the quantity of:
(1) Residue gas and each gas plant product that a processing plant
produces; or
(2) The quantity of washed coal that a coal wash plant produces.
Netting means reducing the reported sales value to account for an
allowance instead of reporting the allowance as a separate entry on
Form ONRR-2014 or Form ONRR-4430.
NGLs means natural gas liquids.
NYMEX price means the average of the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX) settlement prices for light sweet crude oil delivered at
Cushing, Oklahoma, calculated as follows:
(1) Sum the prices published for each day during the calendar month
of production (excluding weekends and holidays) for oil to be delivered
in the prompt month corresponding to each such day; and
(2) Divide the sum by the number of days on which those prices are
published (excluding weekends and holidays).
Oil means a mixture of hydrocarbons that existed in the liquid
phase in natural underground reservoirs, remains liquid at atmospheric
pressure after passing through surface separating facilities, and is
marketed or used as a liquid. Condensate recovered in lease separators
or field facilities is oil.
ONRR means the Office of Natural Resources Revenue, Department of
the Interior.
ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin means a publication ONRR
approves for determining NGLs prices.
ONRR-approved publication means:
(1) For oil, a publication ONRR approves for determining ANS spot
prices or WTI differentials; or
(2) For gas, a publication ONRR approves for determining index
pricing points.
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means all submerged lands lying
seaward and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable waters as
defined in Section 2 of the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301) and of
which the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and are
subject to its jurisdiction and control.
Payor means any person who reports and pays royalties under a
lease, regardless of whether that person also is a lessee.
Person means any individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture (when established as a
separate entity).
Processing means any process designed to remove elements or
compounds (hydrocarbon and nonhydrocarbon) from gas, including
absorption, adsorption, or refrigeration. Field processes which
normally take place on or near the lease, such as natural pressure
reduction, mechanical separation, heating, cooling, dehydration, and
compression, are not considered processing. The changing of pressures
and/or temperatures in a reservoir is not considered processing. The
use of a Joules-Thompson (JT) unit to remove NGLs from gas is
considered processing regardless of where the JT unit is located
provided that you market the NGLs as NGLs.
Processing allowance means a deduction in determining royalty value
for the reasonable, actual costs the lessee incurs for processing gas.
Prompt month means the nearest month of delivery for which NYMEX
futures prices are published during the trading month.
Quality differential means an amount paid or received under an
exchange agreement (whether in money or in barrels of oil) that results
from differences in API gravity, sulfur content, viscosity, metals
content, and other quality factors between oil delivered and oil
received in the exchange. A quality differential may represent all or
part of the difference between the price received for oil delivered and
the price paid for oil received under a buy/sell agreement.
Region for coal means the eight Federal coal production regions,
which the Bureau of Land Management designates as follows: Denver-Raton
Mesa Region, Fort Union Region, Green River-Hams Fork Region, Powder
River Region, San Juan River Region, Southern Appalachian Region,
Uinta-Southwestern Utah Region, and Western Interior Region. See 44 FR
65197 (1979).
Residue gas means that hydrocarbon gas consisting principally of
methane resulting from processing gas.
Rocky Mountain Region means the States of Colorado, Montana, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming, except for those portions of
the San Juan Basin and other oil-producing fields in the ``Four
Corners'' area that lie within Colorado and Utah.
Roll means an adjustment to the NYMEX price that is calculated as
follows: Roll = .6667 x (P0-P1) + .3333 x
(P0-P2), where: P0 = the average of
the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during the prompt
month that is the same as the month of production, as published for
each day during the trading month for which the month of production is
the prompt month; P1 = the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during the month following the month
of production, published for each day during the trading month for
which the month of production is the prompt month; and P2 =
the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during
the second month following the month of production, as published for
each day during the trading month for which the month of production is
the prompt month. Calculate the average of
[[Page 646]]
the daily NYMEX settlement prices using only the days on which such
prices are published (excluding weekends and holidays).
(1) Example 1. Prices in Out Months are Lower Going Forward:
The month of production for which you must determine royalty value
is December. December was the prompt month (for year 2011) from
October 21 through November 18. January was the first month
following the month of production, and February was the second month
following the month of production. P0 therefore is the
average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during
December published for each business day between October 21 and
November 18. P1 is the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during January published for each
business day between October 21 and November 18. P2 is
the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries
during February published for each business day between October 21
and November 18. In this example, assume that P0 = $95.08
per bbl, P1 = $95.03 per bbl, and P2 = $94.93
per bbl. In this example (a declining market), Roll = .6667 x
($95.08-$95.03) + .3333 x ($95.08-$94.93) = $0.03 + $0.05 = $0.08.
You add this number to the NYMEX price.
(2) Example 2. Prices in Out Months are Higher Going Forward:
The month of production for which you must determine royalty value
is November. November was the prompt month (for year 2012) from
September 21 through October 22. December was the first month
following the month of production, and January was the second month
following the month of production. P0 therefore is the
average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during
November published for each business day between September 21 and
October 22. P1 is the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during December published for each
business day between September 21 and October 22. P2 is
the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries
during January published for each business day between September 21
and October 22. In this example, assume that P0 = $91.28
per bbl, P1 = $91.65 per bbl, and P2 = $92.10
per bbl. In this example (a rising market), Roll = .6667 x ($91.28-
$91.65) + .3333 x ($91.28-$92.10) = (-$0.25) + (-$0.27) = (-$0.52).
You add this negative number to the NYMEX price (effectively a
subtraction from the NYMEX price).
Sale means a contract between two persons where:
(1) The seller unconditionally transfers title to the oil, gas, gas
plant product, or coal to the buyer and does not retain any related
rights such as the right to buy back similar quantities of oil, gas,
gas plant product, or coal from the buyer elsewhere;
(2) The buyer pays money or other consideration for the oil, gas,
gas plant product, or coal; and
(3) The parties' intent is for a sale of the oil, gas, gas plant
product, or coal to occur.
Section 6 lease means an OCS lease subject to section 6 of the
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, as amended, 43 U.S.C. 1335.
Short tons means 2000 pounds.
Spot price means the price under a spot sales contract where:
(1) A seller agrees to sell to a buyer a specified amount of oil at
a specified price over a specified period of short duration;
(2) No cancellation notice is required to terminate the sales
agreement; and
(3) There is no obligation or implied intent to continue to sell in
subsequent periods.
Tonnage means tons of coal measured in short tons.
Trading month means the period extending from the second business
day before the 25th day of the second calendar month preceding the
delivery month (or, if the 25th day of that month is a non-business
day, the second business day before the last business day preceding the
25th day of that month) through the third business day before the 25th
day of the calendar month preceding the delivery month (or, if the 25th
day of that month is a non-business day, the third business day before
the last business day preceding the 25th day of that month), unless the
NYMEX publishes a different definition or different dates on its
official Web site, www.nymex.com, in which case the NYMEX definition
will apply.
Transportation allowance means a deduction in determining royalty
value for the reasonable, actual costs the lessee incurs for moving:
(1) Oil to a point of sale or delivery off the lease, unit area, or
communitized area. The transportation allowance does not include
gathering costs; or
(2) Unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas plant products to a point
of sale or delivery off the lease, unit area, or communitized area, or
away from a processing plant. The transportation allowance does not
include gathering costs; or
(3) Coal to a point of sale remote from both the lease and mine or
wash plant.
Washing allowance means a deduction in determining royalty value
for the reasonable, actual costs the lessee incurs for coal washing.
WTI differential means the average of the daily mean differentials
for location and quality between a grade of crude oil at a market
center and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil at Cushing published
for each day for which price publications perform surveys for
deliveries during the production month, calculated over the number of
days on which those differentials are published (excluding weekends and
holidays). Calculate the daily mean differentials by averaging the
daily high and low differentials for the month in the selected
publication. Use only the days and corresponding differentials for
which such differentials are published.
0
6. Revise subpart C to read as follows:
Subpart C--Federal Oil
Sec.
1206.100 What is the purpose of this subpart?
1206.101 How do I calculate royalty value for oil I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm's-length contract?
1206.102 How do I value oil that is not sold under an arm's-length
contract?
1206.103 What publications does ONRR approve?
1206.104 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
1206.105 How will ONRR determine the value of my oil for royalty
purposes?
1206.106 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
value under this subpart?
1206.107 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.108 How do I request a value determination?
1206.109 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
1206.110 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
1206.111 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract?
1206.112 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I do not
have an arm's-length transportation contract?
1206.113 What adjustments and transportation allowances apply when I
value oil production from my lease using NYMEX prices or ANS spot
prices?
1206.114 How will ONRR identify market centers?
1206.115 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.116 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.117 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
1206.118 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
1206.119 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
Subpart C--Federal Oil
Sec. 1206.100 What is the purpose of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all oil produced from Federal oil and
gas leases onshore and on the OCS. It explains how you as a lessee must
calculate the value of production for
[[Page 647]]
royalty purposes consistent with mineral leasing laws, other applicable
laws, and lease terms.
(b) If you are a designee and if you dispose of production on
behalf of a lessee, the terms ``you'' and ``your'' in this subpart
refer to you and not to the lessee. In this circumstance, you must
determine and report royalty value for the lessee's oil by applying the
rules in this subpart to your disposition of the lessee's oil.
(c) If you are a designee and only report for a lessee and do not
dispose of the lessee's production, references to ``you'' and ``your''
in this subpart refer to the lessee and not the designee. In this
circumstance, you as a designee must determine and report royalty value
for the lessee's oil by applying the rules in this subpart to the
lessee's disposition of its oil.
(d) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute;
(2) A settlement agreement between the United States and a lessee
resulting from administrative or judicial litigation;
(3) A written agreement between the lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the value of production from any
lease that ONRR expects at least would approximate the value
established under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of an oil and gas lease subject to this
subpart, then the statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or
lease provision will govern to the extent of the inconsistency.
(e) ONRR may audit, monitor, or review and adjust all royalty
payments.
Sec. 1206.101 How do I calculate royalty value for oil I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length contract?
(a) The value of oil under this section for royalty purposes is the
gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate under the arm's-length
contract less applicable allowances determined under Sec. 1206.111 or
Sec. 1206.112. This value does not apply if you exercise an option to
use a different value provided in paragraph (c)(1) or (c)(2)(i) of this
section or if ONRR decides to value your oil under Sec. 1206.105. You
must use this paragraph (a) to value oil when:
(1) You sell under an arm's-length sales contract; or
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under
a non-arm's-length contract and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them, then sells the oil under an arm's-length
contract, unless you exercise the option provided in paragraph
(c)(2)(i) of this section.
(b) If you have multiple arm's-length contracts to sell oil
produced from a lease that is valued under paragraph (a) of this
section, the value of the oil is the volume-weighted average of the
values established under this section for each contract for the sale of
oil produced from that lease.
(c)(1) If you enter into an arm's-length exchange agreement, or
multiple sequential arm's-length exchange agreements, and following the
exchange(s) you or your affiliate sell(s) the oil received in the
exchange(s) under an arm's-length contract, then you may use either
Sec. 1206.101(a) or Sec. 1206.102 to value your production for
royalty purposes. If you fail to make the election required under this
paragraph, you may not make a retroactive election and ONRR may decide
your value under Sec. 1206.105.
(i) If you use Sec. 1206.101(a), your gross proceeds are the gross
proceeds under your or your affiliate's arm's-length sales contract
after the exchange(s) occur(s). You must adjust your gross proceeds for
any location or quality differential, or other adjustments, you
received or paid under the arm's-length exchange agreement(s). If ONRR
determines that any arm's-length exchange agreement does not reflect
reasonable location or quality differentials, ONRR may decide your
value under Sec. 1206.105. You may not otherwise use the price or
differential specified in an arm's-length exchange agreement to value
your production.
(ii) When you elect under Sec. 1206.101(c)(1) to use Sec.
1206.101(a) or Sec. 1206.102, you must make the same election for all
of your production from the same unit, communitization agreement, or
lease (if the lease is not part of a unit or communitization agreement)
sold under arm's-length contracts following arm's-length exchange
agreements. You may not change your election more often than once every
2 years.
(2)(i) If you sell or transfer your oil production to your
affiliate and that affiliate or another affiliate then sells the oil
under an arm's-length contract, you may use either Sec. 1206.101(a) or
Sec. 1206.102 to value your production for royalty purposes.
(ii) When you elect under Sec. 1206.101(c)(2)(i) to use Sec.
1206.101(a) or Sec. 1206.102, you must make the same election for all
of your production from the same unit, communitization agreement, or
lease (if the lease is not part of a unit or communitization agreement)
that your affiliates resell at arm's-length. You may not change your
election more often than once every 2 years.
Sec. 1206.102 How do I value oil not sold under an arm's-length
contract?
This section explains how to value oil that you may not value under
Sec. 1206.101 or that you elect under Sec. 1206.101(c)(1) to value
under this section, unless ONRR decides to value your oil under
1206.105. First, determine if paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this
section applies to production from your lease, or if you may apply
paragraph (d) or (e) with ONRR approval.
(a) Production from leases in California or Alaska. Value is the
average of the daily mean ANS spot prices published in any ONRR-
approved publication during the trading month most concurrent with the
production month. For example, if the production month is June,
calculate the average of the daily mean prices using the daily ANS spot
prices published in the ONRR-approved publication for all the business
days in June.
(1) To calculate the daily mean spot price, you must average the
daily high and low prices for the month in the selected publication.
(2) You must use only the days and corresponding spot prices for
which such prices are published.
(3) You must adjust the value for applicable location and quality
differentials, and you may adjust it for transportation costs, under
Sec. 1206.111.
(4) After you select an ONRR-approved publication, you may not
select a different publication more often than once every 2 years,
unless the publication you use is no longer published or ONRR revokes
its approval of the publication. If you must change publications, you
must begin a new 2-year period.
(b) Production from leases in the Rocky Mountain Region. This
paragraph provides methods and options for valuing your production
under different factual situations. You must consistently apply
paragraph (b)(2) or (3) of this section to value all of your production
from the same unit, communitization agreement, or lease (if the lease
or a portion of the lease is not part of a unit or communitization
agreement) that you cannot value under Sec. 1206.101 or that you elect
under Sec. 1206.101(c)(1) to value under this section.
(1) You may elect to value your oil under either paragraph (b)(2)
or (3) of this section. After you select either paragraph (b)(2) or (3)
of this section, you may not change to the other method more often than
once every 2 years, unless the method you have been using is no longer
applicable and you must apply the other paragraph. If you change
[[Page 648]]
methods, you must begin a new 2-year period.
(2) Value is the volume-weighted average of the gross proceeds
accruing to the seller under your or your affiliate's arm's-length
contracts for the purchase or sale of production from the field or area
during the production month.
(i) The total volume purchased or sold under those contracts must
exceed 50 percent of your and your affiliate's production from both
Federal and non-Federal leases in the same field or area during that
month.
(ii) Before calculating the volume-weighted average, you must
normalize the quality of the oil in your or your affiliate's arm's-
length purchases or sales to the same gravity as that of the oil
produced from the lease.
(3) Value is the NYMEX price (without the roll), adjusted for
applicable location and quality differentials and transportation costs
under Sec. 1206.113.
(4) If you demonstrate to ONRR's satisfaction that paragraphs
(b)(2) through (3) of this section result in an unreasonable value for
your production as a result of circumstances regarding that production,
the ONRR Director may establish an alternative valuation method.
(c) Production from leases not located in California, Alaska, or
the Rocky Mountain Region. (1) Value is the NYMEX price, plus the roll,
adjusted for applicable location and quality differentials and
transportation costs under Sec. 1206.113.
(2) If the ONRR Director determines that use of the roll no longer
reflects prevailing industry practice in crude oil sales contracts or
that the most common formula used by industry to calculate the roll
changes, ONRR may terminate or modify use of the roll under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section at the end of each 2-year period [EFFECTIVE DATE
OF THE FINAL RULE], through notice published in the Federal Register
not later than 60 days before the end of the 2-year period. ONRR will
explain the rationale for terminating or modifying the use of the roll
in this notice.
(d) Unreasonable value. If ONRR determines that the NYMEX price or
ANS spot price does not represent a reasonable royalty value in any
particular case, ONRR may decide to value your oil under Sec.
1206.105.
(e) Production delivered to your refinery and the NYMEX price or
ANS spot price is an unreasonable value. If ONRR determines that the
NYMEX price or ANS spot price does not represent a reasonable royalty
value in any particular case, ONRR may decide to value under Sec.
1206.105.
Sec. 1206.103 What publications does ONRR approve?
(a) ONRR periodically will publish to www.onrr.gov a list of ONRR-
approved publications for the NYMEX price and ANS spot price based on
certain criteria including, but not limited to:
(1) Publications buyers and sellers frequently use;
(2) Publications frequently mentioned in purchase or sales
contracts;
(3) Publications that use adequate survey techniques, including
development of estimates based on daily surveys of buyers and sellers
of crude oil, and, for ANS spot prices, buyers and sellers of ANS crude
oil; and
(4) Publications independent from ONRR, other lessors, and lessees.
(b) Any publication may petition ONRR to be added to the list of
acceptable publications.
(c) ONRR will specify the tables you must use in the acceptable
publications.
(d) ONRR may revoke its approval of a particular publication if it
determines that the prices or differentials published in the
publication do not accurately represent NYMEX prices or differentials
or ANS spot market prices or differentials.
Sec. 1206.104 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are
correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and audit the royalties you
report, and, if ONRR determines that your reported value is
inconsistent with the requirements of this subpart, ONRR may direct you
to use a different measure of royalty value or decide your value under
Sec. 1206.105.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a different royalty value, you must
either pay any additional royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter) or
report a credit for, or request a refund of, any overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR will examine if your or your
affiliate's contract reflects the total consideration actually
transferred, either directly or indirectly, from the buyer to you or
your affiliate for the oil. If ONRR determines that a contract does not
reflect the total consideration, ONRR may decide your value under Sec.
