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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Grubesic
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/5/06
2/6/06 HB
SHORT TITLE Oil & Gas Severance Surtax & Fund
SB 468
ANALYST Francis
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
155,500.0
Recurring
Severance Tax
Permanent Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
FY08
155,500.0
$303,700.0 Recurring Severance Tax
Permanent Fund
155,500.0
303,700.0 Recurring
Community
Energy Security
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Consensus Revenue Group
Responses Received From
Higher Education Department (HED)
Energy Minerals and Natural Resources (EMNRD)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 468 creates a new fund called the “Community Energy Security Fund,” imposes a
surtax on oil and gas severance receipts, and distributes the proceeds of the surtax to the created
fund.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 468 – Page
2
The community energy security fund will be used first for making grants to municipalities, coun-
ties and public institutions of higher education to conduct studies on the economic impact of high
energy costs. For municipalities and counties, the study will include how many households in
the government’s boundaries have heating cost in excess of 6 percent of that household’s in-
come, which locally owned businesses are most vulnerable to high energy costs with an estimate
of energy cost burdens for a sample of businesses, and the municipality or county’s energy costs.
For a higher education institution, the study will assess the institution’s total energy costs.
An eligible entity who has conducted the study can apply for a grant to implement energy cost
saving measures. In the case of municipalities or counties, the types of projects should be aimed
at assisting those households and businesses identified as vulnerable and the government’s own
energy costs. For a higher education institution, the purpose will be for installing and utilizing
energy conservation measures.
The fund will receive revenues from the oil and gas severance tax surtax. This surtax is pegged
to the taxable value price of natural gas and oil in the previous year:
Surtax
Imposed
More Than But Less Than More Than But Less Than
-
$
22.00
$
-
$
2.70
$
0%
22.00
27.00
2.70
4.20
1%
27.00
32.00
4.20
5.70
2%
32.00
37.00
5.70
7.20
3%
37.00
42.00
7.20
8.70
4%
42.00
47.00
8.70
10.20
5%
47.00
52.00
10.20
11.70
6%
52.00
11.70
7%
Price of Oil
per Barrel
Price of Natural Gas per
Thousand Cubic Feet
* Price is the effective price based on taxable value
The effective date is February 1, 2007.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The effective date of SB468 is February 1, 2007, so only five months of oil and gas activity is
included in the estimate. For FY07, the consensus revenue group has forecast the prices of oil
and gas as $55/barrel and $6.10 per thousand cubic feet (MCF) respectively. For FY08, those
prices are $53/barrel and $5.80/MCF. With deductions from taxable value (historically 9 percent
of value for oil and 17 percent of value for natural gas), the taxable value prices which are used
to establish the surtax are shown in table one.
In FY07, the surtax is estimated to increase severance tax revenues by $155.5 million and in
FY08 the increased revenue is $303.7 million.
The appropriation to the community energy security fund of $155.5 million in FY07 and $307.3
million in FY08 contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the severance tax permanent fund.
Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of each fiscal year shall not re-
vert.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 468 – Page
3
Consensus Forecast
Oil
Price*
Volume
Value**
($M)
Taxable
Value Price
Surtax
Imposed
Surtax
($M)
FY07***
54.00
$
25.67
1,258.49
49.03
7% 88.09
FY08
51.00
59.50
2,755.33
46.31
6% 165.32
Natural Gas
FY07***
6.50
$
626.67
3,368.65
5.38
2% 67.37
FY08
5.65
1,481.00
6,920.05
4.67
2% 138.40
* Calendar year price is average of consensus group fiscal year prices.
** Typical deductions have been accounted for.
*** Effective date of February 1, 2007 means only five months are included in FY07.
This bill creates a new fund and provides for continuing appropriations. The LFC has concerns
with including continuing appropriation language in the statutory provisions for newly created
funds, as earmarking reduces the ability of the legislature to establish spending priorities.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
This is a major tax increase on the oil and gas industry. Even though it may be designed for
windfall profits due to recent high prices, the current forecast for oil and gas prices mean that the
surtax will likely stay above 4 percent for oil and 2 percent for natural gas. The surtax may add
to the volatility of production in New Mexico as exploration and drilling will contract when
prices are lower than they have been.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
EMNRD:
The project qualifications criteria in the bill are complex and do not necessarily result in
selection of a cost effective project. A good return on investment on specific projects should
be a major part of the selection criteria. A return on investment greater than what the state
gets on its overall investments would be a good measure.
It is difficult to obtain new or current energy consumption data from the utility on household
energy consumption. The information may not be available because the utility companies
consider it private information. A county with households that spend more than 6% on their
utility bill would be eligible. Census data or other typical sources of general information
would not be useful because they do not consider the increase in energy costs that occurred in
the last 12 months.
There are two definitions of “Department”. In the tax section, the bill refers to the Taxation
and Revenue Department. In the new material section, it refers to the Department of Finance
and Administration. The definitions should clarify this issue.
Amendment: Add “biobased energy related systems and equipment” under energy conserva-
tion measures. HB995 – Biomass-Related Equipment tax Deduction passed by the 2005
Legislative session has specific definitions.
pg_0004
Senate Bill 468 – Page
4
ALTERNATIVES
EMNRD proposes the following amendment:
Section 6. E. (2) (k) Remove: or
Section 6. E. (2) (l) Add: or
Section 6. E. (2) “ (m)
biomass-related equipment used to produce energy from biobased
products, biofuels and biomass materials that is useful to operate facilities, motor vehicles or
equipment.”
The following are specific definitions in the law that could be included.
(1) "biobased products" means products created from plant- or crop-based resources
such as agricultural crops and crop residues, forestry, pastures and rangelands that are nor-
mally made from petroleum;
(2) "biofuels" means biomass converted to liquid or gaseous fuels such as ethanol,
methanol, methane and hydrogen;
(3) "biomass material" means organic material that is available on a renewable or
recurring basis, including:
(a) forest-related materials, including mill residues, logging residues, forest
thinnings, slash, brush, low commercial value materials or undesirable species, salt cedar and
other phreatophyte or woody vegetation removed from river basins or watersheds and woody
material harvested for the purpose of forest fire fuel reduction or forest health and watershed
improvement;
(b) agricultural-related materials, including orchard trees, vineyard, grain or
crop residues, including straws and stover, aquatic plants and agricultural processed co-
products and waste products, including fats, oils, greases, whey and lactose;
(c) animal waste, including manure and slaughterhouse and other processing
waste;
(d) solid woody waste materials, including landscape or right-of-way tree trim-
mings, range land maintenance residues, waste pallets, crates and manufacturing, construc-
tion and demolition wood wastes, excluding pressure-treated, chemically treated or painted
wood wastes and wood contaminated with plastic;
(e) crops and trees planted for the purpose of being used to produce energy;
(f) landfill gas, wastewater treatment gas and biosolids, including organic waste
byproducts generated during the wastewater treatment process; and
(g) segregated municipal solid waste, excluding tires and medical and hazardous
waste; and
(4) "biopower" means biomass converted to produce electrical and thermal en-
ergy."
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1. There will be hundreds of millions of dollars going into this fund over the next several years at
forecast oil and gas prices. How much does it typically cost to weatherize a house.
NF/yr