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Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 et seq.;
25 U.S.C. 396 et seq., 396a et seq., 2101 et seq.;
30 U.S.C. 181 et seq., 351 et seq., 1001 et seq.,
1701 et seq.; 31 U.S.C. 9701.; 43 U.S.C. 1301 et seq.,
1331 et seq., and 1801 et seq.
Editorial Note: Nomenclature
changes to part 206 appear at 67 FR 19111, Apr. 18,
2002.
The information collection requirements contained in this part have
been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. The forms, filing date, and approved OMB clearance
numbers are identified in 30 CFR 210.10. [57 FR 41863, Sept. 14, 1992] Source: 61 FR 5455, Feb. 12, 1996,
unless otherwise noted.
(a) This subpart applies to all oil produced from Indian (tribal and
allotted) oil and gas leases (except leases on the Osage Indian
Reservation, Osage County, Oklahoma). This subpart does not apply to
Federal leases, including Federal leases for which revenues are shared
with Alaska Native Corporations. This subpart: (1) Establishes the value of production for royalty purposes consistent
with the Indian mineral leasing laws, other applicable laws, and lease
terms; (2) Explains how you as a lessee must calculate the value of production
for royalty purposes consistent with applicable statutes and lease terms;
and (3) Is intended to ensure that the United States discharges its trust
responsibilities for administering Indian oil and gas leases under the
governing Indian mineral leasing laws, treaties, and lease terms. (b) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with a Federal
statute, a settlement agreement or written agreement as these terms are
defined in this paragraph, or an express provision of an oil and gas lease
subject to this subpart, then the statute, settlement agreement, written
agreement, or lease provision will govern to the extent of the
inconsistency. For purposes of this paragraph: (1) Settlement agreement means a settlement agreement that is
between the United States and a lessee, or between an individual Indian
mineral owner and a lessee and is approved by the United States, resulting
from administrative or judicial litigation; and (2) Written agreement means a written agreement between the
lessee and the MMS Director (and approved by the tribal lessor for tribal
leases) establishing a method to determine the value of production from
any lease that MMS expects at least would approximate the value
established under this subpart. (c) The MMS or Indian tribes may audit, or perform other compliance
reviews, and require a lessee to adjust royalty payments and reports. [72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007] For purposes of this subpart: Affiliate means a person who controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with another person. (1) Ownership or common ownership of more than 50 percent of the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership, or other forms of ownership, of
another person constitutes control. Ownership of less than 10 percent
constitutes a presumption of noncontrol that MMS may rebut. (2) If there is ownership or common ownership of 10 through 50 percent
of the voting securities or instruments of ownership, or other forms of
ownership, of another person, MMS will consider the following factors in
determining whether there is control in a particular case: (i) The extent to which there are common officers or directors; (ii) With respect to the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership: (A) The percentage of ownership or common ownership; (B) The relative percentage of ownership or common ownership compared
to the percentage(s) of ownership by other persons; (C) Whether a person is the greatest single owner; and (D) Whether there is an opposing voting bloc of greater ownership; (iii) Operation of a lease, plant, or other facility; (iv) The extent of participation by other owners in operations and
day-to-day management of a lease, plant, or other facility; and (v) Other evidence of power to exercise control over or common control
with another person. (3) Regardless of any percentage of ownership or common ownership,
relatives, either by blood or marriage, are affiliates. Area means a geographic region at least as large as the defined
limits of an oil and/or gas field in which oil and/or gas lease products
have similar quality, economic, and legal characteristics. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement between
independent persons who are not affiliates and who have opposing economic
interests regarding that contract. To be considered arm's length for any
production month, a contract must satisfy this definition for that month,
as well as when the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting and auditing standards, of royalty payment compliance
activities of lessees or other interest holders who pay royalties, rents,
or bonuses on Indian leases. BLM means the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior. Condensate means liquid hydrocarbons (generally exceeding 40
degrees of API gravity) recovered at the surface without resorting to
processing. Condensate is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons that results
from condensation of petroleum hydrocarbons existing initially in a
gaseous phase in an underground reservoir. Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions thereto, between two or more persons and
enforceable by law that with due consideration creates an obligation. Exchange agreement means an agreement where one person agrees to
deliver oil to another person at a specified location in exchange for oil
deliveries at another location, and other consideration. Exchange
agreements: (1) May or may not specify prices for the oil involved; (2) Frequently specify dollar amounts reflecting location, quality, or
other differentials; (3) Include buy/sell agreements, which specify prices to be paid at
each exchange point and may appear to be two separate sales within the
same agreement, or in separate agreements; and (4) May include, but are not limited to, exchanges of produced oil for
specific types of oil (e.g., WTI); exchanges of produced oil for other oil
at other locations (location trades); exchanges of produced oil for other
grades of oil (grade trades); and multi-party exchanges. Field means a geographic region situated over one or more
subsurface oil and gas reservoirs encompassing at least the outermost
boundaries of all oil and gas accumulations known to be within those
reservoirs vertically projected to the land surface. Onshore fields
usually are given names, and their official boundaries are often
designated by oil and gas regulatory agencies in the respective states in
which the fields are located. Gathering means the movement of lease production to a central
accumulation or treatment point on the lease, unit, or communitized area,
or to a central accumulation or treatment point off the lease, unit, or
communitized area as approved by BLM operations personnel. Gross proceeds means the total monies and other consideration
accruing for the disposition of oil produced. Gross proceeds also include,
but are not limited to, the following examples: (1) Payments for services, such as dehydration, marketing, measurement,
or gathering that the lessee must perform at no cost to the lessor in
order to put the production into marketable condition; (2) The value of services to put the production into marketable
condition, such as salt water disposal, that the lessee normally performs
but that the buyer performs on the lessee's behalf; (3) Reimbursements for harboring or terminaling fees; (4) Tax reimbursements, even though the Indian royalty interest may be
exempt from taxation; (5) Payments made to reduce or buy down the purchase price of oil to be
produced in later periods, by allocating those payments over the
production whose price the payment reduces and including the allocated
amounts as proceeds for the production as it occurs; and (6) Monies and all other consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled, but does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts. Indian tribe means any Indian tribe, band, nation, pueblo,
community, rancheria, colony, or other group of Indians for which any