1206.105.
(c) ONRR may decide your value under Sec. 1206.105 if ONRR
determines that the gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate
under a contract do not reflect reasonable consideration because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) You have breached your duty to market the oil for the mutual
benefit of yourself and the lessor by selling your oil at a value that
is unreasonably low. ONRR may consider a sales price to be unreasonably
low if it is 10 percent less than the lowest reasonable measures of
market price, including but not limited to, index prices and prices
reported to ONRR for like quality oil; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly valued your oil under
Sec. 1206.101 or Sec. 1206.102 for any reason, including but not
limited to, you or your affiliate's failure to provide documents ONRR
requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart B.
(d) You have the burden of demonstrating that your or your
affiliate's contract is arm's-length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify that the provisions in your or
your affiliate's contract include all of the consideration the buyer
paid you or your affiliate, either directly or indirectly, for the oil.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or amendment, if you or your
affiliate fail(s) to take proper or timely action to receive prices or
benefits to which you or your affiliate are entitled, you must pay
royalty based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely application for a price
increase or benefit allowed under your or your affiliate's contract but
the purchaser refuses and you or your affiliate take reasonable
documented measures to force purchaser compliance, you will not owe
additional royalties unless or until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration resulting from the price increase.
You may not construe this paragraph to permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in
whole or in part, or timely, for a quantity of oil.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make all contracts, contract
revisions, or amendments in writing and all parties to the contract
must sign the contract, contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to comply with paragraph
(g)(1) of this section, ONRR may determine your value under Sec.
1206.105.
(3) This provision applies notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
Sec. 1206.105 How will ONRR determine the value of my oil for royalty
purposes?
If ONRR decides that it will value your oil for royalty purposes
under Sec. 1206.104, or any other provision in
[[Page 649]]
this subpart, then ONRR will determine value, for royalty purposes, by
considering any information we deem relevant, which may include, but is
not limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality oil in the same field or nearby
fields or areas;
(b) The value of like-quality oil from the refinery or area;
(c) Public sources of price or market information that ONRR deems
reliable;
(d) Information available and reported to ONRR, including but not
limited to, on Form ONRR-2014 and Form ONRR-4054;
(e) Costs of transportation or processing if ONRR determines they
are applicable; or
(f) Any information ONRR deems relevant regarding the particular
lease operation or the salability of the oil.
Sec. 1206.106 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
value under this subpart?
If you determine the value of your oil under this subpart, you must
retain all data relevant to the determination of royalty value.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the value you reported, including all
adjustments for location, quality, and transportation; and
(2) How you complied with these rules.
(b) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
(c) ONRR may review and audit your data, and ONRR will direct you
to use a different value if it determines that the reported value is
inconsistent with the requirements of this subpart.
Sec. 1206.107 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
(a) You must place oil in marketable condition and market the oil
for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the
Federal Government.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an arm's-length contract in
determining value, you must increase those gross proceeds to the extent
that the purchaser, or any other person, provides certain services that
the seller normally would be responsible to perform to place the oil in
marketable condition or to market the oil.
Sec. 1206.108 How do I request a value determination?
(a) You may request a value determination from ONRR regarding any
oil produced. Your request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases involved, all interest owners
of those leases, the designee(s), and the operator(s) for those leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant facts. You must inform ONRR of
any changes to relevant facts that occur before we respond to your
request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the issue(s), including citations to
all relevant precedents (including adverse precedents); and
(6) Suggest your proposed valuation method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR may:
(1) Request that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a valuation determination;
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR will not provide a
determination or guidance. Situations in which ONRR typically will not
provide any determination or guidance include, but are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of pending litigation or
administrative appeals.
(c)(1) A value determination the Assistant Secretary for Policy,
Management and Budget signs is binding on both you and ONRR until the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues a value determination, you
must make any adjustments to royalty payments that follow from the
determination and, if you owe additional royalties, you must pay the
additional royalties due, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(3) A value determination the Assistant Secretary signs is the
final action of the Department and is subject to judicial review under
5 U.S.C. 701-706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not binding on ONRR, delegated States,
or you with respect to the specific situation addressed in the
guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR's decision whether or not to issue guidance
or request an Assistant Secretary determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not appealable decisions or orders
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring you to pay royalty on the
same basis as the guidance, you may appeal that order under 30 CFR part
1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary may use any of the applicable
valuation criteria in this subpart to provide guidance or make a
determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute or regulation on which ONRR
or the Assistant Secretary based any determination or guidance takes
precedence over the determination or guidance, regardless of whether
ONRR or the Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds the determination
or guidance.
(g) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary generally will not
retroactively modify or rescind a value determination issued under
paragraph (d) of this section, unless:
(1) There was a misstatement or omission of material facts; or
(2) The facts subsequently developed are materially different from
the facts on which the guidance was based.
(h) ONRR may make requests and replies under this section available
to the public, subject to the confidentiality requirements under Sec.
1206.109.
Sec. 1206.109 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
(a) Certain information you or your affiliate submit(s) to ONRR
regarding valuation of oil, including transportation allowances, may be
exempt from disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and regulations permit, ONRR will
keep confidential any data you or your affiliate submit(s) that is
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt from disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all requests for information under
the Freedom of Information Act regulations of the Department of the
Interior at 43 CFR part 2.
Sec. 1206.110 What general transportation allowance requirements
apply to me?
(a) ONRR will allow a deduction for the reasonable, actual costs to
transport oil from the lease to the point off the lease under Sec.
1206.110, Sec. 1206.111, or Sec. 1206.112, as applicable. You may not
deduct transportation costs you incur to move a particular volume of
production to reduce royalties you owe on production for which you did
not incur those costs. This paragraph applies when:
(1) You value oil under Sec. 1206.101 based on a sale at a point
off the lease, unit, or communitized area where the oil is produced;
(2)(i) The movement to the sales point is not gathering.
(ii) For oil produced on the OCS, the movement of oil from the
wellhead to the first platform is not transportation; and
(3) You do not value your oil under Sec. 1206.102(a)(3) or (b)(3).
[[Page 650]]
(b) You must calculate the deduction for transportation costs based
on your or your affiliate's cost of transporting each product through
each individual transportation system. If your or your affiliate's
transportation contract includes more than one liquid product, you must
allocate costs consistently and equitably to each of the liquid
products transported. Your allocation must use the same proportion as
the ratio of the volume of each liquid product (excluding waste
products with no value) to the volume of all liquid products (excluding
waste products with no value).
(1) You may not take an allowance for transporting lease production
that is not royalty-bearing.
(2) You may propose to ONRR a prospective cost allocation method
based on the values of the liquid products transported. ONRR will
approve the method if it is consistent with the purposes of the
regulations in this subpart.
(3) You may use your proposed procedure to calculate a
transportation allowance beginning with the production month following
the month ONRR received your proposed procedure until ONRR accepts or
rejects your cost allocation. If ONRR rejects your cost allocation, you
must amend your Form ONRR-2014 for the months that you used the
rejected method and pay any additional royalty due, plus late payment
interest.
(c)(1) Where you or your affiliate transport(s) both gaseous and
liquid products through the same transportation system, you must
propose a cost allocation procedure to ONRR.
(2) You may use your proposed procedure to calculate a
transportation allowance until ONRR accepts or rejects your cost
allocation. If ONRR rejects your cost allocation, you must amend your
Form ONRR-2014 for the months that you used the rejected method and pay
any additional royalty and interest due.
(3) You must submit your initial proposal, including all available
data, within 3 months after you first claim the allocated deductions on
Form ONRR-2014.
(d)(1) Your transportation allowance may not exceed 50 percent of
the value of the oil as determined under Sec. 1206.101 of this
subpart.
(2) If ONRR approved your request to take a transportation
allowance in excess of the 50-percent limitation under former Sec.
1206.109(c), that approval is terminated as of [effective date of final
rule].
(e) You must express transportation allowances for oil as a dollar-
value equivalent. If your or your affiliate's payments for
transportation under a contract are not on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
must convert whatever consideration you or your affiliate are paid to a
dollar-value equivalent.
(f) ONRR may determine your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.105 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the transportation because you breached your duty to
market the oil for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by
transporting your oil at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance to be unreasonably high if it is 10
percent higher than the highest reasonable measures of transportation
costs, including but not limited to, transportation allowances reported
to ONRR and tariffs for gas, residue gas, or gas plant product
transported through the same system; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly calculated a
transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.111 or Sec. 1206.112 for any
reason, including, but not limited to, your or your affiliate's failure
to provide documents ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart B.
(g) You do not need ONRR approval before reporting a transportation
allowance.
Sec. 1206.111 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have
an arm's-length transportation contract?
(a)(1) If you or your affiliate incur transportation costs under an
arm's-length transportation contract, you may claim a transportation
allowance for the reasonable, actual costs incurred as more fully
explained in paragraph (b) of this section, except as provided in Sec.
1206.110(f) and subject to the limitation in Sec. 1206.110(d).
(2) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is at arm's-length.
(3) You do not need ONRR approval before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs incurred under an arm's-length transportation
contract.
(b) Subject to the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section,
you may include, but are not limited to the following costs to
determine your transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this
section. You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(1) The amount that you pay under your arm's-length transportation
contract or tariff.
(2) Fees paid (either in volume or in value) for actual or
theoretical line losses.
(3) Fees paid for administration of a quality bank.
(4) Fees paid to a terminal operator for loading and unloading of
crude oil into or from a vessel, vehicle, pipeline, or other
conveyance.
(5) Fees paid for short-term storage (30 days or less) incidental
to transportation as required by a transporter.
(6) Fees paid to pump oil to another carrier's system or vehicles
as required under a tariff.
(7) Transfer fees paid to a hub operator associated with physical
movement of crude oil through the hub when you do not sell the oil at
the hub. These fees do not include title transfer fees.
(8) Payments for a volumetric deduction to cover shrinkage when
high-gravity petroleum (generally in excess of 51 degrees API) is mixed
with lower gravity crude oil for transportation.
(9) Costs of securing a letter of credit, or other surety, that the
pipeline requires you as a shipper to maintain.
(10) Hurricane surcharges you or your affiliate actually pay(s).
(c) You may not include the following costs to determine your
transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this section:
(1) Fees paid for long-term storage (more than 30 days);
(2) Administrative, handling, and accounting fees associated with
terminalling;
(3) Title and terminal transfer fees;
(4) Fees paid to track and match receipts and deliveries at a
market center or to avoid paying title transfer fees;
(5) Fees paid to brokers;
(6) Fees paid to a scheduling service provider;
(7) Internal costs, including salaries and related costs, rent/
space costs, office equipment costs, legal fees, and other costs to
schedule, nominate, and account for sale or movement of production;
(8) Gauging fees; and
(9) The cost of carrying on your books as inventory a volume of oil
that you or your affiliate, as the pipeline operator, maintain(s) in
the line as line fill.
(d) If you have no written contract for the arm's-length
transportation of oil, then ONRR will determine your
[[Page 651]]
transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.105. You may not use this
paragraph (d) if you or your affiliate perform(s) your own
transportation.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.108(a).
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues its determination.
Sec. 1206.112 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I do
not have an arm's-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length transportation contract, including situations where you
or your affiliate provide your own transportation services. You must
calculate your transportation allowance based on your or your
affiliate's reasonable, actual costs for transportation during the
reporting period using the procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (h) of this section; and
(3)(i) Depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital
investment under paragraph (i)(1) of this section, or you may elect to
use a cost equal to a return on the initial depreciable capital
investment in the transportation system under paragraph (i)(2) of this
section. After you have elected to use either method for a
transportation system, you may not later elect to change to the other
alternative without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to
change methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the
production month following the month ONRR received your change request;
and
(ii) A return on the reasonable salvage value under paragraph
(i)(1)(iii) of this section, after you have depreciated the
transportation system to its reasonable salvage value.
(c) To the extent not included in costs identified in paragraphs
(e) through (h) of this section;
(1) If you or your affiliate incur(s) the following actual costs
under your or your affiliate's non-arm's-length contract, you may
include these costs in your calculations under this section.
(i) Fees paid to a non-affiliated terminal operator for loading and
unloading of crude oil into or from a vessel, vehicle, pipeline, or
other conveyance.
(ii) Transfer fees paid to a hub operator associated with physical
movement of crude oil through the hub when you do not sell the oil at
the hub. These fees do not include title transfer fees.
(iii) A volumetric deduction to cover shrinkage when high-gravity
petroleum (generally in excess of 51 degrees API) is mixed with lower
gravity crude oil for transportation.
(iv) Fees paid to a non-affiliated quality bank administrator for
administration of a quality bank.
(2) You may not include in your transportation allowance:
(i) Any of the costs identified under Sec. 1206.111(c); and
(ii) Fees paid (either in volume or in value) for actual or
theoretical line losses.
(d) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(e) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment) that are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(f) Allowable operating expenses include:
(i) Operations supervision and engineering;
(ii) Operations labor;
(iii) Fuel;
(iv) Utilities;
(v) Materials;
(vi) Ad valorem property taxes;
(vii) Rent;
(viii) Supplies; and
(ix) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating
expense that you can document.
(g) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(1) Maintenance of the transportation system;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(h) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the transportation system, is an allowable expense.
State and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees,
including royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(i)(1) To calculate depreciation and a return on undepreciated
capital investment, you may elect to use either a straight-line
depreciation method (based on the life of equipment or on the life of
the reserves that the transportation system services) or a unit of
production method. After you make an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR received your change request.
(i) A change in ownership of a transportation system will not alter
the depreciation schedule the original transporter/lessee established
for purposes of the allowance calculation.
(ii) You may depreciate a transportation system, with or without a
change in ownership, only once.
(iii)(A) To calculate the return on undepreciated capital
investment, you may use an amount equal to the undepreciated capital
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of
return you determine under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(B) After you have depreciated a transportation system to the
reasonable salvage value, you may continue to include in the allowance
calculation a cost equal to the reasonable salvage value multiplied by
a rate of return under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(2) As an alternative to using depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, you may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the transportation system multiplied by
the rate of return determined under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
You may not include depreciation in your allowance.
(3) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(i) You must use the monthly average BBB rate that Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(ii) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
Sec. 1206.113 What adjustments and transportation allowances apply
when I value oil production from my lease using NYMEX prices or ANS
spot prices?
This section applies when you use NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices
to calculate the value of production under Sec. 1206.102. As specified
in this section, you must adjust the NYMEX price to reflect the
difference in value between your lease and Cushing, Oklahoma, or adjust
the ANS spot price to reflect the difference in value between your
lease and the appropriate ONRR-recognized market center at which the
ANS spot price is published (for example, Long Beach, California, or
San Francisco, California). Paragraph (a) of this section explains how
you adjust the value between the lease and the market center,
[[Page 652]]
and paragraph (b) of this section explains how you adjust the value
between the market center and Cushing when you use NYMEX prices.
Paragraph (c) of this section explains how adjustments may be made for
quality differentials that are not accounted for through exchange
agreements. Paragraph (d) of this section gives some examples.
References in this section to ``you'' include your affiliates as
applicable.
(a) To adjust the value between the lease and the market center:
(1)(i) For oil that you exchange at arm's-length between your lease
and the market center (or between any intermediate points between those
locations), you must calculate a lease-to-market center differential by
the applicable location and quality differentials derived from your
arm's-length exchange agreement applicable to production during the
production month.
(ii) For oil that you exchange between your lease and the market
center (or between any intermediate points between those locations)
under an exchange agreement that is not at arm's-length, you must
obtain approval from ONRR for a location and quality differential.
Until you obtain such approval, you may use the location and quality
differential derived from that exchange agreement applicable to
production during the production month. If ONRR prescribes a different
differential, you must apply ONRR's differential to all periods for
which you used your proposed differential. You must pay any additional
royalties due resulting from using ONRR's differential, plus late
payment interest from the original royalty due date, or you may report
a credit for any overpaid royalties, plus interest, under 30 U.S.C.
1721(h).
(2) For oil that you transport between your lease and the market
center (or between any intermediate points between those locations),
you may take an allowance for the cost of transporting that oil between
the relevant points as determined under Sec. 1206.111 or Sec.
1206.112, as applicable.
(3) If you transport or exchange at arm's-length (or both transport
and exchange) at least 20 percent, but not all, of your oil produced
from the lease to a market center, you must determine the adjustment
between the lease and the market center for the oil that is not
transported or exchanged (or both transported and exchanged) to or
through a market center as follows:
(i) Determine the volume-weighted average of the lease-to-market
center adjustment calculated under paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this
section for the oil that you do transport or exchange (or both
transport and exchange) from your lease to a market center.
(ii) Use that volume-weighted average lease-to-market center
adjustment as the adjustment for the oil that you do not transport or
exchange (or both transport and exchange) from your lease to a market
center.
(4) If you transport or exchange (or both transport and exchange)
less than 20 percent of the crude oil produced from your lease between
the lease and a market center, you must propose to ONRR an adjustment
between the lease and the market center for the portion of the oil that
you do not transport or exchange (or both transport and exchange) to a
market center. Until you obtain such approval, you may use your
proposed adjustment. If ONRR prescribes a different adjustment, you
must apply ONRR's adjustment to all periods for which you used your
proposed adjustment. You must pay any additional royalties due
resulting from using ONRR's adjustment, plus late payment interest from
the original royalty due date, or you may report a credit for any
overpaid royalties plus interest under 30 U.S.C. 1721(h).
