The federal government already has a windfall tax on gas profits. But while gas prices soar, is the tax doing its job?

Home Politics The federal government already has a windfall tax on gas profits. But while gas prices soar, is the tax doing its job?
The federal government already has a windfall tax on gas profits. But while gas prices soar, is the tax doing its job?

There’s rarely been a better time to be an Australian gas exporter.

The war in Ukraine has seen demand for Australian gas soar, and pulled prices skyward with it.

And Australia has plenty of gas to offer — it is one of the world’s largest LNG exporters, and those companies selling gas to the world are in a prime position to capitalise.

The gas being sold is owned by the Commonwealth, and licensed to be sold by the companies extracting it.

So how much are Australian taxpayers making from the sale of Australian gas?

Right now, probably not as much as you might expect.

The windfall tax you’ve probably never heard of

As gas prices have shot up, there have been calls for Australia to try and capture some of that profit through a new tax on gas companies.

Comparisons have been drawn with countries like Norway, which places a 78 per cent tax on profits from its oil and gas companies (many of which are partly state-owned anyway).

Others suggest Australia just reform the taxes already in place.

Australia already has a special tax for offshore oil and gas projects, known as the Petroleum Resources Rent Tax (PRRT).

It taxes profits from those projects at 40 per cent, on the grounds they are commonwealth resources — so the Commonwealth should share in the profits.

But despite plenty of gas being sold, it brings in surprisingly little tax.

The tax has been around since the late 1980’s, as Australia’s oil industry was developing.

Gas is now a much larger industry than oil, but despite the industry’s growth, the tax has been bringing in roughly the same amount of revenue.

The revenue isn’t even keeping up with Australia’s general economic growth, becoming ever-smaller against Australia’s growing GDP.

And it is forecast to keep diminishing — falling from $2.6 billion this year, down to just $2 billion in 2025-26.

So why is an industry bringing in tens of billions of revenue, paying so little tax for the gas it sells?

A decades-old tax made for a different time

The tax was introduced in 1988 to try and capture revenue from offshore oil and gas projects, but back then it was mostly oil.

The aim was to try and both encourage companies to explore offshore oil and gas, and significantly tax the profits made.

Companies would only have to pay tax once the projects had entirely paid for themselves — that is, all the money spent exploring and constructing oil and gas wells and the associated infrastructure had been recouped.

That’s a fairly normal circumstance — most taxes are only paid on profit.

But importantly (and controversially), those constructions costs grow over time, the same way interest grows and compounds in a savings account.

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