minerals or interest in minerals is held in trust by the United States or
that is subject to Federal restriction against alienation. Individual Indian mineral owner means any Indian for whom
minerals or an interest in minerals is held in trust by the United States
or who holds title subject to Federal restriction against alienation. Lease means any contract, profit-share arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States under
an Indian mineral leasing law that authorizes exploration for, development
or extraction of, or removal of lease products. Depending on the context,
lease may also refer to the land area covered by that authorization. Lease products means any leased minerals attributable to,
originating from, or allocated to Indian leases. Lessee means any person to whom the United States, a tribe, or
individual Indian mineral owner issues a lease, and any person who has
been assigned an obligation to make royalty or other payments required by
the lease. Lessee includes: (1) Any person who has an interest in a lease (including operating
rights owners); and (2) An operator, purchaser, or other person with no lease interest who
makes royalty payments to MMS or the lessor on the lessee's behalf Lessor means an Indian tribe or individual Indian mineral owner
who has entered into a lease. Like-quality oil means oil that has similar chemical and
physical characteristics. Location differential means an amount paid or received (whether
in money or in barrels of oil) under an exchange agreement that results
from differences in location between oil delivered in exchange and oil
received in the exchange. A location differential may represent all or
part of the difference between the price received for oil delivered and
the price paid for oil received under a buy/sell exchange agreement. Marketable condition means lease products that are sufficiently
free from impurities and otherwise in a condition that they will be
accepted by a purchaser under a sales contract typical for the field or
area. MMS means the Minerals Management Service of the Department of
the Interior. Net means to reduce the reported sales value to account for
transportation instead of reporting a transportation allowance as a
separate entry on Form MMS�2014. NYMEX price means the average of the New York Mercantile
Exchange (NYMEX) settlement prices for light sweet oil delivered at
Cushing, Oklahoma, calculated as follows: (1) Sum the prices published for each day during the calendar month of
production (excluding weekends and holidays) for oil to be delivered in
the nearest month of delivery for which NYMEX futures prices are published
corresponding to each such day; and (2) Divide the sum by the number of days on which those prices are
published (excluding weekends and holidays). Oil means a mixture of hydrocarbons that existed in the liquid
phase in natural underground reservoirs and remains liquid at atmospheric
pressure after passing through surface separating facilities and is
marketed or used as such. Condensate recovered in lease separators or
field facilities is considered to be oil. Operating rights owner, also known as a working interest owner,
means any person who owns operating rights in a lease subject to this
subpart. A record title owner is the owner of operating rights under a
lease until the operating rights have been transferred from record title
(see Bureau of Land Management regulations at 43 CFR 3100.0�5(d)). Person means any individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture (when established as a separate
entity). Processing means any process designed to remove elements or
compounds (hydrocarbon and nonhydrocarbon) from gas, including absorption,
adsorption, or refrigeration. Field processes that normally take place on
or near the lease, such as natural pressure reduction, mechanical
separation, heating, cooling, dehydration, and compression, are not
considered processing. The changing of pressures and/or temperatures in a
reservoir is not considered processing. Quality differential means an amount paid or received under an
exchange agreement (whether in money or in barrels of oil) that results
from differences in API gravity, sulfur content, viscosity, metals
content, and other quality factors between oil delivered and oil received
in the exchange. A quality differential may represent all or part of the
difference between the price received for oil delivered and the price paid
for oil received under a buy/sell agreement. Sale means a contract between two persons where: (1) The seller unconditionally transfers title to the oil to the buyer
and does not retain any related rights such as the right to buy back
similar quantities of oil from the buyer elsewhere; (2) The buyer pays money or other consideration for the oil; and (3) The parties' intent is for a sale of the oil to occur. Sales type code means the contract type or general disposition
(e.g., arm's-length or non-arm's-length) of production from the lease. The
sales type code applies to the sales contract, or other disposition, and
not to the arm's-length or non-arm's-length nature of a transportation
allowance. Transportation allowance means a deduction in determining
royalty value for the reasonable, actual costs of moving oil to a point of
sale or delivery off the lease, unit area, or communitized area. The
transportation allowance does not include gathering costs. WTI means West Texas Intermediate. You means a lessee, operator, or other person who pays royalties
under this subpart. [72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007, as amended at 73 FR 15890, Mar. 26,
2008] (a) The value of oil under this section is the gross proceeds accruing
to the seller under the arm's-length contract, less applicable allowances
determined under ��206.56 and 206.57. If the arm's-length sales contract
does not reflect the total consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the buyer to the seller, you must value the
oil sold as the total consideration accruing to the seller. Use this
section to value oil that: (1) You sell under an arm's-length sales contract; or (2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under a
non-arm's-length contract and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them, then sells the oil under an arm's-length
contract. (b) If you have multiple arm's-length contracts to sell oil produced
from a lease that is valued under paragraph (a) of this section, the value
of the oil is the volume-weighted average of the total consideration
established under this section for all contracts for the sale of oil
produced from that lease. (c) If MMS determines that the value under paragraph (a) of this
section does not reflect the reasonable value of the production due to
either: (1) Misconduct by or between the parties to the arm's-length contract;
or (2) Breach of your duty to market the oil for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor, MMS will establish a value based on other
relevant matters. (i) The MMS will not use this provision to simply substitute its
judgment of the market value of the oil for the proceeds received by the
seller under an arm's-length sales contract. (ii) The fact that the price received by the seller under an
arm's-length contract is less than other measures of market price is
insufficient to establish breach of the duty to market unless MMS finds
additional evidence that the seller acted unreasonably or in bad faith in
the sale of oil produced from the lease. (d) You must base value on the highest price that the seller can
receive through legally enforceable claims under the oil sales contract.
If the seller fails to take proper or timely action to receive prices or
benefits to which it is entitled, you must base value on that obtainable
price or benefit. (1) In some cases the seller may apply timely for a price increase or
benefit allowed under the oil sales contract, but the purchaser refuses
the seller's request. If this occurs, and the seller takes reasonable
documented measures to force purchaser compliance, you will owe no
additional royalties unless or until the seller receives monies or
consideration resulting from the price increase or additional benefits.