(5) You may not both take a transportation allowance and use a
location and quality adjustment or exchange differential for the same
oil between the same points.
(b) For oil that you value using NYMEX prices, you must adjust the
value between the market center and Cushing, Oklahoma, as follows:
(1) If you have arm's-length exchange agreements between the market
center and Cushing under which you exchange to Cushing at least 20
percent of all the oil you own at the market center during the
production month, you must use the volume-weighted average of the
location and quality differentials from those agreements as the
adjustment between the market center and Cushing for all the oil that
you produce from the leases during that production month for which that
market center is used.
(2) If paragraph (b)(1) of this section does not apply, you must
use the WTI differential published in an ONRR-approved publication for
the market center nearest your lease, for crude oil most similar in
quality to your production, as the adjustment between the market center
and Cushing. For example, for light sweet crude oil produced offshore
of Louisiana, you must use the WTI differential for Light Louisiana
Sweet crude oil at St. James, Louisiana. After you select an ONRR-
approved publication, you may not select a different publication more
often than once every 2 years, unless the publication you use is no
longer published or ONRR revokes its approval of the publication. If
you must change publications, you must begin a new 2-year period.
(3) If neither paragraph (b)(1) nor (2) of this section applies,
you may propose an alternative differential to ONRR. Until you obtain
such approval, you may use your proposed differential. If ONRR
prescribes a different differential, you must apply ONRR's differential
to all periods for which you used your proposed differential. You must
pay any additional royalties due resulting from using ONRR's
differential, plus late payment interest from the original royalty due
date, or you may report a credit for any overpaid royalties plus
interest under 30 U.S.C. 1721(h).
(c)(1) If you adjust for location and quality differentials or for
transportation costs under paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, you
also must adjust the NYMEX price or ANS spot price for quality based on
premiums or penalties determined by pipeline quality bank
specifications at intermediate commingling points or at the market
center if those points are downstream of the royalty measurement point
approved by BSEE or BLM, as applicable. You must make this adjustment
only if and to the extent that such adjustments were not already
included in the location and quality differentials determined from your
arm's-length exchange agreements.
(2) If the quality of your oil as adjusted is still different from
the quality of the representative crude oil at the market center after
making the quality adjustments described in paragraphs (a), (b), and
(c)(1) of this section, you may make further gravity adjustments using
posted price gravity tables. If quality bank adjustments do not
incorporate or provide for adjustments for sulfur content, you may make
sulfur adjustments, based on the quality of the representative crude
oil at the market center, of 5.0 cents per one-tenth percent difference
in sulfur content.
(i) You may request prior ONRR approval to use a different
adjustment.
(ii) If ONRR approves your request to use a different quality
adjustment, you may begin using that adjustment the production month
following the month ONRR received your request.
(d) The examples in this paragraph illustrate how to apply the
requirement of this section.
(1) Example. Assume that a Federal lessee produces crude oil from a
lease near Artesia, New Mexico. Further, assume that the lessee
transports the oil
[[Page 653]]
to Roswell, New Mexico, and then exchanges the oil to Midland, Texas.
Assume the lessee refines the oil received in exchange at Midland.
Assume that the NYMEX price is $86.21/bbl, adjusted for the roll; that
the WTI differential (Cushing to Midland) is -$2.27/bbl; that the
lessee's exchange agreement between Roswell and Midland results in a
location and quality differential of -$0.08/bbl; and that the lessee's
actual cost of transporting the oil from Artesia to Roswell is $0.40/
bbl. In this example, the royalty value of the oil is $86.21 - $2.27 -
$0.08 - $0.40 = $83.46/bbl.
(2) Example. Assume the same facts as in the example in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section, except that the lessee transports and exchanges
to Midland 40 percent of the production from the lease near Artesia,
and transports the remaining 60 percent directly to its own refinery in
Ohio. In this example, the 40 percent of the production would be valued
at $83.46/bbl, as explained in the previous example. In this example,
the other 60 percent also would be valued at $83.46/bbl.
(3) Example. Assume that a Federal lessee produces crude oil from a
lease near Bakersfield, California. Further, assume that the lessee
transports the oil to Hynes Station and then exchanges the oil to
Cushing, which it further exchanges with oil it refines. Assume that
the ANS spot price is $105.65/bbl and that the lessee's actual cost of
transporting the oil from Bakersfield to Hynes Station is $0.28/bbl.
The lessee must request approval from ONRR for a location and quality
adjustment between Hynes Station and Long Beach. For example, the
lessee likely would propose using the tariff on Line 63 from Hynes
Station to Long Beach as the adjustment between those points. Assume
that adjustment to be $0.72, including the sulfur and gravity bank
adjustments, and that ONRR approves the lessee's request. In this
example, the preliminary (because the location and quality adjustment
is subject to ONRR review) royalty value of the oil is $105.65 - $0.72
- $0.28 = $104.65/bbl. The fact that oil was exchanged to Cushing does
not change use of ANS spot prices for royalty valuation.
Sec. 1206.114 How will ONRR identify market centers?
ONRR will monitor market activity and, if necessary, add to or
modify the list of market centers published to www.onrr.gov. ONRR will
consider the following factors and conditions in specifying market
centers:
(a) Points where ONRR-approved publications publish prices useful
for index purposes;
(b) Markets served;
(c) Input from industry and others knowledgeable in crude oil
marketing and transportation;
(d) Simplification; and
(e) Other relevant matters.
Sec. 1206.115 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-2014 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
transportation contracts, production agreements, operating agreements,
and related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.116 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-2014 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm's-length transportation facilities or
arrangements, you must base your initial deduction on estimates of
allowable transportation costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the transportation system as your estimate, if
available. If such data is not available, you must use estimates based
on data for similar transportation systems.
(3) Section 1206.118 applies when you amend your report based on
the actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to calculate the allowance deduction. You may find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(d) If you are authorized under Sec. 1206.112(j) to use an
exception to the requirement to calculate your actual transportation
costs, you must follow the reporting requirements of Sec. 1206.115.
Sec. 1206.117 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a transportation allowance?
(a) If you deduct a transportation allowance on Form ONRR-2014 that
exceeds 50 percent of the value of the oil transported, you must pay
additional royalties due, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter, on the excess
allowance amount taken from the date that amount is taken to the date
you pay the additional royalties due.
(b) If you improperly net a transportation allowance against the
oil instead of reporting the allowance as a separate entry on Form
ONRR-2014, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR part 1241.
Sec. 1206.118 What reporting adjustments must I make for
transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation allowance is less than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR-2014 for each month during the allowance
reporting period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of
this chapter from the date you took the deduction to the date you repay
the difference.
(b) If the actual transportation allowance is greater than the
amount you claimed on Form ONRR-2014 for any month during the period
reported on the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit plus
interest.
Sec. 1206.119 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
(a) You must calculate royalties based on the quantity and quality
of oil as measured at the point of royalty settlement that BLM or BSEE
approves for onshore leases and OCS leases, respectively.
(b) If you base the value of oil determined under this subpart on a
quantity and/or quality that is different from the quantity and/or
quality at the point of royalty settlement that BLM or BSEE approves,
you must adjust that value for the differences in quantity and/or
quality.
(c) You may not make any deductions from the royalty volume or
royalty value for actual or theoretical losses. Any actual loss that
you sustain before the royalty settlement metering or measurement point
is not subject to royalty if BLM or BSEE, whichever is appropriate,
determines that such loss was unavoidable.
(d) You must pay royalties on 100 percent of the volume measured at
the approved point of royalty settlement. You may not claim a reduction
in that measured volume for actual losses beyond the approved point of
royalty settlement or for theoretical losses that you claim to have
taken place either before or after the approved point of royalty
settlement.
0
7. Revise subpart D to read as follows:
Subpart D--Federal Gas
Sec.
1206.140 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
[[Page 654]]
1206.141 How do I calculate royalty value for unprocessed gas I or
my affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length
contract?
1206.142 How do I calculate royalty value for processed gas I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length
contract?
1206.143 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
1206.144 How will ONRR determine the value of my gas for royalty
purposes?
1206.145 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
royalty under this subpart?
1206.146 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.147 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process considered final?
1206.148 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
1206.149 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
1206.150 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
1206.151 How do I perform accounting for comparison?
1206.152 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
1206.153 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract?
1206.154 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have a
non-arm's-length transportation contract?
1206.155 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.156 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.157 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
1206.158 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
1206.159 What general requirements regarding processing allowances
apply to me?
1206.160 How do I determine a processing allowance, if I have an
arm's-length processing contract?
1206.161 How do I determine a processing allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length processing contract?
1206.162 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
processing contract?
1206.163 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
processing contract?
1206.164 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
processing allowance?
1206.165 What reporting adjustments must I make for processing
allowances?
Subpart D--Federal Gas
Sec. 1206.140 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all gas produced from Federal oil and
gas leases onshore and on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). It
explains how you, as a lessee, must calculate the value of production
for royalty purposes consistent with mineral leasing laws, other
applicable laws, and lease terms.
(b) The terms ``you'' and ``your'' in this subpart refer to the
lessee.
(c) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute;
(2) A settlement agreement between the United States and a lessee
resulting from administrative or judicial litigation;
(3) A written agreement between the lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the value of production from any
lease that ONRR expects, at least, would approximate the value
established under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of an oil and gas lease subject to this
subpart; then the statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or
lease provision will govern to the extent of the inconsistency.
(d) ONRR may audit and order you to adjust all royalty payments.
Sec. 1206.141 How do I calculate royalty value for unprocessed gas I
or my affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length
contract?
(a) This section applies to unprocessed gas. Unprocessed gas is:
(1) Gas that is not processed;
(2) Any gas that you are not required to value under Sec. 1206.142
or that ONRR does not value under Sec. 1206.144;
(3) Processed gas that you must value prior to processing under
Sec. 1206.151 of this part; and
(4) Any gas you sell prior to processing based on a price per MMBtu
or Mcf when the price is not based on the residue gas and gas plant
products.
(b) The value of gas under this section for royalty purposes is the
gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate under the first arm's-
length contract less an applicable transportation allowance determined
under Sec. 1206.152. This value does not apply if you may exercise the
option provided in paragraph (c) of this section or if ONRR decides to
value your gas under Sec. 1206.144. You must use this paragraph (b) to
value gas when:
(1) You sell under an arm's-length contract;
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under
a non-arm's-length contract and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them, then sells the gas under an arm's-length
contract, unless you exercise the option provided in paragraph (c) of
this section;
(3) You, your affiliate, or another person sell(s) under multiple
arm's-length contracts for gas produced from a lease that is valued
under this paragraph. In that case, unless you exercise the option
provided in paragraph (c) of this section, because you sold non-arm's
length to your affiliate or another person, the value of the gas is the
volume-weighted average of the value established under this paragraph
for each contract for the sale of gas produced from that lease; or
(4) You or your affiliate sell(s) under a pipeline cash-out
program. In that case, for over-delivered volumes within the tolerance
under a pipeline cash-out program, the value is the price the pipeline
must pay you or your affiliate under the transportation contract. You
must use the same value for volumes that exceed the over-delivery
tolerances, even if those volumes are subject to a lower price under
the transportation contract.
(c) If you do not sell under an arm's-length contract, you may
elect to value your gas under this paragraph (c). You may not change
your election more often than once every two years.
(1)(i) If you can only transport gas to one index pricing point
published in an ONRR-approved publication, available at www.onrr.gov,
your value, for royalty purposes, is the highest reported monthly
bidweek price for that index pricing point for the production month.
(ii) If you can transport gas to more than one index pricing point
published in an ONRR-approved publication, available at www.onrr.gov,
your value, for royalty purposes, is the highest reported monthly
bidweek price for the index pricing points to which your gas could be
transported for the production month, whether or not there are
constraints for that production month.
(iii) If there are sequential index pricing points on a pipeline,
you must use the first index pricing point at or after your gas enters
the pipeline.
(iv) You must reduce the number calculated under paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(ii) of this section by 5 percent for sales from
the OCS Gulf of Mexico and by 10 percent for sales from all other
areas, but not by less than 10 cents per MMBtu or more than 30 cents
per MMBtu.
(v) After you select an ONRR-approved publication available at
www.onrr.gov, you may not select a different publication more often
than once every two years.
(vi) ONRR may exclude an individual index pricing point found in an
ONRR-approved publication, if ONRR determines that the index pricing
point does not accurately reflect the values of
[[Page 655]]
production. ONRR will publish a list of excluded index pricing points
available at www.onrr.gov.
(2) You may not take any other deductions from the value calculated
under this paragraph (c).
(d) If you have no written contract for the sale of gas or no sale
of gas subject to this section and:
(1) There is an index pricing point for the gas, then you must
value your gas under paragraph (c) of this section;
(2) There is not an index pricing point for the gas, then ONRR will
decide the value under Sec. 1206.144.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the value using
the procedures in Sec. 1206.148(a).
(ii) You may use that method to determine value, for royalty
purposes, until ONRR issues its decision.
(iii) After ONRR issues its determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.143(a)(2).
Sec. 1206.142 How do I calculate royalty value for processed gas I or
my affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length
contract?
(a) This section applies to the valuation of processed gas,
including but not limited to:
(1) Gas you or your affiliate do not sell, or otherwise dispose of,
under an arm's-length contract prior to processing;
(2) Gas where your or your affiliate's arm's-length contract for
the sale of gas prior to processing provides for payment to be
determined on the basis of the value of any products resulting from
processing, including residue gas or natural gas liquids;
(3) Gas you or your affiliate process under an arm's-length
keepwhole contract; and
(4) Gas where your or your affiliate's arm's-length contract
includes a reservation of the right to process the gas and you or your
affiliate exercise(s) that right.
(b) The value of gas subject to this section, for royalty purposes,
is:
(1) The combined value of the residue gas and all gas plant
products you determine under this section;
(2) Plus the value of any condensate recovered downstream of the
point of royalty settlement without resorting to processing you
determine under Sec. 1206.141 of this part;
(3) Less applicable transportation and processing allowances you
determine under this subpart, unless you exercise the option provided
in paragraph (d) of this section.
(c) The value of residue gas or any gas plant product under this
section for royalty purposes is the gross proceeds accruing to you or
your affiliate under the first arm's-length contract. This value does
not apply if you exercise the option provided in paragraph (d) of this
section, or if ONRR decides to value your residue gas or any gas plant
product under Sec. 1206.144. You must use this paragraph (c) to value
residue gas or any gas plant product when:
(1) You sell under an arm's-length contract;
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under
a non-arm's-length contract, and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them then sells the residue gas or any gas plant
product under an arm's-length contract, unless you exercise the option
provided in paragraph (d) of this section;
(3) You, your affiliate, or another person sell(s) under multiple
arm's-length contracts for residue gas or any gas plant products
recovered from gas produced from a lease that you value under this
paragraph. In that case, unless you exercise the option provided in
paragraph (d) of this section, because you sold non-arm's-length to
your affiliate or another person, the value of the residue gas or any
gas plant product is the volume-weighted average of the gross proceeds
established under this paragraph for each arm's-length contract for the
sale of residue gas or any gas plant products recovered from gas
produced from that lease; or
(4) You or your affiliate sell(s) under a pipeline cash-out
program. In that case, for over-delivered volumes within the tolerance
under a pipeline cash-out program, the value is the price the pipeline
must pay you or your affiliate under the transportation contract. You
must use the same value for volumes that exceed the over-delivery
tolerances, even if those volumes are subject to a lower price under
the transportation contract.
(d) If you do not sell under an arm's-length contract, you may
elect to value your residue gas and natural gas liquids (NGLS) under
this paragraph (d). You may not change your election more often than
once every two years.
(1)(i) If you can only transport residue gas to one index pricing
point published in an ONRR-approved publication, available at
www.onrr.gov, your value, for royalty purposes, is the highest reported
monthly bidweek price for that index pricing point for the production
month.
(ii) If you can transport residue gas to more than one index
pricing point published in an ONRR-approved publication, available at
www.onrr.gov, your value, for royalty purposes, is the highest reported
monthly bidweek price for the index pricing points to which your gas
could be transported for the production month, whether or not there are
constraints, for the production month.
(iii) If there are sequential index pricing points on a pipeline,
you must use the first index pricing point at or after your residue gas
enters the pipeline.
(iv) You must reduce the number calculated under paragraphs
(d)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section by 5 percent for sales from the OCS
Gulf of Mexico and by 10 percent for sales from all other areas, but
not by less than 10 cents per MMBtu or more than 30 cents per MMBtu.
(v) After you select an ONRR-approved publication available at
www.onrr.gov, you may not select a different publication more often
than once every two years.
(vi) ONRR may exclude an individual index pricing point found in an
ONRR-approved publication, if ONRR determines that the index pricing
point does not accurately reflect the values of production. ONRR will
publish a list of excluded index pricing points available at
www.onrr.gov.
(2)(i) If you sell NGLs in an area with one or more ONRR-approved
commercial price bulletins available at www.onrr.gov, you must choose
one bulletin and your value, for royalty purposes, is the monthly
average price for that bulletin for the production month.
(ii) You must reduce the number calculated under paragraph
(d)(2)(i) of this section by the amounts ONRR posts at www.onrr.gov for
the geographic location of your lease. The methodology ONRR will use to
calculate the amounts is set forth in the preamble to this regulation.
This methodology is binding on you and ONRR. ONRR will update the
amounts periodically using this methodology.
(iii) After you select an ONRR-approved commercial price bulletin
available at www.onrr.gov, you may not select a different commercial
price bulletin more often than once every 2 years.
(3) You may not take any other deductions from the value calculated
under this paragraph (d).
