In the same general area of dubya/ head/Repugs protecting and enriching their budies in the energy sector:
January 28, 2006
Editorial
Gas Royalties Under a Cloud
A three-month investigation by Edmund L. Andrews of The Times has raised troubling questions about royalty payments from energy companies that extract natural gas under federal leases. Although the market price for natural gas has soared in recent years, the payments in fiscal year 2005 were below those made in fiscal 2001. There is reason to wonder whether defects in the rules or perhaps even scheming by the gas producers is depriving the government of hundreds of millions of dollars. Clearly, an audit is needed.
The Interior Department's Minerals Management Service attributes the lagging royalties to seemingly innocuous factors. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita led to late royalty payments, it says. And production sites have shifted over the past few years from shallow water, where the royalty rate is high, to onshore areas, where the rate is lower, and deep water, where some production is exempt from royalties to encourage high-risk exploration.
These factors may play some role, but their importance seems overstated. Mr. Andrews also questioned whether deliberate cheating by producers might be involved. An Alabama jury ruled in 2003 that Exxon shortchanged the state by more than $60 million for gas taken from state-owned waters, a verdict Exxon has appealed. And the Interior Department's inspector general has uncovered at least two cases of multimillion-dollar underpayments.
Lax oversight may also contribute. The Interior Department has fewer auditors than in the past to deal with a rising workload, and has forced out two of its more aggressive and successful auditors.
( aka routine Repug -the-consumer+govt/enrich-energy-co's )
The overriding problem may be that most royalties on gas are based on a calculated price rather than an actual market value. The companies pay royalties on the value of the gas when it emerges from the ground, not the price when it actually hits the market. They typically estimate the earlier value by taking the final sales prices and deducting the costs of transportation and processing.
By contrast, royalties on oil are now pegged to an index of spot market prices. By one rough calculation, if the government had used a spot market index for gas prices as well, it could have collected some $700 million more in royalty payments last year. The industry says it has come to favor indexing, so it may be time to adopt that approach for gas.
The Government Accountability Office should respond positively to a request from 22 senators to investigate royalty collections. The gap between the high market price for natural gas and the lower calculated price on which royalties are paid has been widening, and it is hard to see why that is justified.
* Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

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