This paragraph (d)(1) does not permit you to avoid your royalty payment
obligation if a purchaser fails to pay, pays only in part, or pays
late. (2) Any contract revisions or amendments that reduce prices or benefits
to which the seller is entitled must be in writing and signed by all
parties to the arm's-length contract. (e) If you or your affiliate enter(s) into an arm's-length exchange
agreement, or multiple sequential arm's-length exchange agreements, then
you must value your oil under this paragraph. (1) If you or your affiliate exchange(s) oil at arm's length for WTI or
equivalent oil at Cushing, Oklahoma, you must value the oil using the
NYMEX price, adjusted for applicable location and quality differentials
under paragraph (e)(3) of this section and any transportation costs under
paragraph (e)(4) of this section and ��206.56 and 206.57. (2) If you do not exchange oil for WTI or equivalent oil at Cushing,
but exchange it at arm's length for oil at another location and following
the arm's-length exchange(s) you or your affiliate sell(s) the oil
received in the exchange(s) under an arm's-length contract, then you must
use the gross proceeds under your or your affiliate's arm's-length sales
contract after the exchange(s) occur(s), adjusted for applicable location
and quality differentials under paragraph (e)(3) of this section and any
transportation costs under paragraph (e)(4) of this section and ��206.56
and 206.57. (3) You must adjust your gross proceeds for any location or quality
differential, or other adjustments, you received or paid under the
arm's-length exchange agreement(s). If MMS determines that any exchange
agreement does not reflect reasonable location or quality differentials,
MMS may adjust the differentials you used based on relevant information.
You may not otherwise use the price or differential specified in an
arm's-length exchange agreement to value your production. (4) If you value oil under this paragraph, MMS will allow a deduction,
under ��206.56 and 206.57, for the reasonable, actual costs to transport
the oil: (i) From the lease to a point where oil is given in exchange; and (ii) If oil is not exchanged to Cushing, Oklahoma, from the point where
oil is received in exchange to the point where the oil received in
exchange is sold. (5) If you or your affiliate exchange(s) your oil at arm's length, and
neither paragraph (e)(1) nor (e)(2) of this section applies, MMS will
establish a value for the oil based on relevant matters. After MMS
establishes the value, you must report and pay royalties and any late
payment interest owed based on that value. (f) You may not deduct any costs of gathering as part of a
transportation deduction or allowance. (g) You must also comply with �206.54. [72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007] (a) The unit value of your oil not sold under an arm's-length contract
is the volume-weighted average of the gross proceeds paid or received by
you or your affiliate, including your refining affiliate, for purchases or
sales under arm's-length contracts. (1) When calculating that unit value, use only purchases or sales of
other like-quality oil produced from the field (or the same area if you do
not have sufficient arm's-length purchases or sales of oil produced from
the field) during the production month. (2) You may adjust the gross proceeds determined under paragraph (a) of
this section for transportation costs under paragraph (c) of this section
and ��206.56 and 206.57 before including those proceeds in the
volume-weighted average calculation. (3) If you have purchases away from the field(s) and cannot calculate a
price in the field because you cannot determine the seller's cost of
transportation that would be allowed under paragraph (c) of this section
and ��206.56 and 206.57, you must not include those purchases in your
weighted-average calculation. (b) Before calculating the volume-weighted average, you must normalize
the quality of the oil in your or your affiliate's arm's-length purchases
or sales to the same gravity as that of the oil produced from the lease.
Use applicable gravity adjustment tables for the field (or the same
general area for like-quality oil if you do not have gravity adjustment
tables for the specific field) to normalize for gravity. Example to paragraph (c) If you value oil under this section, MMS will allow a deduction,
under ��206.56 and 206.57, for the reasonable, actual costs: (1) That you incur to transport oil that you or your affiliate sell(s),
which is included in the weighted-average price calculation, from the
lease to the point where the oil is sold; and (2) That the seller incurs to transport oil that you or your affiliate
purchase(s), which is included in the weighted-average cost calculation,
from the property where it is produced to the point where you or your
affiliate purchase(s) it. You may not deduct any costs of gathering as
part of a transportation deduction or allowance. (d) If paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section result in an unreasonable
value for your production as a result of circumstances regarding that
production, the MMS Director may establish an alternative valuation
method. (e) You must also comply with �206.54. [72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007] (a) For any Indian leases that provide that the Secretary may consider
the highest price paid or offered for a major portion of production (major
portion) in determining value for royalty purposes, if data are available
to compute a major portion, MMS will, where practicable, compare the value
determined in accordance with this section with the major portion. The
value to be used in determining the value of production, for royalty
purposes, will be the higher of those two values. (b) For purposes of this paragraph, major portion means the highest
price paid or offered at the time of production for the major portion of
oil production from the same field. The major portion will be calculated
using like-quality oil sold under arm's-length contracts from the same
field (or, if necessary to obtain a reasonable sample, from the same area)
for each month. All such oil production will be arrayed from highest price
to lowest price (at the bottom). The major portion is that price at which
50 percent by volume plus one barrel of oil (starting from the bottom) is
sold. [72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007] You must place oil in marketable condition and market the oil for the
mutual benefit of yourself and the Indian lessor at no cost to the lessor,
unless the lease agreement provides otherwise. If, in the process of
marketing the oil or placing it in marketable condition, your gross
proceeds are reduced because services are performed on your behalf that
would be your responsibility, and if you valued the oil using your or your
affiliate's gross proceeds (or gross proceeds received in the sale of oil
received in exchange) under �206.52, you must increase value to the extent
that your gross proceeds are reduced. [72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007] (a) Where the value of oil has been determined under �206.52 or �206.53
of this subpart at a point (e.g., sales point or point of value
determination) off the lease, MMS shall allow a deduction for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred by the lessee to transport oil to a
point off the lease; provided, however, that no transportation allowance
will be granted for transporting oil taken as Royalty-In-Kind (RIK);
or (b)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the
transportation allowance deduction on the basis of a sales type code may
not exceed 50 percent of the value of the oil at the point of sale as
determined under �206.52 of this subpart. Transportation costs cannot be
transferred between sales type codes or to other products. (2) Upon request of a lessee, MMS may approve a transportation
allowance deduction in excess of the limitation prescribed by paragraph
(b)(1) of this section. The lessee must demonstrate that the
transportation costs incurred in excess of the limitation prescribed in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section were reasonable, actual, and necessary.
An application for exception (using Form MMS�4393, Request to Exceed
Regulatory Allowance Limitation) must contain all relevant and supporting
documentation necessary for MMS to make a determination. Under no
circumstances may the value, for royalty purposes, under any sales type
code, be reduced to zero. (c) Transportation costs must be allocated among all products produced
and transported as provided in �206.57. Transportation allowances for oil
shall be expressed as dollars per barrel. (d) If, after a review or audit, MMS determines that a lessee has
improperly determined a transportation allowance authorized by this
subpart, then the lessee will pay any additional royalties, plus interest
determined in accordance with 30 CFR 218.54, or will be entitled to a
credit without interest. [61 FR 5455, Feb. 12, 1996. Redesignated and amended at 72 FR 71241,
Dec. 17, 2007; 73 FR 15890, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) Arm's-length transportation contracts. (1)(i) For
transportation costs incurred by a lessee under an arm's-length contract,
the transportation allowance shall be the reasonable, actual costs
incurred by the lessee for transporting oil under that contract, except as
provided in paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (a)(1)(iii) of this section, subject
to monitoring, review, audit, and adjustment. The lessee shall have the
burden of demonstrating that its contract is arm's-length. Such allowances
shall be subject to the provisions of paragraph (f) of this section.