(4) ONRR will post changes to any of the rates in this paragraph
(d) on its Web site.
(e) If you have no written contract for the sale of gas or no sale
of gas subject to this section and:
(1) There is an index pricing point or commercial price bulletin
for the gas, then you must value your gas under paragraph (d) of this
section.
[[Page 656]]
(2) There is not an index pricing point or commercial price
bulletin for the gas, then ONRR will determine the value under Sec.
1206.144.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the value using
the procedures in Sec. 1206.148(a).
(ii) You may use that method to determine value, for royalty
purposes, until ONRR issues its decision.
(iii) After ONRR issues its determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.143(a)(2).
Sec. 1206.143 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are
correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and audit the royalties you
report. If ONRR determines that your reported value is inconsistent
with the requirements of this subpart, ONRR will direct you to use a
different measure of royalty value or decide your value under Sec.
1206.144.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a different royalty value, you must
either pay any additional royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter or
report a credit for, or request a refund of, any overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR will examine if your or your
affiliate's contract reflects the total consideration actually
transferred, either directly or indirectly, from the buyer to you or
your affiliate for the gas, residue gas, or gas plant products. If ONRR
determines that a contract does not reflect the total consideration,
ONRR may decide your value under Sec. 1206.144.
(c) ONRR may decide your value under Sec. 1206.144, if ONRR
determines that the gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate
under a contract do not reflect reasonable consideration because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) You have breached your duty to market the gas, residue gas, or
gas plant products for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by
selling your gas, residue gas, or gas plant products at a value that is
unreasonably low. ONRR may consider a sales price unreasonably low, if
it is 10 percent less than the lowest reasonable measures of market
price, including but not limited to, index prices and prices reported
to ONRR for like-quality gas, residue gas, or gas plant products; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly valued your gas, residue
gas, or gas plant products under Sec. 1206.141 or Sec. 1206.142 for
any reason, including but not limited to, your or your affiliate's
failure to provide documents ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212,
subpart B.
(d) You have the burden of demonstrating that your or your
affiliate's contract is arm's length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify that the provisions in your or
your affiliate's contract include(s) all of the consideration the buyer
paid you or your affiliate, either directly or indirectly, for the gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or amendment, if you or your
affiliate fail(s) to take proper or timely action to receive prices or
benefits to which you or your affiliate are entitled, you must pay
royalty based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely application for a price
increase or benefit allowed under your or your affiliate's contract,
but the purchaser refuses, and you or your affiliate take reasonable
documented measures to force purchaser compliance, you will not owe
additional royalties unless or until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration resulting from the price increase.
You may not construe this paragraph to permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in
whole or in part, or timely, for a quantity of gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make all contracts, contract
revisions, or amendments in writing, and all parties to the contract
must sign the contract, contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to comply with paragraph
(g)(1) of this section, ONRR may decide your value under Sec.
1206.144.
(3) This provision applies notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
Sec. 1206.144 How will ONRR determine the value of my gas for royalty
purposes?
If ONRR decides to value your gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products for royalty purposes under Sec. 1206.143, or any other
provision in this subpart, then ONRR will determine the value, for
royalty purposes, by considering any information we deem relevant,
which may include, but is not limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality gas in the same field or nearby
fields or areas;
(b) The value of like-quality residue gas or gas plant products
from the same plant or area;
(c) Public sources of price or market information that ONRR deems
reliable;
(d) Information available or reported to ONRR, including but not
limited to, on Form ONRR-2014 and Form ONRR-4054;
(e) Costs of transportation or processing, if ONRR determines they
are applicable; or
(f) Any information ONRR deems relevant regarding the particular
lease operation or the salability of the gas.
Sec. 1206.145 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
royalty under this subpart?
If you value your gas under this subpart, you must retain all data
relevant to the determination of the royalty you paid. You can find
recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the royalty value, including all allowable
deductions; and
(2) How you complied with this subpart.
(b) Upon request, you must submit all data to ONRR. You must comply
with any such requirement within the time ONRR specifies.
Sec. 1206.146 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
(a) You must place gas, residue gas, and gas plant products in
marketable condition and market the gas, residue gas, and gas plant
products for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost
to the Federal Government.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an arm's-length contract to
determine royalty, you must increase those gross proceeds to the extent
that the purchaser, or any other person, provides certain services that
you normally are responsible to perform to place the gas, residue gas,
and gas plant products in marketable condition or to market the gas.
Sec. 1206.147 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation,
monitoring, or other like process considered final?
Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
ONRR does not consider any audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process that results in ONRR redetermining royalty due,
under this subpart, final or binding as against the Federal Government
or its beneficiaries unless ONRR chooses to formally close the audit
period in writing.
Sec. 1206.148 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
(a) You may request a valuation determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any gas produced. Your request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases involved, all interest owners
of those
[[Page 657]]
leases, the designee(s), and the operator(s) for those leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant facts. You must inform ONRR of
any changes to relevant facts that occur before we respond to your
request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the issue(s), including citations to
all relevant precedents (including adverse precedents); and
(6) Suggest your proposed valuation method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR may:
(1) Request that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a determination; or
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR will not provide a
determination or guidance. Situations in which ONRR typically will not
provide any determination or guidance include, but are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of pending litigation or
administrative appeals.
(c)(1) A determination the Assistant Secretary for Policy,
Management and Budget signs is binding on both you and ONRR until the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues a determination, you must
make any adjustments to royalty payments that follow from the
determination and, if you owe additional royalties, you must pay the
additional royalties due, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(3) A determination the Assistant Secretary signs is the final
action of the Department and is subject to judicial review under 5
U.S.C. 701-706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not binding on ONRR, delegated States,
or you with respect to the specific situation addressed in the
guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR's decision whether or not to issue guidance
or request an Assistant Secretary determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not appealable decisions or orders
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring you to pay royalty on the
same basis as the guidance, you may appeal that order under 30 CFR part
1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary may use any of the applicable
criteria in this subpart to provide guidance or make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute or regulation on which ONRR
based any guidance, or the Assistant Secretary based any determination,
takes precedence over the determination or guidance after the effective
date of the statute or regulation, regardless of whether ONRR or the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds the guidance or determination.
(g) ONRR may make requests and replies under this section available
to the public, subject to the confidentiality requirements under Sec.
1206.149.
Sec. 1206.149 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
(a) Certain information you or your affiliate submit(s) to ONRR
regarding royalties on gas, including deductions and allowances, may be
exempt from disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and regulations permit, ONRR will
keep confidential any data you or your affiliate submit(s) that is
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt from disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all requests for information under
the Freedom of Information Act regulations of the Department of the
Interior at 43 CFR part 2.
Sec. 1206.150 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
(a)(1) You must calculate royalties based on the quantity and
quality of unprocessed gas as measured at the point of royalty
settlement that BLM or BSEE approves for onshore leases and OCS leases,
respectively.
(2) If you base the value of gas determined under this subpart on a
quantity and/or quality that is different from the quantity and/or
quality at the point of royalty settlement that BLM or BSEE approves,
you must adjust that value for the differences in quantity and/or
quality.
(b)(1) For residue gas and gas plant products, the quantity basis
for computing royalties due is the monthly net output of the plant,
even though residue gas and/or gas plant products may be in temporary
storage.
(2) If you value residue gas and/or gas plant products determined
under this subpart on a quantity and/or quality of residue gas and/or
gas plant products that is different from that which is attributable to
a lease determined under paragraph (c) of this section, you must adjust
that value for the differences in quantity and/or quality.
(c) You must determine the quantity of the residue gas and gas
plant products attributable to a lease based on the following
procedure:
(1) When you derive the net output of the processing plant from gas
obtained from only one lease, you must base the quantity of the residue
gas and gas plant products for royalty computation on the net output of
the plant.
(2) When you derive the net output of a processing plant from gas
obtained from more than one lease producing gas of uniform content, you
must base the quantity of the residue gas and gas plant products
allocable to each lease on the same proportions as the ratios obtained
by dividing the amount of gas delivered to the plant from each lease by
the total amount of gas delivered from all leases.
(3) When the net output of a processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from more than one lease producing gas of non-uniform content:
(i) You must determine the quantity of the residue gas allocable to
each lease by multiplying the amount of gas delivered to the plant from
the lease by the residue gas content of the gas, and dividing that
arithmetical product by the sum of the similar arithmetical products
separately obtained for all leases from which gas is delivered to the
plant, and then multiplying the net output of the residue gas by the
arithmetic quotient obtained.
(ii) You must determine the net output of gas plant products
allocable to each lease by multiplying the amount of gas delivered to
the plant from the lease by the gas plant product content of the gas,
and dividing that arithmetical product by the sum of the similar
arithmetical products separately obtained for all leases from which gas
is delivered to the plant, and then multiplying the net output of each
gas plant product by the arithmetic quotient obtained.
(4) You may request prior ONRR approval of other methods for
determining the quantity of residue gas and gas plant products
allocable to each lease. If approved, you must apply that method to all
gas production from Federal leases that is processed in the same plant
beginning with the production month following the month ONRR received
your request to use another method.
(d)(1) You may not make any deductions from the royalty volume or
royalty value for actual or theoretical losses. Any actual loss of
unprocessed gas that you sustain before the royalty settlement meter or
measurement point is not subject to royalty; if BLM or BSEE, whichever
is appropriate, determines that such loss was unavoidable.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(1) of this section and
Sec. 1202.151(c), you must pay royalties due on 100 percent of the
volume determined under paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
[[Page 658]]
section. You may not reduce that determined volume for actual losses
after you have determined the quantity basis, or for theoretical losses
that you claim to have taken place. Royalties are due on 100 percent of
the value of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, and/or gas plant
products, as provided in this subpart, less applicable allowances. You
may not take any deduction from the value of the unprocessed gas,
residue gas, and/or gas plant products to compensate for actual losses
after you have determined the quantity basis or for theoretical losses
that you claim to have taken place.
Sec. 1206.151 How do I perform accounting for comparison?
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, if you or
your affiliate (or a person to whom you have transferred gas under a
non-arm's-length contract or without a contract) processes your or your
affiliate's gas and after processing the gas, you or your affiliate do
not sell the residue gas under an arm's-length contract, the value, for
royalty purposes, will be the greater of:
(1) The combined value, for royalty purposes, of the residue gas
and gas plant products resulting from processing the gas determined
under Sec. 1206.142 of this subpart, plus the value, for royalty
purposes, of any condensate recovered downstream of the point of
royalty settlement without resorting to processing determined under
Sec. 1206.102 of this subpart; or
(2) The value, for royalty purposes, of the gas prior to processing
as determined under Sec. 1206.141 of this subpart.
(b) The requirement for accounting for comparison contained in the
terms of leases will govern as provided in Sec. 1206.142(a)(2) of this
subpart.
(c) When lease terms require accounting for comparison, you must
perform accounting for comparison under paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 1206.152 What general transportation allowance requirements
apply to me?
(a) ONRR will allow a deduction for the reasonable, actual costs to
transport residue gas, gas plant products, or unprocessed gas from the
lease to the point off the lease under Sec. 1206.153 or Sec.
1206.154, as applicable. You may not deduct transportation costs you
incur to move a particular volume of production to reduce royalties you
owe on production for which you did not incur those costs. This
paragraph applies when:
(1) You value unprocessed gas under Sec. 1206.141(b) or residue
gas and gas plant products under Sec. 1206.142(b) based on a sale at a
point off the lease, unit, or communitized area where the residue gas,
gas plant products, or unprocessed gas is produced; and
(2)(i) The movement to the sales point is not gathering.
(ii) For gas produced on the OCS, the movement of gas from the
wellhead to the first platform is not transportation.
(b) You must calculate the deduction for transportation costs based
on your or your affiliate's cost of transporting each product through
each individual transportation system. If your or your affiliate's
transportation contract includes more than one product in a gaseous
phase, you must allocate costs consistently and equitably to each of
the products transported. Your allocation must use the same proportion
as the ratio of the volume of each product (excluding waste products
with no value) to the volume of all products in the gaseous phase
(excluding waste products with no value).
(1) You may not take an allowance for transporting lease production
that is not royalty-bearing.
(2) You may propose to ONRR a prospective cost allocation method
based on the values of the products transported. ONRR will approve the
method, if it is consistent with the purposes of the regulations in
this subpart.
(3) You may use your proposed procedure to calculate a
transportation allowance beginning with the production month following
the month ONRR received your proposed procedure until ONRR accepts or
rejects your cost allocation. If ONRR rejects your cost allocation, you
must amend your Form ONRR-2014 for the months that you used the
rejected method and pay any additional royalty due, plus late payment
interest calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this
chapter.
(c)(1) Where you or your affiliate transport(s) both gaseous and
liquid products through the same transportation system, you must
propose a cost allocation procedure to ONRR.
(2) You may use your proposed procedure to calculate a
transportation allowance until ONRR accepts or rejects your cost
allocation. If ONRR rejects your cost allocation, you must amend your
Form ONRR-2014 for the months that you used the rejected method and pay
any additional royalty due, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter.
(3) You must submit your initial proposal, including all available
data, within 3 months after you first claim the allocated deductions on
Form ONRR-2014.
(d) If you value unprocessed gas under Sec. 1206.141(c) or residue
gas and gas plant products under Sec. 1206.142 (d), you may not take a
transportation allowance.
(e)(1) Your transportation allowance may not exceed 50 percent of
the value of the residue gas, gas plant products, or unprocessed gas as
determined under Sec. 1206.141 or Sec. 1206.142 of this subpart.
(2) If ONRR approved your request to take a transportation
allowance in excess of the 50-percent limitation under former Sec.
1206.156(c)(3), that approval is terminated as of the effective date of
the final rule.
(f) You must express transportation allowances for residue gas, gas
plant products, or unprocessed gas as a dollar-value equivalent. If
your or your affiliate's payments for transportation under a contract
are not on a dollar-per-unit basis, you must convert whatever
consideration you or your affiliate are paid to a dollar-value
equivalent.
(g) ONRR may determine your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.144 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the transportation because you breached your duty to
market the gas, residue gas, or gas plant products for the mutual
benefit of yourself and the lessor by transporting your gas, residue
gas, or gas plant products at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance unreasonably high if it is 10-
percent higher than the highest reasonable measures of transportation
costs including, but not limited to, transportation allowances reported
to ONRR and tariffs for gas, residue gas, or gas plant products
transported through the same system; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly calculated a
transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.153 or Sec. 1206.154 for any
reason, including but not limited to, you or your affiliate's failure
to provide documents ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart B.
(h) You do not need ONRR approval before reporting a transportation
allowance.
Sec. 1206.153 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have
an arm's-length transportation contract?
(a)(1) If you or your affiliate incur transportation costs under an
arm's-length transportation contract, you may claim a transportation
allowance for the reasonable, actual costs incurred as
[[Page 659]]
more fully explained in paragraph (b) of this section, except as
provided in Sec. 1206.152(g) and subject to the limitation in Sec.
1206.152(e).
(2) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is arm's-length.
(b) Subject to the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section,
you may include, but are not limited to, the following costs to
determine your transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this
section. You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(1) Firm demand charges paid to pipelines. You may deduct firm
demand charges or capacity reservation fees you or your affiliate paid
to a pipeline, including charges or fees for unused firm capacity you
or your affiliate have not sold before you report your allowance. If
you or your affiliate receive(s) a payment from any party for release
or sale of firm capacity after reporting a transportation allowance
that included the cost of that unused firm capacity, or if you or your
affiliate receive(s) a payment or credit from the pipeline for penalty
refunds, rate case refunds, or other reasons, you must reduce the firm
demand charge claimed on the Form ONRR-2014 by the amount of that
payment. You must modify the Form ONRR-2014 by the amount received or
credited for the affected reporting period, and pay any resulting
royalty due, plus late payment interest calculated under Sec. Sec.
1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter;
(2) Gas supply realignment (GSR) costs. The GSR costs result from a
pipeline reforming or terminating supply contracts with producers to
implement the restructuring requirements of FERC Orders in 18 CFR part
284;
(3) Commodity charges. The commodity charge allows the pipeline to
recover the costs of providing service;
(4) Wheeling costs. Hub operators charge a wheeling cost for
transporting gas from one pipeline to either the same or another
pipeline through a market center or hub. A hub is a connected manifold
of pipelines through which a series of incoming pipelines are
interconnected to a series of outgoing pipelines;
(5) Gas Research Institute (GRI) fees. The GRI conducts research,
development, and commercialization programs on natural gas related
topics for the benefit of the U.S. gas industry and gas customers. GRI
fees are allowable provided such fees are mandatory in FERC-approved
tariffs;
(6) Annual Charge Adjustment (ACA) fees. FERC charges these fees to
pipelines to pay for its operating expenses;
(7) Payments (either volumetric or in value) for actual or
theoretical losses. However, theoretical losses are not deductible in
transportation arrangements unless the transportation allowance is
based on arm's-length transportation rates charged under a FERC- or
State regulatory-approved tariff, or ONRR approves your use of a FERC
or State regulatory-approved tariff as an exception from the
requirement to calculate actual costs under Sec. 1206.154(l) of this
subpart. If you or your affiliate receive(s) volumes or credit for line
gain, you must reduce your transportation allowance accordingly and pay
any resulting royalties, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this chapter;
(8) Temporary storage services. This includes short duration
storage services offered by market centers or hubs (commonly referred
to as ``parking'' or ``banking''), or other temporary storage services
provided by pipeline transporters, whether actual or provided as a
matter of accounting. Temporary storage is limited to 30 days or less;
(9) Supplemental costs for compression, dehydration, and treatment
of gas. ONRR allows these costs only if such services are required for
transportation and exceed the services necessary to place production
into marketable condition required under Sec. 1206.146 of this part;
(10) Costs of surety. You may deduct the costs of securing a letter
of credit, or other surety, that the pipeline requires you or your
affiliate as a shipper to maintain under a transportation contract; and
(11) Hurricane Surcharges. You may deduct hurricane surcharges you
or your affiliate actually pay(s).
