Statoil Of Norway Claims Gross Overpayment of Taxes

by Duane Nichols on August 7, 2016

Statoil Wants Money Back From Local West Virginia Counties

From an Article by Casey Junkins, Wheeling Intelligencer, July 17, 2016

Wheeling,WV — Norwegian shale driller Statoil wants officials in Ohio, Brooke, Wetzel and Marshall counties to refund nearly $6.5 million worth of property tax the company claims it overpaid, but local leaders believe they are under no obligation to return the money.

Marshall County commissioners already denied Statoil’s refund request of $342,000, while commissioners in Ohio County rejected the firm’s claim that it should regain $2.9 million. Commissioners in Wetzel County are still considering whether to refund $1.4 million to Statoil, while Brooke County commissioners are scheduled to hear from the company on Monday about its request for $1.8 million to be returned.

Brooke County Assessor Tom Oughton hopes commissioners deny Statoil’s request, as he said the West Virginia State Tax Department does not require any refund to the company under the circumstances.

“Statoil had plenty of chances to figure this out. They dropped the ball,” Oughton said.

Statoil began operating Marcellus Shale wells in the Northern Panhandle as a minority-interest partner with Chesapeake Energy approximately six years ago.

In Ohio County, Chesapeake owned 71 percent of each operation, with Statoil holding 29 percent. Statoil reduced its interest in local wells to 23 percent upon Chesapeake’s $5 billion sale of its assets to Southwestern Energy in late 2014.

“Statoil USA Onshore Properties filed an exoneration motion in four West Virginia counties, Brooke, Wetzel, Marshall and Ohio, to request a refund for the 2015 property taxes. We are awaiting decisions on the hearings from Brooke and Wetzel counties. Marshall County and Ohio County have denied the request for refund and we are considering our appeal rights,” company spokeswoman Lauren Shane said.

“We maintain that this was a clerical error,” Shane continued. “The clerical error stems from over-reporting of revenue data for tax year 2015.”

However, Northern Panhandle officials do not believe Statoil’s action fits the definition of an unintentional clerical error.

“Statoil sought an exoneration for reduction in tax assessment based upon their failure to properly document various values of the oil and natural gas assets,” Ohio County Solicitor Don Tennant said. “They have to prove it was a clerical error that was unintentional. The commission believes they failed to prove that.”

“It was pure neglect on their part, as far as I could see,” Ohio County Commissioner Orphy Klempa said. Tennant said because the $2.9 million overpaid is property tax money, most of the funding goes toward public education.

In Wetzel County, Statoil is only one of numerous frackers producing oil and natural gas from the Marcellus and Utica shales. However, Assessor Scott Lemley and Commissioner Larry Lemon said the Norwegian driller is the only one asking for money to be refunded.

“The State Tax Department is not changing the value they have set on their working interest in Wetzel County,” Lemley said. “We are just following the law.” “We held a hearing on this June 14. We are still deliberating,” Lemon added. “We hope to make a decision soon.”

Shane said Statoil is considering steps to appeal the unfavorable decisions at the county level. Tennant said the company could appeal to circuit court and, ultimately, to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals if it chooses to do so.

>. >. >. >. >.

Wetzel Commission Denies Tax Break to Statoil

From an Article by Chad Turner, Wetzel Chronicle, August 3, 2016

At its Tuesday, July 26 meeting, the Wetzel County Commission denied Statoil’s request of $1,640,104.32 that it claims it overpaid the county in property tax. Wwtzel is one of four local counties that Statoil claims it overpaid.

Previously, Statoil spokeswoman Lauren Shane released the following statement: “Statoil USA Onshore Properties filed an exoneration motion in four West Virginia counties, Brooke, Wetzel, Marshall and Ohio, to request a refund for the 2015 property taxes. We are awaiting decisions on the hearings from Brooke and Wetzel counties. Marshall County and Ohio County have denied the request for refund and we are considering our appeal rights.”

“We maintain that this was a clerical error,” Shane said. “The clerical error stems from over-reporting of revenue data for tax year 2015.”

Wetzel County Assessor Scott Lemley previously stated that Statoil received notice that their values were going up on their wells. Statoil paid the 2015 tax bill but is now claiming they overstated the revenues that they received off the wells.

Lemley noted that Statoil should have realized they overstated their revenues when they received their increase notice.

All stakeholders have been given the opportunity to present witnesses, introduce exhibits, and address the county commission with their respective arguments. After careful deliberation, the commission made the following findings:

1) The taxpayer failed to meet their burden of proof that the assessment was a clerical error as the taxpayer presented testimony from only one witness who lacked personal knowledge of the manner in which the error was committed or the procedures in place to supervise employees and prevent such an error.

2) The evidence presented indicates that the taxpayer was negligent in failing to double check information, supervise employees responsible for providing the information and track and receipt notices sent to them regarding the assessment and respond to the same.

3) The tax payer had a duty to forward accurate information in order for the assessment to be made and negligently failed in the performance of the same.

Wetzel County Commission President Larry Lemon noted that, “essentially, the taxpayer failed to prove that the assessment was a clerical error.”

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Redheaded Woodpecker September 17, 2016 at 12:03 pm

Statoil closes on $95 million sale of U.S. shale acreage
Norwegian company still holds hundreds of thousands of acres in parts of Ohio.
By Daniel J. Graeber, UPI.com, Sept. 16, 2016

Stavanger, Norway, Sept. 16 (UPI) — Norwegian energy company Statoil said it retained some of its shale acreage in the United States, but completed a sale Friday of assets in West Virginia.

Statoil said it closed Friday on the $96 million sale of 11,500 acres in the Marcellus shale natural gas basin in West Virginia to Antero Resources Corp. The Norwegian company retains about 350,000 net acres of the Marcellus shale natural gas basin in Ohio.

The sale from the Marcellus shale, initialized in August, is the third for Statoil in the past two years. In December 2014, the company sold some of its interest in Marcellus for $394 million after suspending some rig work to save capital.

Marcellus represents about 18 percent of total U.S. gas production and remains one of the more attractive shale basins in the United States. The August sale announcement to Antero followed Statoil’s financial release for the second quarter, which showed an adjusted operating profit of $913 million, down from the $2.9 billion reported one year ago. Spending plans for 2016 were revised lower by $1 billion to $12 billion.

The Marcellus basin is one of the more lucrative reserve areas in the United States. A drilling productivity report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration finds total natural gas production is expected to increase slightly as more rigs enter the area.

Net equity production for Statoil was 6 percent higher than the second quarter of 2015 in part because of discoveries off the coast of Norway, as well as one in Canada. As of June 30, the company said it completed only about a dozen or so wells, however, and spending on exploration and production for the quarter was down almost 20 percent year-on-year.

Source: http://www.upi.com/Statoil-completes-sale-of-Marcellus-acreage/1601474030319/

See also: http://www.FrackCheckWV.net

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: