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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Cisneros
DATE TYPED 01/31/05 HB
SHORT TITLE Tax Credit For Electrical Generation Water
SB 111
ANALYST Padilla-Jackson
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
(*)
(3,000.0) Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
*Unable to determine due to the lack of effective date provided
Duplicates: House Bill 197
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Energy, Minerals & Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 111 would provide a corporate income tax credit to a taxpayer who gathers, trans-
ports or treats produced water (byproduct) in the generation of electricity. The disposition of wa-
ter must be in accordance with rules of the oil conservation division of EMRD. The tax credit
would be $1 thousand per acre-foot of produced water in the taxable year, provided that the total
tax credit to all claimants not exceed $3 million. The total accumulated tax credits claimed by
the taxpayer cannot exceed fifty percent of the capital cost of equipment for gathering, transport-
ing, or treating the produced water. If the tax credit exceeds the taxpayer’s tax liability, the
credit may be rolled over for up to three consecutive years.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The total full-year fiscal impact of Senate Bill 111 is $3 million to the general fund. The analy-
sis TRD provided suggests that, according to industry representatives, there is no produced water
that is currently being diverted to use in electricity generation, though the total volume of pro-
pg_0002
Senate Bill 111 -- Page 2
duced water in the state is significant. The amount of water used in power plant cooling is also
significant. TRD notes that statewide water use for this purpose is well in excess of the 3,000
acre-feet that would maximize the utilization of this credit. TRD’s fiscal analysis assumes that,
due to the significant size of the tax credit, the proposed activity will grow, though it may take a
while before the credit usage is maximized.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The bill will impact both TRD and EMNRD. According to TRD, implementing provisions of
the bill would require forms, instructions and publication changes, as well as employee educa-
tion. It would also require coordination with the Conservation Division of EMNRD. TRD will
probably employ about .25 FTEs at a cost of $10,000 annually to administer the credits, depend-
ing upon the number of corporations claiming the credits.
The Oil Conservation Division (OCD) of the Energy, Minerals, & Natural Resources Department
would be responsible for determining if the produced water is disposed of in accordance with
rules in Subsection B of the bill and would be responsible for issuing the certification of eligibil-
ity for the tax credit. The OCD is reportedly already in the process of promulgating rules related
to that use of produced water. The bill also requires the OCD to determine how much of the
produced water was used in the generation of electricity. Since the OCD does not currently
gather this information, it currently has no mechanism to track produced water from production
to disposition. The associated infrastructure support, inspection activities, and 0.5 FTE requireed
will cost approximately $50,000 per year according to EMNRD.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Three technical issues that TRD noted include:
1.
The bill does not provide the department with guidance on how to allocate credits among
taxpayers when more than one taxpayer is involved in the process of gathering, transport-
ing and treating a given volume of water.
2.
The bill does not provide guidance on how the $3 million cap on total credit claims in
one year should be allocated among competing claimants.
3.
The bill does not provide for a process by which taxpayers apply to the department for
approval of their credits prior to claiming them on tax returns.
Additionally, there is an ending quotation mark at the end of Subsection E of the bill, which has
no accompanying quotation mark.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to EMNRD, the only taxpayers eligible for the credit are corporations – there is no
comparable credit for sole proprietors, partnerships, etc. EMRND believes that if the corpora-
tions benefiting from this tax credit pass the savings on to their customers, they will have an un-
fair advantage over their non-corporate competitors doing the same work.
OPJ/lg