(c) You may not include the following costs to determine your
transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this section:
(1) Fees or costs incurred for storage. This includes storing
production in a storage facility, whether on or off the lease, for more
than 30 days;
(2) Aggregator/marketer fees. This includes fees you or your
affiliate pay(s) to another person (including your affiliates) to
market your gas, including purchasing and reselling the gas, or finding
or maintaining a market for the gas production;
(3) Penalties you or your affiliate incur(s) as shipper. These
penalties include, but are not limited to:
(i) Over-delivery cash-out penalties. This includes the difference
between the price the pipeline pays you or your affiliate for over-
delivered volumes outside the tolerances and the price you or your
affiliate receive(s) for over-delivered volumes within the tolerances;
(ii) Scheduling penalties. This includes penalties you or your
affiliate incur(s) for differences between daily volumes delivered into
the pipeline and volumes scheduled or nominated at a receipt or
delivery point;
(iii) Imbalance penalties. This includes penalties you or your
affiliate incur(s) (generally on a monthly basis) for differences
between volumes delivered into the pipeline and volumes scheduled or
nominated at a receipt or delivery point; and
(iv) Operational penalties. This includes fees you or your
affiliate incur(s) for violation of the pipeline's curtailment or
operational orders issued to protect the operational integrity of the
pipeline.
(4) Intra-hub transfer fees. These are fees you or your affiliate
pay(s) to hub operators for administrative services (e.g., title
transfer tracking) necessary to account for the sale of gas within a
hub;
(5) Fees paid to brokers. This includes fees you or your affiliate
pay(s) to parties who arrange marketing or transportation, if such fees
are separately identified from aggregator/marketer fees;
(6) Fees paid to scheduling service providers. This includes fees
you or your affiliate pay(s) to parties who provide scheduling
services, if such fees are separately identified from aggregator/
marketer fees;
(7) Internal costs. This includes salaries and related costs, rent/
space costs, office equipment costs, legal fees, and other costs to
schedule, nominate, and account for sale or movement of production; and
(8) Other nonallowable costs. Any cost you or your affiliate
incur(s) for services you are required to provide at no cost to the
lessor, including but not limited to, costs to place your gas, residue
gas, or gas plant products into marketable condition disallowed under
Sec. 1206.146 and costs of boosting residue gas disallowed under 30
CFR 1202.151(b).
(d) If you have no written contract for the transportation of gas,
then ONRR will determine your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.144. You may not use this paragraph (d), if you or your affiliate
perform(s) your own transportation.
[[Page 660]]
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.148(a).
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues its determination.
Sec. 1206.154 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have
a non-arm's-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length transportation contract, including situations where you
or your affiliate provide your own transportation services. You must
calculate your transportation allowance based on your or your
affiliate's reasonable, actual costs for transportation during the
reporting period using the procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (h) of this section;
(3) Depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital investment
under paragraph (i)(1) of this section, or you may elect to use a cost
equal to a return on the initial depreciable capital investment in the
transportation system under paragraph (i)(2) of this section. After you
have elected to use either method for a transportation system, you may
not later elect to change to the other alternative without ONRR
approval. If ONRR accepts your request to change methods, you may use
your changed method beginning with the production month following the
month ONRR received your change request; and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage value under paragraph
(i)(1)(iii) of this section, after you have depreciated the
transportation system to its reasonable salvage value.
(c)(1) To the extent not included in costs identified in paragraphs
(e) through (g) of this section, if you or your affiliate incur(s) the
actual transportation costs listed under Sec. 1206.153(b)(2), (5), and
(6) of this subpart under your or your affiliate's non-arm's-length
contract, you may include those costs in your calculations under this
section. You may not include any of the other costs identified under
Sec. 1206.153 (b); and
(2) You may not include in your calculations under this section any
of the nonallowable costs listed under Sec. 1206.153(c).
(d) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(e) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment) that are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(f) Allowable operating expenses include:
(1) Operations supervision and engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating expense
that you can document.
(g) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(i) Maintenance of the transportation system;
(ii) Maintenance of equipment;
(iii) Maintenance labor; and
(iv) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(h) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the transportation system, is an allowable expense.
State and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees,
including royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(i)(1) To calculate depreciation and a return on undepreciated
capital investment, you may elect to use either a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the life of
the reserves that the transportation system services, or a unit of
production method. After you make an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR received your change request.
(i) A change in ownership of a transportation system will not alter
the depreciation schedule the original transporter/lessee established
for purposes of the allowance calculation.
(ii) You may depreciate a transportation system only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(iii)(A) To calculate the return on undepreciated capital
investment, you may use an amount equal to the undepreciated capital
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of
return you determine under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(B) After you have depreciated a transportation system to the
reasonable salvage value, you may continue to include in the allowance
calculation a cost equal to the reasonable salvage value multiplied by
a rate of return under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
(2) As an alternative to using depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, you may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the transportation system multiplied by
the rate of return determined under paragraph (i)(3) of this section.
You may not include depreciation in your allowance.
(3) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(i) You must use the monthly average that BBB rate Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(ii) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
Sec. 1206.155 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-2014 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
transportation contracts, production agreements, operating agreements,
and related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.156 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-2014 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on non-arm's-length transportation costs you or
your affiliate incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm's-length transportation facilities or
arrangements, you must base your initial deduction on estimates of
allowable transportation costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the transportation system as your estimate. If such
data is not available, you must use estimates based on data for similar
transportation systems.
(3) Section 1206.158 applies when you amend your report based on
your actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to calculate the allowance deduction. You
[[Page 661]]
can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this
chapter.
(d) If you are authorized under Sec. 1206.154(j) to use an
exception to the requirement to calculate your actual transportation
costs, you must follow the reporting requirements of Sec. 1206.155.
Sec. 1206.157 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a transportation allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you took an unauthorized
transportation allowance, then you must pay any additional royalties
due, plus late payment interest calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and
1218.102 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your transportation allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit with interest.
(b) If you deduct a transportation allowance on Form ONRR-2014 that
exceeds 50 percent of the value of the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products transported, you must pay late payment interest on the excess
allowance amount taken from the date that amount is taken until the
date you pay the additional royalties due.
(c) If you improperly net a transportation allowance against the
sales value of the residue gas, gas plant products, or unprocessed gas
instead of reporting the allowance as a separate entry on Form ONRR-
2014, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR part 1241.
Sec. 1206.158 What reporting adjustments must I make for
transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation allowance is less than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR-2014 for each month during the allowance
reporting period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of
this chapter from the date you took the deduction to the date you repay
the difference.
(b) If the actual transportation allowance is greater than the
amount you claimed on Form ONRR-2014 for any month during the period
reported on the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit plus
interest.
Sec. 1206.159 What general processing allowances requirements apply
to me?
(a)(1) When you value any gas plant product under Sec. 1206.142(c)
of this subpart, you may deduct from value the reasonable actual costs
of processing.
(2) You do not need ONRR approval before reporting a processing
allowance.
(b) You must allocate processing costs among the gas plant
products. You must determine a separate processing allowance for each
gas plant product and processing plant relationship. ONRR considers
NGLs one product.
(c)(1) You may not apply the processing allowance against the value
of the residue gas.
(2) The processing allowance deduction on the basis of an
individual product may not exceed 66\2/3\ percent of the value of each
gas plant product determined under Sec. 1206.142(c). Before you
calculate the 66\2/3\ percent limit, you must first reduce the value
for any transportation allowances related to post-processing
transportation authorized under Sec. 1206.152.
(3) If ONRR approved your request to take a processing allowance in
excess of the limitation in paragraph (c)(2) of this section under
former Sec. 1206.158(c)(3), that approval is terminated as of
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(4) If ONRR approved your request to take an extraordinary cost
processing allowance under former Sec. 1206.158(d), ONRR terminates
that approval as of [EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE].
(d)(1) ONRR will not allow a processing cost deduction for the
costs of placing lease products in marketable condition, including
dehydration, separation, compression, or storage, even if those
functions are performed off the lease or at a processing plant.
(2) Where gas is processed for the removal of acid gases, commonly
referred to as ``sweetening,'' ONRR will not allow processing cost
deductions for such costs unless the acid gases removed are further
processed into a gas plant product.
(A) In such event, you are eligible for a processing allowance
determined under this subpart.
(B) ONRR will not grant any processing allowance for processing
lease production that is not royalty bearing.
Sec. 1206.160 How do I determine a processing allowance, if I have an
arm's-length processing contract?
(a)(1) If you or your affiliate incur processing costs under an
arm's-length processing contract, you may claim a processing allowance
for the reasonable, actual costs incurred as more fully explained in
paragraph (b) of this section, except as provided in paragraphs
(a)(3)(1) and (a)(3)(ii) of this section and subject to the limitation
in Sec. 1206.159(c)(2).
(2) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is arm's length.
(3) ONRR may determine your processing allowance under Sec.
1206.144, if:
(i) ONRR determines that your or your affiliate's contract reflects
more than the consideration actually transferred either directly or
indirectly from you or your affiliate to the processor for processing;
or
(ii) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length processing contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the processing because you breached your duty to
market the gas for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by
processing your gas at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a processing allowance unreasonably high, if it is 10-percent
higher than the highest reasonable measures of processing costs,
including but not limited to processing allowances reported to ONRR for
gas processed in the same plant or area.
(b)(1) If your or your affiliate's arm's-length processing contract
includes more than one gas plant product and you can determine the
processing costs for each product based on the contract, then you must
determine the processing costs for each gas plant product under the
contract.
(2) If your or your affiliate's arm's-length processing contract
includes more than one gas plant product and you cannot determine the
processing costs attributable to each product from the contract, you
must propose an allocation procedure to ONRR.
(i) You may use your proposed allocation procedure until ONRR
issues its determination.
(ii) You must submit all relevant data to support your proposal.
(iii) ONRR will determine the processing allowance based upon your
proposal and any additional information ONRR deems necessary.
(iv) You must submit the allocation proposal within 3 months of
claiming the allocated deduction on Form ONRR-2014.
(3) You may not take an allowance for the costs of processing lease
production that is not royalty-bearing.
(4) If your or your affiliate's payments for processing under an
arm's-length contract are not based on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
must convert whatever consideration you or your affiliate paid to a
dollar-value equivalent.
(c) If you have no written contract for the arm's-length processing
of gas, then ONRR will determine your processing allowance under Sec.
1206.144. You may not use this paragraph (c) if you or your affiliate
perform(s) your own processing.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.148(a).
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
[[Page 662]]
Sec. 1206.161 How do I determine a processing allowance if I have a
non-arm's-length processing contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length processing contract, including situations where you or
your affiliate provide your own processing services. You must calculate
your processing allowance based on you or your affiliate's reasonable,
actual costs for processing during the reporting period using the
procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) You or your affiliate's actual costs include the following:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of this section;
(3) Depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital investment
in accordance with paragraph (h)(1) of this section, or you may elect
to use a cost equal to the initial depreciable capital investment in
the processing plant under paragraph (h)(2) of this section. After you
have elected to use either method for a processing plant, you may not
later elect to change to the other alternative without ONRR approval.
If ONRR accepts your request to change methods, you may use your
changed method beginning with the production month following the month
ONRR received your change request; and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage value under paragraph
(h)(1)(iii) of this section, after you have depreciated the processing
plant to its reasonable salvage value.
(c) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment), which are an integral part of the processing
plant.
(e) Allowable operating expenses include:
(1) Operations supervision and engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating expense
that you can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(1) Maintenance of the processing plant;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the processing plant, is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation and a return on undepreciated
capital investment, you may elect to use either a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the life of
the reserves which the processing plant services, or a unit-of-
production method. After you make an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR received your change request.
(i) A change in ownership of a processing plant will not alter the
depreciation schedule that the original processor/lessee established
for purposes of the allowance calculation.
(ii) You may depreciate a processing plant only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(iii)(A) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment,
you may use an amount equal to the undepreciated capital investment in
the processing plant multiplied by the rate of return you determine
under paragraph (h)(3) of this section.
(B) After you have depreciated a processing plant to its reasonable
salvage value, you may continue to include in the allowance calculation
a cost equal to the reasonable salvage value multiplied by a rate of
return under paragraph (h)(3) of this section.
(2) You may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable initial
capital investment in the processing plant multiplied by the rate of
return determined under paragraph (h)(3) of this section. You may not
include depreciation in your allowance.
(3) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(i) You must use the monthly average that BBB rate Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(ii) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
(i)(1) You must determine the processing allowance for each gas
plant product based on your or your affiliate's reasonable and actual
cost of processing the gas. You must base your allocation of costs to
each gas plant product upon generally accepted accounting principles.
(2) You may not take an allowance for processing lease production
that is not royalty-bearing.
(j) You may apply for an exception from the requirement to
calculate actual costs under paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(1) ONRR will grant the exception, if:
(i) You have or your affiliate has arm's-length contracts for
processing other gas production at the same processing plant; and
(ii) At least 50-percent of the gas processed annually at the plant
is processed under arm's-length processing contracts.
(2) If ONRR grants the exception, you must use as your processing
allowance the volume-weighted average prices charged other persons
under arm's-length contracts for processing at the same plant.
Sec. 1206.162 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length processing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-2014 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on arm's-length processing costs you or your
affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
processing contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.163 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length processing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-2014 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on non-arm's-length processing costs you or your
affiliate incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm's-length processing facilities or
arrangements, you must base your initial deduction on estimates of
allowable gas processing costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the processing plant as your estimate, if
available. If such data is not available, you must use estimates based
on data for similar processing plants.
(3) Section 1206.165 applies when you amend your report based on
your actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to
[[Page 663]]
calculate the allowance deduction. You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(d) If you are authorized under Sec. 1206.161(j) to use an
exception to the requirement to calculate your actual processing costs,
you must follow the reporting requirements of Sec. 1206.162.
Sec. 1206.164 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a processing allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you took an unauthorized processing
allowance, then you must pay any additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of
this chapter.
(2) If you understated your processing allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit with interest.
(b) If you deduct a processing allowance on Form ONRR-2014 that
exceeds 66\2/3\ percent of the value of a gas plant product, you must
pay late payment interest on the excess allowance amount taken from the
date that amount is taken until the date you pay the additional
royalties due.
(c) If you improperly net a processing allowance against the sales
value of a gas plant product instead of reporting the allowance as a
separate entry on Form ONRR-2014, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under
30 CFR part 1241.
Sec. 1206.165 What reporting adjustments must I make for processing
allowances?
(a) If your actual processing allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR-2014 for each month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late payment
interest calculated under Sec. Sec. 1218.54 and 1218.102 of this
chapter from the date you took the deduction to the date you repay the
difference.
(b) If the actual processing allowance is greater than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR-2014 for any month during the period reported
on the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit plus interest.
0
8. Revise subpart F to read as follows:
Subpart F--Federal Coal
Sec.
1206.250 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
1206.251 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
1206.252 How do I calculate royalty value for coal I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
1206.253 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
1206.254 How will ONRR determine the value of my coal for royalty
purposes?
1206.255 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
royalty under this subpart?
1206.256 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.257 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process considered final?
1206.258 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
1206.259 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
1206.260 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
1206.261 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract or no written arm's-length
contract?
1206.262 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have a
non-arm's-length transportation contract?
1206.263 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.264 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.265 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
1206.266 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
1206.267 What general washing allowance requirements apply to me?
1206.268 How do I determine washing allowances if I have an arm's-
length washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
1206.269 How do I determine washing allowances if I have a non-
arm's-length washing contract?
1206.270 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
washing contract?
1206.271 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
washing contract?
1206.272 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
washing allowance?
1206.273 What reporting adjustments must I make for washing
allowances?
Subpart F--Federal Coal
Sec. 1206.250 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all coal produced from Federal coal
leases. It explains how you, as the lessee, must calculate the value of
production for royalty purposes consistent with the mineral leasing
laws, other applicable laws and lease terms.
(b) The terms ``you'' and ``your'' in this subpart refer to the
lessee.
(c) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute;
(2) A settlement agreement between the United States and a lessee
resulting from administrative or judicial litigation;
(3) A written agreement between the lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the value of production from any
lease that ONRR expects, at least, would approximate the value
established under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of a coal lease subject to this subpart,
then the statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or lease
provision will govern to the extent of the inconsistency.
(d) ONRR may audit and order you to adjust all royalty payments.
Sec. 1206.251 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
(a) You must calculate royalties based on the quantity and quality
of coal at the royalty measurement point that ONRR and BLM jointly
determine.
(b) You must measure coal in short tons using the methods BLM
prescribes for Federal coal leases under 43 CFR part 3000. You must
report coal quantity on appropriate forms required in 30 CFR part
1210--Forms and Reports.
(c)(1) You are not required to pay royalties on coal you produce
and add to stockpiles or inventory until you use, sell, or otherwise
finally dispose of such coal.
(2) ONRR may request BLM to require you to increase your lease bond
if BLM determines that stockpiles or inventory are excessive such that
they increase the risk of resource degradation.
(d) You must pay royalty at the rate specified in your lease at the
time you use, sell, or otherwise finally dispose of the coal.
(e) You must allocate washed coal by attributing the washed coal to
the leases from which it was extracted.