Before any deduction may be taken, the lessee must submit a completed page
one of Form MMS�4110 (and Schedule 1), Oil Transportation Allowance
Report, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of this section. A
transportation allowance may be claimed retroactively for a period of not
more than 3 months prior to the first day of the month that Form MMS�4110
is filed with MMS, unless MMS approves a longer period upon a showing of
good cause by the lessee. (ii) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the lessee to the transporter for the
transportation. If the contract reflects more than the total
consideration, then MMS may require that the transportation allowance be
determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. (iii) If MMS determines that the consideration paid under an
arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the reasonable value
of the transportation because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the
lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and
the lessor, then MMS shall require that the transportation allowance be
determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS
determines that the value of the transportation may be unreasonable, MMS
will notify the lessee and give the lessee an opportunity to provide
written information justifying the lessee's transportation costs. (2)(i) If an arm's-length transportation contract includes more than
one liquid product, and the transportation costs attributable to each
product cannot be determined from the contract, then the total
transportation costs shall be allocated in a consistent and equitable
manner to each of the liquid products transported in the same proportion
as the ratio of the volume of each product (excluding waste products which
have no value) to the volume of all liquid products (excluding waste
products which have no value). Except as provided in this paragraph, no
allowance may be taken for the costs of transporting lease production
which is not royalty-bearing without MMS approval. (ii) Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph (i), the lessee may
propose to MMS a cost allocation method on the basis of the values of the
products transported. MMS shall approve the method unless it determines
that it is not consistent with the purposes of the regulations in this
part. (3) If an arm's-length transportation contract includes both gaseous
and liquid products, and the transportation costs attributable to each
product cannot be determined from the contract, the lessee shall propose
an allocation procedure to MMS. The lessee may use the oil transportation
allowance determined in accordance with its proposed allocation procedure
until MMS issues its determination on the acceptability of the cost
allocation. The lessee shall submit all available data to support its
proposal. The initial proposal must be submitted by June 30, 1988 or
within 3 months after the last day of the month for which the lessee
requests a transportation allowance, whichever is later (unless MMS
approves a longer period). MMS shall then determine the oil transportation
allowance based upon the lessee's proposal and any additional information
MMS deems necessary. (4) Where the lessee's payments for transportation under an
arm's-length contract are not on a dollar-per-unit basis, the lessee shall
convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent for
the purposes of this section. (5) Where an arm's-length sales contract price, or a posted price,
includes a provision whereby the listed price is reduced by a
transportation factor, MMS will not consider the transportation factor to
be a transportation allowance. The transportation factor may be used in
determining the lessee's gross proceeds for the sale of the product. The
transportation factor may not exceed 50 percent of the base price of the
product without MMS approval. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length transportation contract or has no contract, including
those situations where the lessee performs transportation services for
itself, the transportation allowance will be based upon the lessee's
reasonable, actual costs as provided in this paragraph. All transportation
allowances deducted under a non-arms-length or no-contract situation are
subject to monitoring, review, audit, and adjustment. Before any estimated
or actual deduction may be taken, the lessee must submit a completed Form
MMS�4110 in its entirety in accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section. A transportation allowance may be claimed retroactively for a
period of not more than 3 months prior to the first day of the month that
Form MMS�4110 is filed with MMS, unless MMS approves a longer period upon
a showing of good cause by the lessee. MMS will monitor the allowance
deductions to determine whether lessees are taking deductions that are
reasonable and allowable. When necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a
lessee to modify its actual transportation allowance deduction. (2) The transportation allowance for non-arms-length or no-contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for
transportation during the reporting period, including operating and
maintenance expenses, overhead, and either depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, or a cost equal to the initial capital
investment in the transportation system multiplied by a rate of return in
accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. Allowable capital
costs are generally those for depreciable fixed assets (including costs of
delivery and installation of capital equipment) which are an integral part
of the transportation system. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes; rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the
transportation system; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and
other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the
lessee can document. (iii) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either depreciation or a return on depreciable
capital investment. After a lessee has elected to use either method for a
transportation system, the lessee may not later elect to change to the
other alternative without approval of MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the transportation system services or on a
unit-of-production method. After an election is made, the lessee may not
change methods without MMS approval. A change in ownership of a
transportation system shall not alter the depreciation schedule
established by the original transporter/lessee for purposes of the
allowance calculation. With or without a change in ownership, a
transportation system shall be depreciated only once. Equipment shall not
be depreciated below a reasonable salvage value. (B) MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the initial capital
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of return
determined under paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section. No allowance shall
be provided for depreciation. This alternative shall apply only to
transportation facilities first placed in service after March 1, 1988. (v) The rate of return shall be the industrial rate associated with
Standard and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return shall be the monthly
average rate as published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first
month of the reporting period for which the allowance is applicable and
shall be effective during the reporting period. The rate shall be
redetermined at the beginning of each subsequent transportation allowance
reporting period (which is determined under paragraph (c) of this
section). (3)(i) The deduction for transportation costs shall be determined on
the basis of the lessee's cost of transporting each product through each
individual transportation system. Where more than one liquid product is
transported, allocation of costs to each of the liquid products
transported shall be in the same proportion as the ratio of the volume of
each liquid product (excluding waste products which have no value) to the
volume of all liquid products (excluding waste products which have no
value) and such allocation shall be made in a consistent and equitable
manner. Except as provided in this paragraph, the lessee may not take an
allowance for transporting lease production which is not royalty-bearing
without MMS approval. (ii) Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph (i), the lessee may
propose to MMS a cost allocation method on the basis of the values of the
products transported. MMS shall approve the method unless it determines
that it is not consistent with the purposes of the regulations in this
part. (4) Where both gaseous and liquid products are transported through the
same transportation system, the lessee shall propose a cost allocation
procedure to MMS. The lessee may use the oil transportation allowance
determined in accordance with its proposed allocation procedure until MMS
issues its determination on the acceptability of the cost allocation. The
lessee shall submit all available data to support its proposal. The
initial proposal must be submitted by June 30, 1988 or within 3 months
after the last day of the month for which the lessee requests a
transportation allowance, whichever is later (unless MMS approves a longer
period). MMS shall then determine the oil transportation allowance on the
basis of the lessee's proposal and any additional information MMS deems
necessary. (5) A lessee may apply to MMS for an exception from the requirement
that it compute actual costs in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(4) of this section. MMS will grant the exception only if the lessee
has a tariff for the transportation system approved by the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (FERC) for Indian leases. MMS shall deny the
exception request if it determines that the tariff is excessive as
compared to arm's-length transportation charges by pipelines, owned by the
lessee or others, providing similar transportation services in that area.
