BC Premier Christy Clark at the Minister's announcement. — Photo courtesy BC Government Flickr Canadian Press is reporting that Prime Minister Stephe
BC Premier Christy Clark at the Minister's announcement. — Photo courtesy BC Government Flickr
Canadian Press is reporting that Prime Minister Stephen Harper has announced federal tax breaks for British Columbia’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry.
Prime Minister Harper, made the announcement recently while at a technical university in Surrey, B.C. He said companies will receive a capital cost allowance of 30 per cent for equipment used in natural gas liquefaction and 10 per cent for buildings at a facility that liquefies natural gas.
Tax relief will be available for capital assets acquired between now and 2025.
The Prime Minister also said the tax incentives will provide the right conditions for the LNG industry to succeed and compete in the global economy while spurring job growth.
“Developing our natural gas resources and encouraging LNG export growth will mean good, well-paying jobs for thousands of British Columbians, including in our aboriginal communities,” Harper told students at Kwantlen Polytechnic University.
“And it’s diverse as jobs in construction, jobs in facilities, once they’re built.”
B.C. Premier Christy Clark said later that the change in the capital cost allowance will make the province more attractive for LNG companies, especially during the global slump in oil prices.
“We’re already more competitive than Australia. Our real main competition in the world is the (United States), and the west coast of North America,” she said, referring to Washington, California and Oregon.
Premier Clark said B.C.’s low taxes, three consecutive balanced budgets and billion-dollar surplus this year are all draws for investors.
Last November, the province passed three major pieces of LNG-linked legislation covering taxes, emissions standards and aboriginal involvement.
Premier Clark also stated then that legislation on the tax and on the environmental side needed to pass before the industry could get going.
The province has said the income tax legislation means one mid-sized LNG plant would pay about $800 million in taxes annually, which is equivalent to taxes that B.C.’s entire forestry industry pays each year.
One plant producing 12 million tonnes of LNG annually would pay as much as $9 billion in taxes over 10 years.
But declining natural gas prices have meant companies with LNG plans are still hedging on making final investment decisions.
“We are still on target, we believe, for three projects by 2020 (to be) up and running,” Christy Clark added.
Source: Canadian Press report