(1) If the wash plant washes coal from only one lease, the quantity
of washed coal allocable to the lease is the total output of washed
coal from the plant.
(2) If the wash plant washes coal from more than one lease, you
must determine the tonnage of washed coal attributable to each lease
by:
(i) First, calculating the input ratio of washed coal allocable to
each lease by dividing the tonnage of coal you input to the wash plant
from each lease by the total tonnage of coal input to the wash plant
from all leases; and
(ii) Then multiplying the input ratio derived under paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of this section by the tonnage of total output of washed coal
from the plant.
Sec. 1206.252 How do I calculate royalty value for coal I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
(a) The value of coal under this section for royalty purposes is
the gross
[[Page 664]]
proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate under the first arm's-length
contract less an applicable transportation allowance determined under
Sec. Sec. 1206.260 through 1206.262 and washing allowance under
Sec. Sec. 1206.267 through 1206.269. You must use this paragraph (a)
to value coal when:
(1) You sell under an arm's-length contract; or
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under
a non-arm's-length contract, and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them, then sells the coal under an arm's-length
contract.
(b) If you have no contract for the sale of coal subject to this
section because you or your affiliate used the coal in a power plant
you or your affiliate own(s) for the generation and sale of electricity
and;
(1) You or your affiliate sell(s) the electricity, then the value
of the coal subject to this section, for royalty purposes, is the gross
proceeds accruing to you for the power plant's arm's-length sales of
the electricity less applicable transportation and washing deductions
determined under Sec. Sec. 1206.260 through 1206.262 and Sec. Sec.
1206.267 through 1206.269 of this subpart and, if applicable,
transmission and generation deductions determined under Sec. Sec.
1206.353 and 1206.352 of subpart H;
(2) You or your affiliate do(es) not sell the electricity at arm's
length (i.e. you or your affiliate deliver(s) the electricity directly
to the grid), then ONRR will determine the value of the coal under
Sec. 1206.254.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the value using
the procedures in Sec. 1206.258(a).
(ii) You may use that method to determine value, for royalty
purposes, until ONRR issues a determination.
(iii) After ONRR issues a determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.253(a)(2).
(c) If you are a coal cooperative, or a member of a coal
cooperative, and:
(1) You sell or transfer coal to another member of the coal
cooperative, and that member of the coal cooperative then sells the
coal under an arm's-length contract, then you must value the coal under
paragraph (a) of this section; or
(2) You sell or transfer coal to another member of the coal
cooperative and the coal is used by you, the coal cooperative, or
another member of the coal cooperative in a power plant for the
generation and sale of electricity, then you must value the coal under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) If you are entitled to take a washing allowance and
transportation allowance for royalty purposes under this section, under
no circumstances may the washing allowance plus the transportation
allowance reduce the royalty value of the coal to zero.
(e) The values in this section do not apply, if ONRR decides to
value your coal under Sec. 1206.254.
Sec. 1206.253 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are
correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and audit the royalties you
report. If ONRR determines that your reported value is inconsistent
with the requirements of this subpart, ONRR will direct you to use a
different measure of royalty value, or decide your value, under Sec.
1206.254.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a different royalty value, you must
either pay any underpaid royalties due, plus late payment interest
calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter or report a credit for,
or request a refund of, any overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR will examine if your or your
affiliate's contract reflects the total consideration actually
transferred, either directly or indirectly, from the buyer to you or
your affiliate for the coal. If ONRR determines that a contract does
not reflect the total consideration, ONRR may decide your value under
Sec. 1206.254.
(c) ONRR may decide to value your coal under Sec. 1206.254 if ONRR
determines that the gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate
under a contract do not reflect reasonable consideration because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) You breached your duty to market the coal for the mutual
benefit of yourself and the lessor by selling your coal at a value that
is unreasonably low. ONRR may consider a sales price unreasonably low
if it is 10-percent less than the lowest other reasonable measures of
market price, including but not limited to, prices reported to ONRR for
like-quality coal; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly valued your coal under
Sec. 1206.252 for any reason, including but not limited to, your or
your affiliate's failure to provide documents to ONRR under 30 CFR part
1212, subpart E.
(d) You have the burden of demonstrating that your or your
affiliate's contract is arm's length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify that the provisions in your or
your affiliate's contract include(s) all of the consideration the buyer
paid you or your affiliate, either directly or indirectly, for the
coal.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or amendment, if you or your
affiliate fail(s) to take proper or timely action to receive prices or
benefits to which you or your affiliate are entitled, you must pay
royalty based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely application for a price
increase or benefit allowed under your or your affiliate's contract,
but the purchaser refuses, and you or your affiliate take reasonable
documented measures to force purchaser compliance, you will not owe
additional royalties unless or until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration resulting from the price increase.
You may not construe this paragraph to permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in
whole or in part, or timely, for a quantity of coal.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make all contracts, contract
revisions, or amendments in writing, and all parties to the contract
must sign the contract, contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to comply with paragraph
(g)(1) of this section, ONRR may decide to value your coal under Sec.
1206.254.
(3) This provision applies notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
Sec. 1206.254 How will ONRR determine the value of my coal for
royalty purposes?
If ONRR decides to value your coal for royalty purposes under Sec.
1206.254, or any other provision in this subpart, then ONRR will
determine value by considering any information we deem relevant, which
may include, but is not limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality coal from the same mine, nearby
mines, same region, or other regions, or washed in the same or nearby
wash plant;
(b) Public sources of price or market information that ONRR deems
reliable, including but not limited to, the price of electricity;
(c) Information available to ONRR and information reported to it,
including but not limited to, on Form ONRR-4430;
(d) Costs of transportation or washing, if ONRR determines they are
applicable; or
(e) Any other information ONRR deems relevant regarding the
particular lease operation or the salability of the coal.
[[Page 665]]
Sec. 1206.255 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
royalty under this subpart?
If you value your coal under this subpart, you must retain all data
relevant to the determination of the royalty you paid. You can find
recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the royalty value, including all allowable
deductions; and
(2) How you complied with this subpart.
(b) Upon request, you must submit all data to ONRR. You must comply
with any such requirement within the time ONRR specifies.
Sec. 1206.256 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
(a) You must place coal in marketable condition and market the coal
for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the
Federal Government.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an arm's-length contract to
determine royalty, you must increase those gross proceeds to the extent
that the purchaser, or any other person, provides certain services that
you normally are responsible to perform to place the coal in marketable
condition or to market the coal.
Sec. 1206.257 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation,
monitoring, or other like process considered final?
Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
ONRR will not consider any audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process that results in ONRR redetermining royalty due,
under this subpart, final or binding as against the Federal Government
or its beneficiaries unless ONRR chooses to formally close the audit
period in writing.
Sec. 1206.258 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
(a) You may request a valuation determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any coal produced. Your request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases involved, all interest owners
of those leases, and the operator(s) for those leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant facts. You must inform ONRR of
any changes to relevant facts that occur before we respond to your
request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the issue(s), including citations to
all relevant precedents (including adverse precedents); and
(6) Suggest a proposed valuation method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR may:
(1) Request that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a determination; or
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR will not provide a
determination or guidance. Situations in which ONRR typically will not
provide any determination or guidance include, but are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of pending litigation or
administrative appeals.
(c)(1) A determination the Assistant Secretary for Policy,
Management and Budget signs is binding on both you and ONRR until the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues a determination, you must
make any adjustments in royalty payments that follow from the
determination and, if you owe additional royalties, you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter.
(3) A determination the Assistant Secretary signs is the final
action of the Department and is subject to judicial review under 5
U.S.C. 701-706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not binding on ONRR, delegated States,
or you with respect to the specific situation addressed in the
guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR's decision whether or not to issue guidance
or request an Assistant Secretary determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not appealable decisions or orders
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring you to pay royalty on the
same basis as the guidance, you may appeal that order under 30 CFR part
1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary may use any of the applicable
criteria in this subpart to provide guidance or make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute or regulation on which ONRR
based any guidance, or the Assistant Secretary based any determination,
takes precedence over the determination or guidance after the effective
date of the statute or regulation, regardless of whether ONRR or the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds the guidance or determination.
(g) ONRR may make requests and replies under this section available
to the public, subject to the confidentiality requirements under Sec.
1206.259.
Sec. 1206.259 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
(a) Certain information you or your affiliate submit(s) to ONRR
regarding royalties on coal, including deductions and allowances, may
be exempt from disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and regulations permit, ONRR will
keep confidential any data you or your affiliate submit(s) that is
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt from disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all requests for information under
the Freedom of Information Act regulations of the Department of the
Interior at 43 CFR part 2.
Sec. 1206.260 What general transportation allowance requirements
apply to me?
(a)(1) ONRR will allow a deduction for the reasonable, actual costs
to transport coal from the lease to the point off the lease or mine as
determined under Sec. 1206.261 or Sec. 1206.262, as applicable.
(2) You do not need ONRR approval before reporting a transportation
allowance for costs incurred.
(b) You may take a transportation allowance when:
(1) You value coal under Sec. 1206.252 of this part;
(2) You transport the coal from a Federal lease to a sales point,
which is remote from both the lease and mine; or
(3) You transport the coal from a Federal lease to a wash plant
when that plant is remote from both the lease and mine and, if
applicable, from the wash plant to a remote sales point.
(c) You may not take an allowance for:
(1) Transporting lease production that is not royalty-bearing;
(2) In-mine movement of your coal; or
(3) Costs to move a particular tonnage of production for which you
did not incur those costs.
(d) You only may claim a transportation allowance when you sell the
coal and pay royalties.
(e) You must allocate transportation allowances to the coal
attributed to the lease from which it was extracted.
(1) If you commingle coal produced from Federal and non-Federal
leases, you may not disproportionately allocate transportation costs to
Federal lease production. Your allocation must use the same proportion
as the ratio of the tonnage from the Federal lease production to the
tonnage from all production.
(2) If you commingle coal produced from more than one Federal
lease, you
[[Page 666]]
must allocate transportation costs to each Federal lease as
appropriate. Your allocation must use the same proportion as the ratio
of the tonnage of each Federal lease production to the tonnage of all
production.
(3) For washed coal, you must allocate the total transportation
allowance only to washed products.
(4) For unwashed coal, you may take a transportation allowance for
the total coal transported.
(5)(i) You must report your transportation costs on Form ONRR-4430
as clean coal short tons sold during the reporting period multiplied by
the sum of the per-short-ton cost of transporting the raw tonnage to
the wash plant and, if applicable, the per-short-ton cost of
transporting the clean coal tons from the wash plant to a remote sales
point.
(ii) You must determine the cost per short ton of clean coal
transported by dividing the total applicable transportation cost by the
number of clean coal tons resulting from washing the raw coal
transported.
(f) You must express transportation allowances for coal as a
dollar-value equivalent per short ton of coal transported. If you do
not base your or your affiliate's payments for transportation under a
transportation contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you must convert
whatever consideration you or your affiliate paid to a dollar-value
equivalent.
(g) ONRR may determine your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.254 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the transportation because you breached your duty to
market the coal for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by
transporting your coal at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance unreasonably high if it is 10-
percent higher than the highest reasonable measures of transportation
costs including, but not limited to, transportation allowances reported
to ONRR and the cost to transport coal through the same transportation
system; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly calculated a
transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.261 or Sec. 1206.262 for any
reason including, but not limited to, your or your affiliate's failure
to provide documents that ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart
E.
Sec. 1206.261 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have
an arm's-length transportation contract or no written arm's-length
contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s) transportation costs under an
arm's-length transportation contract, you may claim a transportation
allowance for the reasonable, actual costs incurred for transporting
the coal under that contract.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is at arm's length.
(c) If you have no written contract for the arm's-length
transportation of coal, then ONRR will determine your transportation
allowance under Sec. 1206.254. You may not use this paragraph (c) if
you or your affiliate perform(s) your own transportation.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.258(a).
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
Sec. 1206.262 How do I determine a transportation allowance for a
non-arm's-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length transportation contract, including situations where you
or your affiliate provide your own transportation services. You must
calculate your transportation allowance based on your or your
affiliate's reasonable, actual costs for transportation during the
reporting period using the procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of this section;
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h) of this section and a return
on undepreciated capital investment under paragraph (i) of this
section, or you may elect to use a cost equal to a return on the
initial depreciable capital investment in the transportation system
under paragraph (j) of this section. After you have elected to use
either method for a transportation system, you may not later elect to
change to the other alternative without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts
your request to change methods, you may use your changed method
beginning with the production month following the month ONRR received
your change request; and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage value, under paragraph (i)
of this section, after you have depreciated the transportation system
to its reasonable salvage value.
(c) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment), which are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(e) Allowable operating expenses include:
(1) Operations supervision and engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating
expenses that you can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(1) Maintenance of the transportation system;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the transportation system, is an allowable expense.
State and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees,
including royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you may elect to use either (i) a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of the
transportation system or the life of the reserves which the
transportation system services, or (ii) a unit-of-production method.
After you make an election, you may not change methods without ONRR
approval. If ONRR accepts your request to change methods, you may use
your changed method beginning with the production month following the
month ONRR received your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a transportation system will not alter
the depreciation schedule that the original transporter/lessee
established for purposes of the allowance calculation.
(3) You may depreciate a transportation system only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(i)(1) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment,
you must multiply the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the
beginning of the period for which you
[[Page 667]]
are calculating the transportation allowance by the rate of return
provided in paragraph (k) of this section.
(2) After you have depreciated a transportation system to its
reasonable salvage value, you may continue to include in the allowance
calculation a cost equal to the reasonable salvage value multiplied by
a rate of return determined under paragraph (k) of this section.
(j) As an alternative to using depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, you may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the transportation system multiplied by
the rate of return determined under paragraph (k) of this section. You
may not include depreciation in your allowance
(k) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average BBB rate that Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues a determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.266.
Sec. 1206.263 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
transportation contracts, production agreements, operating agreements,
and related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.264 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on non-arm's-length transportation costs you or
your affiliate incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm's-length transportation facilities or
arrangements, you must base your initial deduction on estimates of
allowable transportation costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the transportation system as your estimate, if
available. If such data is not available, you must use estimates based
on data for similar transportation systems.
(3) Section 1206.266 applies when you amend your report based on
the actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to calculate the allowance deduction. You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.265 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a transportation allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you took an unauthorized
transportation allowance, then you must pay any additional royalties
due, plus late payment interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this
chapter.
(2) If you understated your transportation allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a transportation allowance against the
sales value of the coal instead of reporting the allowance as a
separate entry on Form ONRR-4430, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under
30 CFR part 1241.
Sec. 1206.266 What reporting adjustments must I make for
transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation allowance is less than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for each month during the allowance
reporting period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter from
the date you took the deduction to the date you repay the difference.
(b) If the actual transportation allowance is greater than the
amount you claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for any month during the period
reported on the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit without
interest.
Sec. 1206.267 What general washing allowance requirements apply to
me?
(a)(1) If you determine the value of your coal under Sec. 1206.252
of this subpart, you may take a washing allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs to wash coal. The allowance is a deduction when
determining coal royalty value for the costs you incur to wash coal.
(2) You do not need ONRR approval before reporting a washing
allowance.
(b) You may not:
(1) Take an allowance for the costs of washing lease production
that is not royalty bearing;
(2) Disproportionately allocate washing costs to Federal leases.
You must allocate washing costs to washed coal attributable to each
Federal lease by multiplying the input ratio determined under Sec.
1206.251(e)(2)(i) by the total allowable costs.
(c)(1) You must express washing allowances for coal as a dollar-
value equivalent per short ton of coal washed.
(2) If you do not base your or your affiliate's payments for
washing under an arm's-length contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
must convert whatever consideration you or your affiliate paid to a
dollar-value equivalent.
(d) ONRR may determine your washing allowance under Sec. 1206.254
because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length washing contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the washing because you breached your duty to market
the coal for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by washing
your coal at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may consider a
washing allowance unreasonably high if it is 10-percent higher than the
highest other reasonable measures of washing, including but not limited
to, washing allowances reported to ONRR and costs for coal washed in
the same plant or other plants in the region; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly calculated a washing
allowance under Sec. Sec. 1206.267 through 1206.269 for any reason,
including but not limited to, your or your affiliate's failure to
provide documents that ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart E.
(e) You only may claim a washing allowance, when you sell the
washed coal and report and pay royalties.
Sec. 1206.268 How do I determine washing allowances if I have an
arm's-length washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s) washing costs under an arm's-
length washing contract, you may claim a washing allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is arm's length.
(c) If you have no written contract for the arm's-length washing of
coal, then ONRR will determine your washing allowance under Sec.
1206.254. You may not use this paragraph (c) if you or your affiliate
perform(s) your own washing. If you or your affiliate perform(s) the
washing, then:
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.258(a).
[[Page 668]]
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
Sec. 1206.269 How do I determine washing allowances if I have a non-
arm's-length washing contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length washing contract, including situations where you or
your affiliate provides your own washing services. You must calculate
your washing allowance based on your or your affiliate's reasonable,
actual costs for washing during the reporting period using the
procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs can include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of this section;
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h) of this section and a return
on undepreciated capital investment under paragraph (i) of this
section, or you may elect to use a cost equal to a return on the
initial depreciable capital investment in the wash plant under
paragraph (j) of this section. After you have elected to use either
method for a wash plant, you may not later elect to change to the other
alternative without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to
change methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the
production month following the month ONRR received your change request;
and
(4) A return on the reasonable salvage value, under paragraph (i)
of this section, after you have depreciated the wash plant to its
reasonable salvage value.
(c) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment), which are an integral part of the wash plant.