If there are no arm's-length transportation charges, MMS shall deny the
exception request if: (i) No FERC cost analysis exists and the FERC has declined to
investigate under MMS timely objections upon filing; and (ii) the tariff significantly exceeds the lessee's actual costs for
transportation as determined under this section. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) With the exception of those transportation allowances specified in
paragraphs (c)(1)(v) and (c)(1)(vi) of this section, the lessee shall
submit page one of the initial Form MMS�4110 (and Schedule 1), Oil
Transportation Allowance Report, prior to, or at the same time as, the
transportation allowance determined, under an arm's-length contract, is
reported on Form MMS�2014, Report of Sales and Royalty Remittance. A Form
MMS�4110 received by the end of the month that the Form MMS�2014 is due
shall be considered to be timely received. (ii) The initial Form MMS�4110 shall be effective for a reporting
period beginning the month that the lessee is first authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance and shall continue until the end of the calendar
year, or until the applicable contract or rate terminates or is modified
or amended, whichever is earlier. (iii) After the initial reporting period and for succeeding reporting
periods, lessees must submit page one of Form MMS�4110 (and Schedule 1)
within 3 months after the end of the calendar year, or after the
applicable contract or rate terminates or is modified or amended,
whichever is earlier, unless MMS approves a longer period (during which
period the lessee shall continue to use the allowance from the previous
reporting period). (iv) MMS may require that a lessee submit arm's-length transportation
contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and related
documents. Documents shall be submitted within a reasonable time, as
determined by MMS. (v) Transportation allowances which are based on arm's-length contracts
and which are in effect at the time these regulations become effective
will be allowed to continue until such allowances terminate. For the
purposes of this section, only those allowances that have been approved by
MMS in writing shall qualify as being in effect at the time these
regulations become effective. (vi) MMS may establish, in appropriate circumstances, reporting
requirements which are different from the requirements of this
section. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (i) With the exception of
those transportation allowances specified in paragraphs (c)(2)(v),
(c)(2)(vii) and (c)(2)(viii) of this section, the lessee shall submit an
initial Form MMS�4110 prior to, or at the same time as, the transportation
allowance determined under a non-arm's-length contract or no-contract
situation is reported on Form MMS�2014. A Form MMS�4110 received by the
end of the month that the Form MMS�2014 is due shall be considered to be
timely received. The initial report may be based upon estimated costs. (ii) The initial Form MMS�4110 shall be effective for a reporting
period beginning the month that the lessee first is authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance and shall continue until the end of the calendar
year, or until transportation under the non-arm's-length contract or the
no-contract situation terminates, whichever is earlier. (iii) For calendar-year reporting periods succeeding the initial
reporting period, the lessee shall submit a completed Form MMS�4110
containing the actual costs for the previous reporting period. If oil
transportation is continuing, the lessee shall include on Form MMS�4110
its estimated costs for the next calendar year. The estimated oil
transportation allowance shall be based on the actual costs for the
previous reporting period plus or minus any adjustments which are based on
the lessee's knowledge of decreases or increases that will affect the
allowance. MMS must receive the Form MMS�4110 within 3 months after the
end of the previous reporting period, unless MMS approves a longer period
(during which period the lessee shall continue to use the allowance from
the previous reporting period). (iv) For new transportation facilities or arrangements, the lessee's
initial Form MMS�4110 shall include estimates of the allowable oil
transportation costs for the applicable period. Cost estimates shall be
based upon the most recently available operations data for the
transportation system or, if such data are not available, the lessee shall
use estimates based upon industry data for similar transportation
systems. (v) Non-arm's-length contract or no-contract transportation allowances
which are in effect at the time these regulations become effective will be
allowed to continue until such allowances terminate. For the purposes of
this section, only those allowances that have been approved by MMS in
writing shall qualify as being in effect at the time these regulations
become effective. (vi) Upon request by MMS, the lessee shall submit all data used to
prepare its Form MMS�4110. The data shall be provided within a reasonable
period of time, as determined by MMS. (vii) MMS may establish, in appropriate circumstances, reporting
requirements which are different from the requirements of this
section. (viii) If the lessee is authorized to use its FERC-approved tariff as
its transportation cost in accordance with paragraph (b)(5) of this
section, it shall follow the reporting requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of
this section. (3) MMS may establish reporting dates for individual lessees different
from those specified in this subpart in order to provide more effective
administration. Lessees will be notified of any change in their reporting
period. (4) Transportation allowances must be reported as a separate entry on
Form MMS�2014, unless MMS approves a different reporting procedure. (d) Interest assessments for incorrect or late reports and for
failure to report. (1) If a lessee deducts a transportation allowance
on its Form MMS�2014 without complying with the requirements of this
section, the lessee shall pay interest only on the amount of such
deduction until the requirements of this section are complied with. The
lessee also shall repay the amount of any allowance which is disallowed by
this section. (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a transportation allowance which
results in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the
amount of that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.54. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual transportation allowance is
less than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�2014 for each month
during the allowance form reporting period, the lessee must pay additional
royalties due plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.54, retroactive to
the first day of the first month the lessee is authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance. If the actual transportation allowance is
greater than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�2014 for each
month during the allowance form reporting period, the lessee will be
entitled to a credit without interest. (2) For lessees transporting production from Indian leases, the lessee
must submit a corrected Form MMS�2014 to reflect actual costs, together
with any payment, in accordance with instructions provided by MMS. (f) Actual or theoretical losses. Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this subpart, for other than arm's-length contracts, no cost
