{"id":44568,"date":"2019-03-14T03:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-03-14T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-eliminate-alaskas-oil-tax-credits\/"},"modified":"2019-03-14T13:53:24","modified_gmt":"2019-03-14T21:53:24","slug":"opinion-eliminate-alaskas-oil-tax-credits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-eliminate-alaskas-oil-tax-credits\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: Eliminate Alaska’s oil tax credits"},"content":{"rendered":"
The lose-lose conundrum advanced by Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s administration of maintaining either the Permanent Fund Dividend or education has a solution — eliminate oil tax credits. Sadly, Alaska is obligated to pay an $8 credit per barrel when the wellhead price is less than $80 per barrel.<\/p>\n
Oil credits obligate Alaska to pay the oil industry — without a reciprocal return on Alaska’s investment expenditure — billions of dollars. Alaska has not received its Senate Bill 21<\/a> promise. There has been no flood of oilfield workers to Alaska’s North Slope and Alaska’s treasury is not replenished by increased oil production.<\/p>\n [Opinion: Stop oil and gas tax credits]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n The dollar amount of oil credits given away by Alaska is staggering. The 2019 “Per-Taxable-Barrel Credit” is $1.245 billion. The forecasted credit each year through 2028 is never less than $1 billion each year. You can look this up yourself by looking at Alaska’s Revenue Source Book Fall 2018 on page 106 in Chapter 8. Alaskans have more to discuss than the lose-lose of either PFDs or education.<\/p>\n Remember the SB 21 promise in 2014 of 1 million barrels per day oil production; this promise to Alaskans was not kept. For those who quibble about that promise, recall the comparable promise 20 years ago: “no decline after ‘99.” The natural decline of the mature Prudhoe Bay and Kuparuk fields and their satellite fields continues. Please look at page 138 of Alaska’s Revenue Source Book Fall 2018 to see the unfortunate but continuing throughput declines; there is no 1 million barrels per day in Alaska’s forecasted future.<\/p>\n