(e) Allowable operating expenses include:
(1) Operations supervision and engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating
expenses that you can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(1) Maintenance of the wash plant;
(2) Maintenance of equipment; and
(3) Maintenance labor.
(4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the wash plant, is an allowable expense. State and
Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of the wash plant
or the life of the reserves which the wash plant services, or a unit-
of-production method. After you make an election, you may not change
methods without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to change
methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the production
month following the month ONRR received your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a wash plant will not alter the
depreciation schedule that the original washer/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(3) With or without a change in ownership, you may depreciate a
wash plant only once.
(i)(1) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment,
you must multiply the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the
beginning of the period for which you are calculating the washing
allowance by the rate of return provided in paragraph (k) of this
section.
(2) After you have depreciated a wash plant to its reasonable
salvage value, you may continue to include in the allowance calculation
a cost equal to the salvage value multiplied by a rate of return
determined under paragraph (k) of this section.
(j) As an alternative to using depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, you may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the wash plant multiplied by the rate of
return as determined under paragraph (k) of this section. You may not
include depreciation in your allowance.
(k) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average BBB rate that Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues its determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.273.
Sec. 1206.270 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length washing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on washing costs you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
washing contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.271 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length washing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on non-arm's-length washing costs you or your
affiliate incur(s).
(b)(1) For new non-arm's-length washing facilities or arrangements,
you must base your initial deduction on estimates of allowable washing
costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the wash plant as your estimate, if available. If
such data is not available, you must use estimates based on data for
similar wash plants.
(3) Section 1206.273 applies when you amend your report based on
the actual costs.
(c) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to calculate the allowance deduction. You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
Sec. 1206.272 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a washing allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you took an unauthorized washing
allowance, then you must pay any additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your washing allowance, you may be entitled
to a credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a washing allowance against the sales
value of the coal instead of reporting the allowance as a separate
entry on Form ONRR-4430, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR
part 1241.
[[Page 669]]
Sec. 1206.273 What reporting adjustments must I make for washing
allowances?
(a) If your actual washing allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for each month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late payment
interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter from the date
you took the deduction to the date you repay the difference.
(b) If the actual washing allowance is greater than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for any month during the period reported on
the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit without interest.
0
9. Revise subpart J to read as follows:
Subpart J--Indian Coal
Sec.
1206.450 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
1206.451 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
1206.452 How do I calculate royalty value for coal I or my affiliate
sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
1206.453 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are correct?
1206.454 How will ONRR determine the value of my coal for royalty
purposes?
1206.455 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
royalty under this subpart?
1206.456 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
1206.457 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process considered final?
1206.458 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
1206.459 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
1206.460 What general transportation allowance requirements apply to
me?
1206.461 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have an
arm's-length transportation contract or no written arm's-length
contract?
1206.462 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have a
non-arm's-length transportation contract?
1206.463 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
transportation contract?
1206.464 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
transportation contract or no written arm's-length contract?
1206.465 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
transportation allowance?
1206.466 What reporting adjustments must I make for transportation
allowances?
1206.467 What general washing allowance requirements regarding apply
to me?
1206.468 How do I determine a washing allowance if I have an arm's-
length washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
1206.469 How do I determine a washing allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length washing contract?
1206.470 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-length
washing contract?
1206.471 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-length
washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
1206.472 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly report a
washing allowance?
1206.473 What reporting adjustments must I make for washing
allowances?
Subpart J--Indian Coal
Sec. 1206.450 What is the purpose and scope of this subpart?
(a) This subpart applies to all coal produced from Indian tribal
coal leases and coal leases on land held by individual Indian mineral
owners. It explains how you, as the lessee, must calculate the value of
production for royalty purposes consistent with the mineral leasing
laws, other applicable laws, and lease terms (except leases on the
Osage Indian Reservation, Osage County, Oklahoma).
(b) The terms ``you'' and ``your'' in this subpart refer to the
lessee.
(c) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with:
(1) A Federal statute or treaty;
(2) A settlement agreement;
(3) A written agreement between the lessee and the ONRR Director
establishing a method to determine the value of production from any
lease that ONRR expects, at least, would approximate the value
established under this subpart; or
(4) An express provision of a coal lease subject to this subpart,
then the statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or lease
provision will govern to the extent of the inconsistency.
(d) ONRR may audit and order you to adjust all royalty payments.
(e) The regulations in this subpart, intended to ensure that the
trust responsibilities of the United States with respect to the
administration of Indian coal leases, are discharged under the
requirements of the governing mineral leasing laws, treaties, and lease
terms.
Sec. 1206.451 How do I determine royalty quantity and quality?
(a) You must calculate royalties based on the quantity and quality
of coal at the royalty measurement point that ONRR and BLM jointly
determine.
(b) You must measure coal in short tons using the methods BLM
prescribes for Indian coal leases. You must report coal quantity on
appropriate forms required in 30 CFR part 1210.
(c)(1) You are not required to pay royalties on coal you produce
and add to stockpiles or inventory until you use, sell, or otherwise
finally dispose of such coal.
(2) ONRR may request BLM to require you to increase your lease bond
if BLM determines that stockpiles or inventory are excessive such that
they increase the risk of resource degradation.
(d) You must pay royalty at the rate specified in your lease at the
time you use, sell, or otherwise finally dispose of the coal.
(e) You must allocate washed coal by attributing the washed coal to
the leases from which it was extracted.
(1) If the wash plant washes coal from only one lease, the quantity
of washed coal allocable to the lease is the total output of washed
coal from the plant.
(2) If the wash plant washes coal from more than one lease, you
must determine the tonnage of washed coal attributable to each lease
by:
(i) First, calculating the input ratio of washed coal allocable to
each lease by dividing the tonnage of coal you input to the wash plant
from each lease by the total tonnage of coal input to the wash plant
from all leases; and
(ii) Then multiplying the input ratio derived under paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of this section by the tonnage of total output of washed coal
from the plant.
Sec. 1206.452 How do I calculate royalty value for coal I or my
affiliate sell(s) under an arm's-length or non-arm's-length contract?
(a) The value of coal under this section for royalty purposes is
the gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate under the first
arm's-length contract less an applicable transportation allowance
determined under Sec. Sec. 1206.460 through 1206.462 and washing
allowance under Sec. Sec. 1206.467 through 1206.469. You must use this
paragraph (a) to value coal when:
(1) You sell under an arm's-length contract; or
(2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under
a non-arm's-length contract, and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them, then sells the coal under an arm's-length
contract.
(b) If you have no contract for the sale of coal subject to this
section because you or your affiliate used the coal in a power plant
you or your affiliate own(s) for the generation and sale of electricity
and;
(1) You or your affiliate sell(s) the electricity, then the value
of the coal subject to this section, for royalty purposes, is the gross
proceeds accruing to you for the power plant's arm's-
[[Page 670]]
length sales of the electricity less applicable transportation and
washing deductions determined under Sec. Sec. 1206.460 through
1206.462 and Sec. Sec. 1206.467 through 1206.469 of this subpart and,
if applicable, transmission and generation deductions determined under
Sec. Sec. 1206.353 and 1206.352 of subpart H;
(2) You or your affiliate do(es) not sell the electricity at arm's
length (i.e. you or your affiliate deliver(s) the electricity directly
to the grid), then ONRR will determine the value of the coal under
Sec. 1206.454.
(i) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the value using
the procedures in Sec. 1206.458(a).
(ii) You may use that method to determine value, for royalty
purposes, until ONRR issues a determination.
(iii) After ONRR issues a determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.453(a)(2).
(c) If you are a coal cooperative, or a member of a coal
cooperative, and;
(1) You sell or transfer coal to another member of the coal
cooperative, and that member of the coal cooperative then sells the
coal under an arm's-length contract, then you must value the coal under
paragraph (a) of this section; or
(2) You sell or transfer coal to another member of the coal
cooperative, and the coal is used by you, the coal cooperative, or
another member of the coal cooperative, in a power plant for the
generation and sale of electricity, then you must value the coal under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) If you are entitled to take a washing allowance and
transportation allowance for royalty purposes under this section, under
no circumstances may the washing allowance plus the transportation
allowance reduce the royalty value of the coal to zero.
(e) The values in this section do not apply, if ONRR decides to
value your coal under Sec. 1206.454.
Sec. 1206.453 How will ONRR determine if my royalty payments are
correct?
(a)(1) ONRR may monitor, review, and audit the royalties you
report. If ONRR determines that your reported value is inconsistent
with the requirements of this subpart, ONRR will direct you to use a
different measure of royalty value, or decide your value, under Sec.
1206.454.
(2) If ONRR directs you to use a different royalty value, you must
either pay any underpaid royalties plus late payment interest
calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter or report a credit for,
or request a refund of, any overpaid royalties.
(b) When the provisions in this subpart refer to gross proceeds, in
conducting reviews and audits, ONRR will examine if your or your
affiliate's contract reflects the total consideration actually
transferred, either directly or indirectly, from the buyer to you or
your affiliate for the coal. If ONRR determines that a contract does
not reflect the total consideration, ONRR may decide your value under
Sec. 1206.454.
(c) ONRR may decide to value your coal under Sec. 1206.454, if
ONRR determines that the gross proceeds accruing to you or your
affiliate under a contract do not reflect reasonable consideration
because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) You breached your duty to market the coal for the mutual
benefit of yourself and the lessor by selling your coal at a value that
is unreasonably low. ONRR may consider a sales price unreasonably low,
if it is 10-percent less than the lowest other reasonable measures of
market price, including but not limited to, prices reported to ONRR for
like-quality coal; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly valued your coal under
Sec. 1206.452 for any reason, including but not limited to, your or
your affiliate's failure to provide documents to ONRR under 30 CFR part
1212, subpart E.
(d) You have the burden of demonstrating that your or your
affiliate's contract is arm's length.
(e) ONRR may require you to certify that the provisions in your or
your affiliate's contract include(s) all of the consideration the buyer
paid you or your affiliate, either directly or indirectly, for the
coal.
(f)(1) Absent contract revision or amendment, if you or your
affiliate fail(s) to take proper or timely action to receive prices or
benefits to which you or your affiliate are entitled, you must pay
royalty based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
(2) If you or your affiliate make timely application for a price
increase or benefit allowed under your or your affiliate's contract,
but the purchaser refuses, and you or your affiliate take reasonable
documented measures to force purchaser compliance, you will not owe
additional royalties unless or until you or your affiliate receive
additional monies or consideration resulting from the price increase.
You may not construe this paragraph to permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in
whole or in part, or timely, for a quantity of coal.
(g)(1) You or your affiliate must make all contracts, contract
revisions, or amendments in writing, and all parties to the contract
must sign the contract, contract revisions, or amendments.
(2) If you or your affiliate fail(s) to comply with paragraph
(g)(1) of this section, ONRR may decide to value your coal under Sec.
1206.454.
(3) This provision applies notwithstanding any other provisions in
this title 30 to the contrary.
Sec. 1206.454 How will ONRR determine the value of my coal for
royalty purposes?
If ONRR decides to value your coal for royalty purposes under Sec.
1206.454, or any other provision in this subpart, then ONRR will
determine value by considering any information we deem relevant, which
may include, but is not limited to:
(a) The value of like-quality coal from the same mine, nearby
mines, same region, or other regions, or washed in the same or nearby
wash plant;
(b) Public sources of price or market information that ONRR deems
reliable, including but not limited to, the price of electricity;
(c) Information available to ONRR and information reported to it,
including but not limited to, on Form ONRR-4430;
(d) Costs of transportation or washing, if ONRR determines they are
applicable; or
(e) Any other information ONRR deems relevant regarding the
particular lease operation or the salability of the coal.
Sec. 1206.455 What records must I keep to support my calculations of
royalty under this subpart?
If you value your coal under this subpart, you must retain all data
relevant to the determination of the royalty you paid. You can find
recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(a) You must show:
(1) How you calculated the royalty value, including all allowable
deductions; and
(2) How you complied with this subpart.
(b) Upon request, you must submit all data to ONRR or the
representative of the Indian lessor, or to the Inspector General of the
Department of the Interior or other persons authorized to receive such
information. Such data may include arm's-length sales and sales
quantity data for like-quality coal sold, purchased, or otherwise
obtained by you or your affiliate from the same mine, nearby mines,
same region, or other regions. You must comply with any such
requirement within the time ONRR specifies.
[[Page 671]]
Sec. 1206.456 What are my responsibilities to place production into
marketable condition and to market production?
(a) You must place coal in marketable condition and market the coal
for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the
Indian lessor.
(b) If you use gross proceeds under an arm's-length contract to
determine royalty, you must increase those gross proceeds to the extent
that the purchaser, or any other person, provides certain services that
you normally are responsible to perform to place the coal in marketable
condition or to market the coal.
Sec. 1206.457 When is an ONRR audit, review, reconciliation,
monitoring, or other like process considered final?
Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
ONRR will not consider any audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process that results in ONRR redetermining royalty due,
under this subpart, final or binding as against the Federal Government
or its beneficiaries unless ONRR chooses to formally close the audit
period in writing.
Sec. 1206.458 How do I request a valuation determination or guidance?
(a) You may request a valuation determination or guidance from ONRR
regarding any coal produced. Your request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Identify specifically all leases involved, all interest owners
of those leases, and the operator(s) for those leases;
(3) Completely explain all relevant facts. You must inform ONRR of
any changes to relevant facts that occur before we respond to your
request;
(4) Include copies of all relevant documents;
(5) Provide your analysis of the issue(s), including citations to
all relevant precedents (including adverse precedents); and
(6) Suggest a proposed valuation method.
(b) In response to your request, ONRR may:
(1) Request that the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management and
Budget issue a determination; or
(2) Decide that ONRR will issue guidance; or
(3) Inform you in writing that ONRR will not provide a
determination or guidance. Situations in which ONRR typically will not
provide any determination or guidance include, but are not limited to:
(i) Requests for guidance on hypothetical situations; and
(ii) Matters that are the subject of pending litigation or
administrative appeals.
(c)(1) A determination the Assistant Secretary for Policy,
Management and Budget signs is binding on both you and ONRR until the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it.
(2) After the Assistant Secretary issues a determination, you must
make any adjustments in royalty payments that follow from the
determination and, if you owe additional royalties, you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus late payment interest calculated under
Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter.
(3) A determination the Assistant Secretary signs is the final
action of the Department and is subject to judicial review under 5
U.S.C. 701-706.
(d) Guidance ONRR issues is not binding on ONRR, Tribes, individual
Indian mineral owners, or you with respect to the specific situation
addressed in the guidance.
(1) Guidance and ONRR's decision whether or not to issue guidance
or request an Assistant Secretary determination, or neither, under
paragraph (b) of this section, are not appealable decisions or orders
under 30 CFR part 1290.
(2) If you receive an order requiring you to pay royalty on the
same basis as the guidance, you may appeal that order under 30 CFR part
1290.
(e) ONRR or the Assistant Secretary may use any of the applicable
criteria in this subpart to provide guidance or make a determination.
(f) A change in an applicable statute or regulation on which ONRR
based any guidance, or the Assistant Secretary based any determination,
takes precedence over the determination or guidance after the effective
date of the statute or regulation, regardless of whether ONRR or the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds the guidance or determination.
(g) ONRR may make requests and replies under this section available
to the public, subject to the confidentiality requirements under Sec.
1206.459.
Sec. 1206.459 Does ONRR protect information I provide?
(a) Certain information you or your affiliate submit(s) to ONRR
regarding royalties on coal, including deductions and allowances, may
be exempt from disclosure.
(b) To the extent applicable laws and regulations permit, ONRR will
keep confidential any data you or your affiliate submit(s) that is
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt from disclosure.
(c) You and others must submit all requests for information under
the Freedom of Information Act regulations of the Department of the
Interior at 43 CFR part 2.
Sec. 1206.460 What general transportation allowance requirements
apply to me?
(a)(1) ONRR will allow a deduction for the reasonable, actual costs
to transport coal from the lease to the point off the lease or mine as
determined under Sec. 1206.461 or Sec. 1206.462, as applicable.
(2) Before you may take any transportation allowance, you must
submit a completed page 1 of Form ONRR-4293, Coal Transportation
Allowance Report, under sections Sec. 1206.463 and Sec. 1206.464 of
this subpart. You may claim a transportation allowance retroactively
for a period of not more than 3 months prior to the first day of the
month that ONRR receives your Form ONRR-4293.
(3) You may not use a transportation allowance that was in effect
before [EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE]. You must use the provisions
of this subpart to determine your transportation allowance.
(b) You may take a transportation allowance when:
(1) You value coal under Sec. 1206.452 of this part;
(2) You transport the coal from an Indian lease to a sales point
which, is remote from both the lease and mine; or
(3) You transport the coal from an Indian lease to a wash plant
when that plant is remote from both the lease and mine and, if
applicable, from the wash plant to a remote sales point.
(c) You may not take an allowance for:
(1) Transporting lease production that is not royalty-bearing;
(2) In-mine movement of your coal; or
(3) Costs to move a particular tonnage of production for which you
did not incur those costs.
(d) You only may claim a transportation allowance when you sell the
coal and pay royalties.
(e) You must allocate transportation allowances to the coal
attributed to the lease from which it was extracted.
(1) If you commingle coal produced from Indian and non-Indian
leases, you may not disproportionately allocate transportation costs to
Indian lease production. Your allocation must use the same proportion
as the ratio of the tonnage from the Indian lease production to the
tonnage from all production.
(2) If you commingle coal produced from more than one Indian lease,
you must allocate transportation costs to each Indian lease as
appropriate. Your allocation must use the same proportion as the ratio
of the tonnage of each Indian
[[Page 672]]
leases production to the tonnage of all production.