shall be allowed for oil transportation which results from payments
(either volumetric or for value) for actual or theoretical losses. This
section does not apply when the transportation allowance is based upon a
FERC or State regulatory agency approved tariff. (g) Other transportation cost determinations. The provisions of
this section shall apply to determine transportation costs when
establishing value using a netback valuation procedure or any other
procedure that requires deduction of transportation costs. [61 FR 5455, Feb. 12, 1996. Redesignated at 72 FR 71241, Dec. 17, 2007,
as amended at 73 FR 15890, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) If MMS finds that you have not properly determined value, you
must: (1) Pay the difference, if any, between the royalty payments you made
and those that are due, based upon the value MMS establishes; and (2) Pay interest on the difference computed under �218.54 of this
chapter. (b) If you are entitled to a credit due to overpayment on Indian
leases, see �218.53 of this chapter. The credit will be without
interest. [72 FR 71244, Dec. 17, 2007] You may ask MMS for guidance in determining value. You may propose a
value method to MMS. Submit all available data related to your proposal
and any additional information MMS deems necessary. We will promptly
review your proposal and provide you with non-binding guidance. [72 FR 71244, Dec. 17, 2007] (a) You must compute royalties on the quantity and quality of oil as
measured at the point of settlement approved by BLM for the lease. (b) If you determine the value of oil under ��206.52, 206.53, or 206.54
of this subpart based on a quantity or quality different from the quantity
or quality at the point of royalty settlement approved by BLM for the
lease, you must adjust the value for those quantity or quality
differences. (c) You may not deduct from the royalty volume or royalty value actual
or theoretical losses incurred before the royalty settlement point unless
BLM determines that any actual loss was unavoidable. [72 FR 71244, Dec. 17, 2007] (a) On request, you must make available sales, volume, and
transportation data for production you sold, purchased, or obtained from
the field or area. You must make this data available to MMS, Indian
representatives, or other authorized persons. (b) You must retain all data relevant to the determination of royalty
value. Document retention and recordkeeping requirements are found at
��207.5, 212.50, and 212.51 of this chapter. The MMS, Indian
representatives, or other authorized persons may review and audit such
data you possess, and MMS will direct you to use a different value if it
determines that the reported value is inconsistent with the requirements
of this subpart or the lease. [72 FR 71244, Dec. 17, 2007] The MMS will keep confidential, to the extent allowed under applicable
laws and regulations, any data or other information you submit that is
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt from disclosure. All
requests for information must be submitted under the Freedom of
Information Act regulations of the Department of the Interior, 43 CFR part
2. [72 FR 71244, Dec. 17, 2007] Source: 65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000,
unless otherwise noted.
(a) This subpart applies to all oil produced from Federal oil and gas
leases onshore and on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). It explains how
you as a lessee must calculate the value of production for royalty
purposes consistent with the mineral leasing laws, other applicable laws,
and lease terms. (b) If you are a designee and if you dispose of production on behalf of
a lessee, the terms �you� and �your� in this subpart refer to you and not
to the lessee. In this circumstance, you must determine and report royalty
value for the lessee's oil by applying the rules in this subpart to your
disposition of the lessee's oil. (c) If you are a designee and only report for a lessee, and do not
dispose of the lessee's production, references to �you� and �your� in this
subpart refer to the lessee and not the designee. In this circumstance,
you as a designee must determine and report royalty value for the lessee's
oil by applying the rules in this subpart to the lessee's disposition of
its oil. (d) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with: (1) A Federal statute; (2) A settlement agreement between the United States and a lessee
resulting from administrative or judicial litigation; (3) A written agreement between the lessee and the MMS Director
establishing a method to determine the value of production from any lease
that MMS expects at least would approximate the value established under
this subpart; or (4) An express provision of an oil and gas lease subject to this
subpart, then the statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or
lease provision will govern to the extent of the inconsistency. (e) MMS may audit and adjust all royalty payments. The following definitions apply to this subpart: Affiliate means a person who controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with another person. For purposes of this
subpart: (1) Ownership or common ownership of more than 50 percent of the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership, or other forms of ownership, of
another person constitutes control. Ownership of less than 10 percent
constitutes a presumption of noncontrol that MMS may rebut. (2) If there is ownership or common ownership of 10 through 50 percent
of the voting securities or instruments of ownership, or other forms of
ownership, of another person, MMS will consider the following factors in
determining whether there is control under the circumstances of a
particular case: (i) The extent to which there are common officers or directors; (ii) With respect to the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership: the percentage of ownership or
common ownership, the relative percentage of ownership or common ownership
compared to the percentage(s) of ownership by other persons, whether a
person is the greatest single owner, or whether there is an opposing
voting bloc of greater ownership; (iii) Operation of a lease, plant, or other facility; (iv) The extent of participation by other owners in operations and
day-to-day management of a lease, plant, or other facility; and (v) Other evidence of power to exercise control over or common control
with another person. (3) Regardless of any percentage of ownership or common ownership,
relatives, either by blood or marriage, are affiliates. ANS means Alaska North Slope (ANS). Area means a geographic region at least as large as the limits
of an oil field, in which oil has similar quality, economic, and legal
characteristics. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement between
independent persons who are not affiliates and who have opposing economic
interests regarding that contract. To be considered arm's length for any
production month, a contract must satisfy this definition for that month,
as well as when the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted under generally accepted
accounting and auditing standards, of royalty payment compliance
activities of lessees, designees or other persons who pay royalties,
rents, or bonuses on Federal leases. BLM means the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior. Condensate means liquid hydrocarbons (normally exceeding 40
degrees of API gravity) recovered at the surface without processing.
