U.S. reversal on
transparency could sting Canadian, European oil
companies
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[February 03, 2017]
By Ernest Scheyder and Nia Williams
HOUSTON/CALGARY
(Reuters) - Canadian and European oil companies will find themselves at
a competitive disadvantage to their American rivals if U.S. lawmakers
scrap tighter transparency requirements on the industry, as expected,
according to company executives, legal experts and trade groups.
The U.S. Senate is poised to overturn the so-called "resource extraction
rule", a regulation requiring U.S. natural resources companies to
disclose taxes and other payments to foreign governments, in a vote that
could come as early as Friday.
The rule is among a handful of regulations ushered in during the final
months of Barack Obama's presidency that Republican lawmakers - who now
control Congress - have targeted as being overly burdensome and bad for
the U.S. economy. Democrats have no way to keep the law in place as
Republicans need only a simple majority to kill the measure.
But overturning the regulation, set to take effect next year, would
leave Canadian and European natural resource companies with the
most-stringent reporting standards in the world for payments to foreign
governments - as U.S. behemoths like Exxon Mobil Corp and Chevron Corp
get a reprieve.
Certain details of contract negotiations and terms of bids to access
reserves are currently required under regulations now in place in both
Canada and Europe. Such information could reveal to competitors
negotiating tactics and other metrics that many companies consider
proprietary, observers say.
"It definitely could put Canada at a disadvantage because we are fairly
stringent on our rules, both domestically and internationally, on how
our companies operate," said Mark Salkeld, chief executive officer of
the Petroleum Services Association of Canada, an industry trade group.
European oil company Royal Dutch Shell Plc, meanwhile, pointed out that
a reversal in the United States would go against the broader global
trend toward transparency in the notoriously murky industry.
"The trend that we have, with access to information, with bringing
distant countries into our space all the time, we will have to live with
that. I don’t think any single political system can turn that around,"
CEO Ben van Beurden told reporters when asked about the proposed change
in U.S. regulation.
"BANG FOR THEIR BUCK"
Required by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law, the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission's extraction rule was finalized last
summer.
Canadian and European regulations were modeled after the Dodd-Frank
efforts.
But the rule was quickly targeted by Congressional Republicans after
victories in the November election that brought President Donald Trump
and his anti-regulation, pro-energy agenda into the White House.
[to top of second column] |
Filled oil drums are seen at Royal Dutch Shell Plc's lubricants
blending plant in the town of Torzhok, north-west of Tver, November
7, 2014. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin
Trump
has signaled a sweeping reduction in regulation to bolster the American drilling
and mining industries, including by undoing Obama's initiatives to combat
climate change.
Vivek Warrier, a partner at Bennett Jones, a law firm in Calgary, said that
could put Canadian companies at an even steeper disadvantage.
"When a potential investor comes in, they will look at the additional regulatory
compliance costs that will impact Canadian companies and probably conclude
there's better bang for their buck south of the border," he said.
Suncor Energy Inc, Canada's largest oil and gas producer, said reporting on
payments to foreign governments is a minor administrative burden. "But generally
speaking we support reporting payments to governments as it contributes to
greater transparency," said Sneh Seetal, a Suncor spokeswoman.
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd and Cenovus Energy Inc, two Canadian oil
producers, declined to comment.
American oil companies, including Exxon Mobil, meanwhile, say that the
regulation had threatened to put them at a competitive disadvantage to huge
state-controlled oil companies like Russia's Rosneft Ltd and China's CNOOC Ltd.
"As
publicly traded companies, we have to compete globally with state-owned
companies who hold a large majority of proved reserves and have no similar
transparency or reporting obligations," Exxon spokesman William Holbrook said.
Stephen Comstock, director of tax policy for the American Petroleum Institute,
said revoking the U.S. extraction rule is "a necessary step by Congress to
establish sensible regulations that balance increasing transparency without
diminishing our industry's competitive advantage."
Exxon and the API said they support an alternative scheme whereby a host country
would report to its citizens at a regular interval how much money in total was
generated from extractive industries, without breaking out company details.
The U.S. oil industry also said that the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
would still remain in effect, prohibiting bribery of foreign officials.
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder in Houston and Nia Williams in Calgary; Additional
reporting by Lisa Lambert and Sarah Lynch in Washington, D.C., Ron Bousso in
London; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Lisa Shumaker)
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