(3) For washed coal, you must allocate the total transportation
allowance only to washed products.
(4) For unwashed coal, you may take a transportation allowance for
the total coal transported.
(5)(i) You must report your transportation costs on Form ONRR-4430
as clean coal short tons sold during the reporting period multiplied by
the sum of the per short-ton cost of transporting the raw tonnage to
the wash plant and, if applicable, the per short-ton cost of
transporting the clean coal tons from the wash plant to a remote sales
point.
(ii) You must determine the cost per short ton of clean coal
transported by dividing the total applicable transportation cost by the
number of clean coal tons resulting from washing the raw coal
transported.
(f) You must express transportation allowances for coal as a
dollar-value equivalent per short ton of coal transported. If you do
not base your or your affiliate's payments for transportation under a
transportation contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you must convert
whatever consideration you or your affiliate paid to a dollar-value
equivalent.
(g) ONRR may determine your transportation allowance under Sec.
1206.454 because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the transportation because you breached your duty to
market the coal for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by
transporting your coal at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may
consider a transportation allowance unreasonably high if it is 10-
percent higher than the highest reasonable measures of transportation
costs including, but not limited to, transportation allowances reported
to ONRR and the cost to transport coal through the same transportation
system; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly calculated a
transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.461 or Sec. 1206.462 for any
reason including, but not limited to, your or your affiliate's failure
to provide documents that ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart
E.
Sec. 1206.461 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have
an arm's-length transportation contract or no written arm's-length
contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s) transportation costs under an
arm's-length transportation contract, you may claim a transportation
allowance for the reasonable, actual costs incurred for transporting
the coal under that contract.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is at arm's length.
(c) If you have no written contract for the arm's-length
transportation of coal, then ONRR will determine your transportation
allowance under Sec. 1206.454. You may not use this paragraph (c) if
you or your affiliate perform(s) your own transportation.
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.458(a).
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
Sec. 1206.462 How do I determine a transportation allowance if I have
a non-arm's-length transportation contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length transportation contract, including situations where you
or your affiliate provide your own transportation services. Calculate
your transportation allowance based on your or your affiliate's
reasonable, actual costs for transportation during the reporting period
using the procedures prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of this section; and
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h) of this section and a return
on undepreciated capital investment under paragraph (i) of this
section, or you may elect to use a cost equal to a return on the
initial depreciable capital investment in the transportation system
under paragraph (j) of this section. After you have elected to use
either method for a transportation system, you may not later elect to
change to the other alternative without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts
your request to change methods, you may use your changed method
beginning with the production month following the month ONRR received
your change request.
(c) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment) which are an integral part of the transportation
system.
(e) Allowable operating expenses include:
(1) Operations supervision and engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating expense
that you can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(1) Maintenance of the transportation system;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the transportation system, is an allowable expense.
State and Federal income taxes and Indian tribal severance taxes and
other fees, including royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of the
transportation system or the life of the reserves which the
transportation system services, or a unit-of-production method. After
you make an election, you may not change methods without ONRR approval.
If ONRR accepts your request to change methods, you may use your
changed method beginning with the production month following the month
ONRR received your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a transportation system will not alter
the depreciation schedule the original transporter/lessee established
for purposes of the allowance calculation.
(3) You may depreciate a transportation system only once with or
without a change in ownership.
(i) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment,
multiply the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the
beginning of the period for which you are calculating the
transportation allowance by the rate of return provided in paragraph
(k) of this section.
(j) As an alternative to using depreciation and a return on
[[Page 673]]
undepreciated capital investment, as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, you may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the transportation system multiplied by
the rate of return determined under paragraph (k) of this section. You
may not include depreciation in your allowance.
(k) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average BBB rate that Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues a determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.466.
Sec. 1206.463 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length transportation contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your affiliate
incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
transportation contracts, production agreements, operating agreements,
and related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
(d)(1) You must submit page 1 of the initial Form ONRR-4293 prior
to, or at the same time as, you report the transportation allowance
determined under an arm's-length contract on Form ONRR-4430.
(2) The initial Form ONRR-4293 is effective beginning with the
production month that you are first authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance and continues until the end of the calendar
year, or until the termination, modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate, whichever is earlier.
(3) After the initial period that ONRR first authorized you to
deduct a transportation allowance and for succeeding periods, you must
submit the entire Form ONRR-4293 by the earlier of:
(i) Within 3 months after the end of the calendar year; or
(ii) After the termination, modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate.
(4) You may request to use an allowance for a longer period than
that required under paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(i) You may use that allowance beginning with the production month
following the month ONRR received your request to use the allowance for
a longer period until ONRR decides whether to approve the longer
period.
(ii) ONRR's decision whether or not to approve a longer period is
not appealable under 30 CFR part 1290.
(iii) If ONRR does not approve the longer period, you must adjust
your transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.466.
Sec. 1206.464 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length transportation contract or no written arm's-length contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on non-arm's-length transportation costs you or
your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to calculate the allowance deduction. You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(c)(1) You must submit an initial Form ONRR-4293 prior to, or at
the same time as, the transportation allowance determined under a non-
arm's-length contract or no written arm's-length contract situation
that you report on Form ONRR-4430. If ONRR receives a Form ONRR-4293 by
the end of the month that the Form ONRR-4430 is due, ONRR will consider
the form timely received. You may base the initial form on estimated
costs.
(2) The initial Form ONRR-4293 is effective beginning with the
production month that you are first authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance and continues until the end of the calendar
year or termination, modification, or amendment of the applicable
contract or rate, whichever is earlier.
(3)(i) At the end of the calendar-year for which you submitted a
Form ONRR-4293 based on estimates, you must submit another completed
Form ONRR-4293 containing the actual costs for that calendar year.
(ii) If the transportation continues, you must include on Form
ONRR-4293 your estimated costs for the next calendar year.
(A) You must base the estimated transportation allowance on the
actual costs for the previous reporting period plus or minus any
adjustments based on your knowledge of decreases or increases that will
affect the allowance.
(B) ONRR must receive Form ONRR-4293 within 3 months after the end
of the previous calendar year.
(d)(1) For new non-arm's-length transportation facilities or
arrangements, on your initial Form ONRR-4293, you must include
estimates of the allowable transportation costs for the applicable
period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the transportation system as your estimate, if
available. If such data is not available, you must use estimates based
on data for similar transportation systems.
(e) Upon ONRR's request, you must submit all data used to prepare
your Form ONRR-4293. You must provide the data within a reasonable
period of time, as ONRR determines.
(f) Section 1206.466 applies when you amend your Form ONRR-4293
based on the actual costs.
Sec. 1206.465 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a transportation allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you took an unauthorized
transportation allowance, then you must pay any additional royalties
due, plus late payment interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this
chapter.
(2) If you understated your transportation allowance, you may be
entitled to a credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a transportation allowance against the
sales value of the coal instead of reporting the allowance as a
separate entry on Form ONRR-4430, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under
30 CFR part 1241.
Sec. 1206.466 What reporting adjustments must I make for
transportation allowances?
(a) If your actual transportation allowance is less than the amount
you claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for each month during the allowance
reporting period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter from
the date you took the deduction to the date you repay the difference.
(b) If the actual transportation allowance is greater than the
amount you claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for any month during the period
reported on the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit without
interest.
Sec. 1206.467 What general washing allowance requirements apply to
me?
(a)(1) If you determine the value of your coal under Sec. 1206.452
of this subpart, you may take a washing allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs to wash coal. The allowance is a deduction when
determining coal royalty value for the costs you incur to wash coal.
(2) Before you may take any deduction, you must submit a completed
page one of Form ONRR-
[[Page 674]]
4292, Coal Washing Allowance Report, under Sec. Sec. 1206.470 and
1206.471 of this subpart. You may claim a washing allowance
retroactively for a period of not more than 3 months prior to the first
day of the month that you have filed Form ONRR-4292 with ONRR.
(3) You may not use a washing allowance that was in effect before
the effective date of the final rule. You must use the provisions of
this subpart to determine your washing allowance.
(b) You may not:
(1) Take an allowance for the costs of washing lease production
that is not royalty bearing;
(2) Disproportionately allocate washing costs to Indian leases. You
must allocate washing costs to washed coal attributable to each Indian
lease by multiplying the input ratio determined under Sec.
1206.451(e)(2)(i) by the total allowable costs.
(c)(1) You must express washing allowances for coal as a dollar-
value equivalent per short ton of coal washed.
(2) If you do not base your or your affiliate's payments for
washing under an arm's-length contract on a dollar-per-unit basis, you
must convert whatever consideration you or your affiliate paid to a
dollar-value equivalent.
(d) ONRR may determine your washing allowance under Sec. 1206.454
because:
(1) There is misconduct by or between the contracting parties;
(2) ONRR determines that the consideration you or your affiliate
paid under an arm's-length washing contract does not reflect the
reasonable cost of the washing because you breached your duty to market
the coal for the mutual benefit of yourself and the lessor by washing
your coal at a cost that is unreasonably high. We may consider a
washing allowance unreasonably high if it is 10-percent higher than the
highest other reasonable measures of washing, including but not limited
to, washing allowances reported to ONRR and costs for coal washed in
the same plant or other plants in the region; or
(3) ONRR cannot determine if you properly calculated a washing
allowance under Sec. Sec. 1206.467 through 1206.469 for any reason,
including but not limited to, your or your affiliate's failure to
provide documents that ONRR requests under 30 CFR part 1212, subpart E.
(e) You only may claim a washing allowance, if you sell the washed
coal and report and pay royalties.
Sec. 1206.468 How do I determine a washing allowance if I have an
arm's-length washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
(a) If you or your affiliate incur(s) washing costs under an arm's-
length washing contract, you may claim a washing allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred.
(b) You must be able to demonstrate that your or your affiliate's
contract is arm's length.
(c) If you have no contract for the washing of coal, then ONRR will
determine your transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.454. You may
not use this paragraph (c), if you or your affiliate perform(s) your
own washing. If you or your affiliate perform(s) the washing, then:
(1) You must propose to ONRR a method to determine the allowance
using the procedures in Sec. 1206.458(a).
(2) You may use that method to determine your allowance until ONRR
issues a determination.
Sec. 1206.469 How do I determine a washing allowance if I have a non-
arm's-length washing contract?
(a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do(es) not have
an arm's-length washing contract, including situations where you or
your affiliate provides your own washing services. Calculate your
washing allowance based on your or your affiliate's reasonable, actual
costs for washing during the reporting period using the procedures
prescribed in this section.
(b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs may include:
(1) Capital costs and operating and maintenance expenses under
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f) of this section;
(2) Overhead under paragraph (g) of this section; and
(3) Depreciation under paragraph (h) of this section and a return
on undepreciated capital investment under paragraph (i) of this
section, or a cost equal to a return on the initial depreciable capital
investment in the wash plant under paragraph (j) of this section. After
you have elected to use either method for a wash plant, you may not
later elect to change to the other alternative without ONRR approval.
If ONRR accepts your request to change methods, you may use your
changed method beginning with the production month following the month
ONRR received your change request.
(c) You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or
part of any other cost that you use under this section.
(d) Allowable capital investment costs are generally those for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation
of capital equipment), which are an integral part of the wash plant.
(e) Allowable operating expenses include:
(1) Operations supervision and engineering;
(2) Operations labor;
(3) Fuel;
(4) Utilities;
(5) Materials;
(6) Ad valorem property taxes;
(7) Rent;
(8) Supplies; and
(9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating
expenses that you can document.
(f) Allowable maintenance expenses include:
(1) Maintenance of the wash plant;
(2) Maintenance of equipment;
(3) Maintenance labor; and
(4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
that you can document.
(g) Overhead, directly attributable and allocable to the operation
and maintenance of the wash plant is an allowable expense. State and
Federal income taxes and Indian tribal severance taxes and other fees,
including royalties, are not allowable expenses.
(h)(1) To calculate depreciation, you may elect to use either (i) a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of the wash plant
or the life of the reserves which the wash plant services, or (ii) a
unit-of-production method. After you make an election, you may not
change methods without ONRR approval. If ONRR accepts your request to
change methods, you may use your changed method beginning with the
production month following the month ONRR received your change request.
(2) A change in ownership of a wash plant will not alter the
depreciation schedule the original washer/lessee established for
purposes of the allowance calculation.
(3) With or without a change in ownership, you may depreciate a
wash plant only once.
(i) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment,
multiply the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the
beginning of the period for which you are calculating the washing
allowance by the rate of return provided in paragraph (k) of this
section.
(j) As an alternative to using depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment, as provided under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, you may use as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial
[[Page 675]]
capital investment in the wash plant multiplied by the rate of return
as determined under paragraph (k) of this section. You may not include
depreciation in your allowance.
(k) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating.
(1) You must use the monthly average BBB rate that Standard &
Poor's publishes for the first month for which the allowance is
applicable.
(2) You must redetermine the rate at the beginning of each
subsequent calendar year.
(3) After ONRR issues its determination, you must make the
adjustments under Sec. 1206.473.
Sec. 1206.470 What are my reporting requirements under an arm's-
length washing contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on washing costs you or your affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit arm's-length
washing contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents.
(c) You can find recordkeeping requirements in parts 1207 and 1212
of this chapter.
(d)(1) You must file an initial Form ONRR-4292 prior to, or at the
same time, as the washing allowance determined under an arm's-length
contract or no written arm's-length contract situation that you report
on Form ONRR-4430. If ONRR receives a Form ONRR-4292 by the end of the
month that the Form ONRR-4430 is due, ONRR will consider the form
timely received.
(2) The initial Form ONRR-4292 is effective beginning with the
production month that you are first authorized to deduct a washing
allowance and continues until the end of the calendar year, or until
the termination, modification, or amendment of the applicable contract
or rate, whichever is earlier.
(3) After the initial period that ONRR first authorized you to
deduct a washing allowance, and for succeeding periods, you must submit
the entire Form ONRR-4292 by the earlier of:
(i) Within 3 months after the end of the calendar year; or
(ii) After the termination, modification, or amendment of the
applicable contract or rate.
(4) You may request to use an allowance for a longer period than
that required under paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(i) You may use that allowance beginning with the production month
following the month ONRR received your request to use the allowance for
a longer period until ONRR decides whether to approve the longer
period.
(ii) ONRR's decision whether or not to approve a longer period is
not appealable under 30 CFR part 1290.
(iii) If ONRR does not approve the longer period, you must adjust
your transportation allowance under Sec. 1206.466.
Sec. 1206.471 What are my reporting requirements under a non-arm's-
length washing contract or no written arm's-length contract?
(a) You must use a separate entry on Form ONRR-4430 to notify ONRR
of an allowance based on non-arm's-length washing costs you or your
affiliate incur(s).
(b) ONRR may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used
to calculate the allowance deduction. You can find recordkeeping
requirements in parts 1207 and 1212 of this chapter.
(c)(1) You must submit an initial Form ONRR-4292 prior to, or at
the same time as, the washing allowance determined under a non-arm's-
length contract or no written arm's-length contract situation that you
report on Form ONRR-4430. If ONRR receives a Form ONRR-4292 by the end
of the month that the Form ONRR-4430 is due, ONRR will consider the
form received timely. You may base the initial reporting on estimated
costs.
(2) The initial Form ONRR-4292 is effective beginning with the
production month that you are first authorized to deduct a washing
allowance and continues until the end of the calendar year or
termination, modification, or amendment of the applicable contract or
rate, whichever is earlier.
(3)(i) At the end of the calendar year for which you submitted a
Form ONRR-4292, you must submit another completed Form ONRR-4292
containing the actual costs for that calendar year.
(ii) If coal washing continues, you must include on Form ONRR-4292
your estimated costs for the next calendar year.
(A) You must base the estimated coal washing allowance on the
actual costs for the previous period plus or minus any adjustments
based on your knowledge of decreases or increases that will affect the
allowance.
(B) ONRR must receive Form ONRR-4292 within 3 months after the end
of the previous calendar year.
(d)(1) For new non-arm's-length washing facilities or arrangements
on your initial Form ONRR-4292, you must include estimates of allowable
washing costs for the applicable period.
(2) You must use your or your affiliate's most recently available
operations data for the wash plant as your estimate, if available. If
such data is not available, you must use estimates based on data for
similar wash plants.
(e) Upon ONRR's request, you must submit all data you used to
prepare your Forms ONRR-4293. You must provide the data within a
reasonable period of time, as ONRR determines.
(f) Section 1206.472 applies when you amend your Form ONRR-4292
based on the actual costs.
Sec. 1206.472 What interest and penalties apply if I improperly
report a washing allowance?
(a)(1) If ONRR determines that you took an unauthorized washing
allowance, then you must pay any additional royalties due, plus late
payment interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter.
(2) If you understated your washing allowance, you may be entitled
to a credit without interest.
(b) If you improperly net a washing allowance against the sales
value of the coal instead of reporting the allowance as a separate
entry on Form ONRR-4430, ONRR may assess a civil penalty under 30 CFR
part 1241.
Sec. 1206.473 What reporting adjustments must I make for washing
allowances?
(a) If your actual washing allowance is less than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for each month during the allowance reporting
period, you must pay additional royalties due, plus late payment
interest calculated under Sec. 1218.202 of this chapter from the date
you took the deduction to the date you repay the difference.
(b) If the actual washing allowance is greater than the amount you
claimed on Form ONRR-4430 for any month during the period reported on
the allowance form, you are entitled to a credit without interest.
[FR Doc. 2014-30033 Filed 12-19-14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4310-T2-P