Condensate is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons resulting from
condensation of petroleum hydrocarbons existing initially in a gaseous
phase in an underground reservoir. Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions, between two or more persons, that is enforceable
by law and that with due consideration creates an obligation. Designee means the person the lessee designates to report and
pay the lessee's royalties for a lease. Exchange agreement means an agreement where one person agrees to
deliver oil to another person at a specified location in exchange for oil
deliveries at another location. Exchange agreements may or may not specify
prices for the oil involved. They frequently specify dollar amounts
reflecting location, quality, or other differentials. Exchange agreements
include buy/sell agreements, which specify prices to be paid at each
exchange point and may appear to be two separate sales within the same
agreement. Examples of other types of exchange agreements include, but are
not limited to, exchanges of produced oil for specific types of crude oil
(e.g., West Texas Intermediate); exchanges of produced oil for other crude
oil at other locations (Location Trades); exchanges of produced oil for
other grades of oil (Grade Trades); and multi-party exchanges. Field means a geographic region situated over one or more
subsurface oil and gas reservoirs and encompassing at least the outermost
boundaries of all oil and gas accumulations known within those reservoirs,
vertically projected to the land surface. State oil and gas regulatory
agencies usually name onshore fields and designate their official
boundaries. MMS names and designates boundaries of OCS fields. Gathering means the movement of lease production to a central
accumulation or treatment point on the lease, unit, or communitized area,
or to a central accumulation or treatment point off the lease, unit, or
communitized area that BLM or MMS approves for onshore and offshore
leases, respectively. Gross proceeds means the total monies and other consideration
accruing for the disposition of oil produced. Gross proceeds also include,
but are not limited to, the following examples: (1) Payments for services such as dehydration, marketing, measurement,
or gathering which the lessee must perform at no cost to the Federal
Government; (2) The value of services, such as salt water disposal, that the
producer normally performs but that the buyer performs on the producer's
behalf; (3) Reimbursements for harboring or terminaling fees; (4) Tax reimbursements, even though the Federal royalty interest may be
exempt from taxation; (5) Payments made to reduce or buy down the purchase price of oil to be
produced in later periods, by allocating such payments over the production
whose price the payment reduces and including the allocated amounts as
proceeds for the production as it occurs; and (6) Monies and all other consideration to which a seller is
contractually or legally entitled, but does not seek to collect through
reasonable efforts. Lease means any contract, profit-share arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States under
a mineral leasing law that authorizes exploration for, development or
extraction of, or removal of oil or gas�or the land area covered by that
authorization, whichever the context requires. Lessee means any person to whom the United States issues an oil
and gas lease, an assignee of all or a part of the record title interest,
or any person to whom operating rights in a lease have been assigned. Location differential means an amount paid or received (whether
in money or in barrels of oil) under an exchange agreement that results
from differences in location between oil delivered in exchange and oil
received in the exchange. A location differential may represent all or
part of the difference between the price received for oil delivered and
the price paid for oil received under a buy/sell exchange agreement. Market center means a major point MMS recognizes for oil sales,
refining, or transshipment. Market centers generally are locations where
MMS-approved publications publish oil spot prices. Marketable condition means oil sufficiently free from impurities
and otherwise in a condition a purchaser will accept under a sales
contract typical for the field or area. MMS-approved publication means a publication MMS approves for
determining ANS spot prices or WTI differentials. Netting means reducing the reported sales value to account for
transportation instead of reporting a transportation allowance as a
separate entry on Form MMS�2014. NYMEX price means the average of the New York Mercantile
Exchange (NYMEX) settlement prices for light sweet crude oil delivered at
Cushing, Oklahoma, calculated as follows: (1) Sum the prices published for each day during the calendar month of
production (excluding weekends and holidays) for oil to be delivered in
the prompt month corresponding to each such day; and (2) Divide the sum by the number of days on which those prices are
published (excluding weekends and holidays). Oil means a mixture of hydrocarbons that existed in the liquid
phase in natural underground reservoirs, remains liquid at atmospheric
pressure after passing through surface separating facilities, and is
marketed or used as a liquid. Condensate recovered in lease separators or
field facilities is oil. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means all submerged lands lying
seaward and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable waters as
defined in Section 2 of the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301) and of
which the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and are
subject to its jurisdiction and control. Person means any individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture (when established as a separate
entity). Prompt month means the nearest month of delivery for which NYMEX
futures prices are published during the trading month. Quality differential means an amount paid or received under an
exchange agreement (whether in money or in barrels of oil) that results
from differences in API gravity, sulfur content, viscosity, metals
content, and other quality factors between oil delivered and oil received
in the exchange. A quality differential may represent all or part of the
difference between the price received for oil delivered and the price paid
for oil received under a buy/sell agreement. Rocky Mountain Region means the States of Colorado, Montana,
North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming, except for those portions
of the San Juan Basin and other oil-producing fields in the �Four Corners�
area that lie within Colorado and Utah. Roll means an adjustment to the NYMEX price that is calculated
as follows: Roll = .6667 � (P0−P1) + .3333 �
(P0−P2), where: P0= the average of the
daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during the prompt month that
is the same as the month of production, as published for each day during
the trading month for which the month of production is the prompt month;
P1= the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for
deliveries during the month following the month of production, published
for each day during the trading month for which the month of production is
the prompt month; and P2= the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during the second month following the
month of production, as published for each day during the trading month
for which the month of production is the prompt month. Calculate the
average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices using only the days on which
such prices are published (excluding weekends and holidays). (1) Example 1. Prices in Out Months are Lower Going Forward: The
month of production for which you must determine royalty value is March.
March was the prompt month (for year 2003) from January 22 through
February 20. April was the first month following the month of production,
and May was the second month following the month of production.
P0therefore is the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices
for deliveries during March published for each business day between
January 22 and February 20. P1is the average of the daily NYMEX
settlement prices for deliveries during April published for each business
day between January 22 and February 20. P2is the average of the
daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during May published for each
business day between January 22 and February 20. In this example, assume
that P0= $28.00 per bbl, P1= $27.70 per bbl, and
P2= $27.10 per bbl. In this example (a declining market), Roll
= .6667 � ($28.00−$27.70) + .3333 � ($28.00−$27.10) = $.20 + $.30 = $.50.
You add this number to the NYMEX price. (2) Example 2. Prices in Out Months are Higher Going Forward:
The month of production for which you must determine royalty value is
July. July 2003 was the prompt month from May 21 through June 20. August
was the first month following the month of production, and September was
the second month following the month of production. P0therefore
is the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for deliveries during
July published for each business day between May 21 and June 20.
P1is the average of the daily NYMEX settlement prices for
deliveries during August published for each business day between May 21
and June 20. P2is the average of the daily NYMEX settlement
prices for deliveries during September published for each business day
between May 21 and June 20. In this example, assume that P0=
$28.00 per bbl, P1= $28.90 per bbl, and P2= $29.50
per bbl. In this example (a rising market), Roll = .6667 � ($28.00−$28.90)
+ .3333 � ($28.00−$29.50) = (−$.60) + (−$.50) = −$1.10. You add this
negative number to the NYMEX price (effectively a subtraction from the
NYMEX price). Sale means a contract between two persons where: (1) The seller unconditionally transfers title to the oil to the buyer
and does not retain any related rights such as the right to buy back
similar quantities of oil from the buyer elsewhere; (2) The buyer pays money or other consideration for the oil; and (3) The parties' intent is for a sale of the oil to occur. Spot price means the price under a spot sales contract
where: (1) A seller agrees to sell to a buyer a specified amount of oil at a
specified price over a specified period of short duration; (2) No cancellation notice is required to terminate the sales
agreement; and (3) There is no obligation or implied intent to continue to sell in
subsequent periods. Tendering program means a producer's offer of a portion of its
crude oil produced from a field or area for competitive bidding,
regardless of whether the production is offered or sold at or near the
lease or unit or away from the lease or unit. Trading month means the period extending from the second
business day before the 25th day of the second calendar month preceding
the delivery month (or, if the 25th day of that month is a non-business
day, the second business day before the last business day preceding the
25th day of that month) through the third business day before the 25th day
of the calendar month preceding the delivery month (or, if the 25th day of
that month is a non-business day, the third business day before the last
business day preceding the 25th day of that month), unless the NYMEX
publishes a different definition or different dates on its official Web
site, www.nymex.com, in which case the NYMEX definition will
apply. Transportation allowance means a deduction in determining
royalty value for the reasonable, actual costs of moving oil to a point of
sale or delivery off the lease, unit area, or communitized area. The
transportation allowance does not include gathering costs. WTI differential means the average of the daily mean
differentials for location and quality between a grade of crude oil at a
market center and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil at Cushing
published for each day for which price publications perform surveys for
deliveries during the production month, calculated over the number of days
on which those differentials are published (excluding weekends and
holidays). Calculate the daily mean differentials by averaging the daily
high and low differentials for the month in the selected publication. Use
only the days and corresponding differentials for which such differentials
are published. (1) Example. Assume the production month was March 2003.
