rockdoc123 it is fine if you want to disagree with me or present your own arguments. Companies make predictions about future prices or costs all the time including levels of taxation, cost of construction, interest rates, foreign exchange risks, etc. Those are the costs of doing business.
Not only are many predictions usually wide of the mark - most of them are.
While I do not support re-writing or renegotiating argeements ex-ante governments can change levels of taxation as many Canadian citizens know. Oil companies were cheating. They were not only extending their CAPEX budgets, but were actively looking to see where they could add operating and admin expenses to their CAPEX budgets. That is cheating the ordinary taxpayer who already pays enough.
As many here have already said Alberta needs a breather in any case to let infrastructure development catch-up to oilfield construction. The oil market is not going away. Not now, not anytime soon. One cannot believe in post peak oil natural resource depletion and simultaneously hold the opinion that oil companies are going to walk away from long-term supply projects in N. Alberta.
I know that natural gas drilling for example was very low last year, so some rigs sat idle as well as the crews that run them. That is one consequence of rising costs due to rapid, over expansion, and not only in Alberta or Canada, but around the globe. But those costs are still tax deductible. Even if the royalty schemes are changed, costs are costs, and therefore they are deducted off the top of revenues before taxes are paid on profits. Sorry that is how it works.
And obviously $90 per barrel generates different levels of royalties and taxation than $30 per barrel. Not 3X, but more. The Alberta government is talking about raising royalties 20%, not 300%, so they are hardly clawing back all the price increase. But companies can and will still be elligible to write off 100% of their expenses and, of course, if there are any losses carry them forward.
What is the total taxpayer bill for infrastructure projects over the past 30-years in Fort McMurray not covered by Syncrude or other corporate taxes? Just because Alberta is open for business does not mean it is for sale. If the Chinese cannot live with that then they can pay backhanders in Venezuela. You can certainly guess that neither Chinese peasants nor Venezuelan taxpayers will be better off afterwards.
The development at any cost model is the problem. The only good old growth forest is a clear-cut forest argument. Otherwise there will be fewer jobs and fewer taxes. That line of argument is wrong. Alberta's oil and gas resources are limited. They need to be developed in a sustainable manner. That is conserved as well as developed without long-term costs to the environment that outweigh any short-term economic benefits.
The Climate Change Argument
This is the kind of straight forward analysis that I admire! The cost versus the risk of not doing something against the cost versus the risk of doing something. That is how we need to frame debates and not who is right or who is wrong. Please pass it along. Thanks.
p.s. do me a huge favor. Please compare Alberta's tax burden - corporate and individual - to that of BC, Saskatchewan, Norway and UK. Then come back and lecture me on which government is more accomodating to investment and job creation. I will, of course, then admit I am wrong once you do this. Thanks! ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.