Industry trade publications performed their price surveys and determined
differentials during January 26 through February 25 for oil delivered in
March. The WTI differential (for example, the West Texas Sour crude at
Midland, Texas, spread versus WTI) applicable to valuing oil produced in
the March 2003 production month would be determined using all the business
days for which differentials were published during the period January 26
through February 25 excluding weekends and holidays (22 days). To
calculate the WTI differential, add together all of the daily mean
differentials published for January 26 through February 25 and divide that
sum by 22. (2) [Reserved] [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 24975, May 5,
2004] (a) The value of oil under this section is the gross proceeds accruing
to the seller under the arm's-length contract, less applicable allowances
determined under ��206.110 or 206.111. This value does not apply if you
exercise an option to use a different value provided in paragraph (d)(1)
or (d)(2)(i) of this section, or if one of the exceptions in paragraph (c)
of this section applies. Use this paragraph (a) to value oil that: (1) You sell under an arm's-length sales contract; or (2) You sell or transfer to your affiliate or another person under a
non-arm's-length contract and that affiliate or person, or another
affiliate of either of them, then sells the oil under an arm's-length
contract, unless you exercise the option provided in paragraph (d)(2)(i)
of this section. (b) If you have multiple arm's-length contracts to sell oil produced
from a lease that is valued under paragraph (a) of this section, the value
of the oil is the volume-weighted average of the values established under
this section for each contract for the sale of oil produced from that
lease. (c) This paragraph contains exceptions to the valuation rule in
paragraph (a) of this section. Apply these exceptions on an individual
contract basis. (1) In conducting reviews and audits, if MMS determines that any
arm's-length sales contract does not reflect the total consideration
actually transferred either directly or indirectly from the buyer to the
seller, MMS may require that you value the oil sold under that contract
either under �206.103 or at the total consideration received. (2) You must value the oil under �206.103 if MMS determines that the
value under paragraph (a) of this section does not reflect the reasonable
value of the production due to either: (i) Misconduct by or between the parties to the arm's-length contract;
or (ii) Breach of your duty to market the oil for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor. (A) MMS will not use this provision to simply substitute its judgment
of the market value of the oil for the proceeds received by the seller
under an arm's-length sales contract. (B) The fact that the price received by the seller under an arm's
length contract is less than other measures of market price, such as index
prices, is insufficient to establish breach of the duty to market unless
MMS finds additional evidence that the seller acted unreasonably or in bad
faith in the sale of oil from the lease. (d)(1) If you enter into an arm's-length exchange agreement, or
multiple sequential arm's-length exchange agreements, and following the
exchange(s) you or your affiliate sell(s) the oil received in the
exchange(s) under an arm's-length contract, then you may use either
�206.102(a) or �206.103 to value your production for royalty purposes. (i) If you use �206.102(a), your gross proceeds are the gross proceeds
under your or your affiliate's arm's-length sales contract after the
exchange(s) occur(s). You must adjust your gross proceeds for any location
or quality differential, or other adjustments, you received or paid under
the arm's-length exchange agreement(s). If MMS determines that any
arm's-length exchange agreement does not reflect reasonable location or
quality differentials, MMS may require you to value the oil under
�206.103. You may not otherwise use the price or differential specified in
an arm's-length exchange agreement to value your production. (ii) When you elect under �206.102(d)(1) to use �206.102(a) or
�206.103, you must make the same election for all of your production from
the same unit, communitization agreement, or lease (if the lease is not
part of a unit or communitization agreement) sold under arm's-length
contracts following arm's-length exchange agreements. You may not change
your election more often than once every 2 years. (2)(i) If you sell or transfer your oil production to your affiliate
and that affiliate or another affiliate then sells the oil under an
arm's-length contract, you may use either �206.102(a) or �206.103 to value
your production for royalty purposes. (ii) When you elect under �206.102(d)(2)(i) to use �206.102(a) or
�206.103, you must make the same election for all of your production from
the same unit, communitization agreement, or lease (if the lease is not
part of a unit or communitization agreement) that your affiliates resell
at arm's length. You may not change your election more often than once
every 2 years. (e) If you value oil under paragraph (a) of this section: (1) MMS may require you to certify that your or your affiliate's
arm's-length contract provisions include all of the consideration the
buyer must pay, either directly or indirectly, for the oil. (2) You must base value on the highest price the seller can receive
through legally enforceable claims under the contract. (i) If the seller fails to take proper or timely action to receive
prices or benefits it is entitled to, you must pay royalty at a value
based upon that obtainable price or benefit. But you will owe no
additional royalties unless or until the seller receives monies or
consideration resulting from the price increase or additional benefits,
if: (A) The seller makes timely application for a price increase or benefit
allowed under the contract; (B) The purchaser refuses to comply; and (C) The seller takes reasonable documented measures to force purchaser
compliance. (ii) Paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section will not permit you to avoid
your royalty payment obligation where a purchaser fails to pay, pays only
in part, or pays late. Any contract revisions or amendments that reduce
prices or benefits to which the seller is entitled must be in writing and
signed by all parties to the arm's-length contract. This section explains how to value oil that you may not value under
�206.102 or that you elect under �206.102(d) to value under this section.
First determine whether paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section applies
to production from your lease, or whether you may apply paragraph (d) or
(e) with MMS approval. (a) Production from leases in California or Alaska. Value is the
average of the daily mean ANS spot prices published in any MMS-approved
publication during the trading month most concurrent with the production
month. (For example, if the production month is June, compute the average
of the daily mean prices using the daily ANS spot prices published in the
MMS-approved publication for all the business days in June.) (1) To calculate the daily mean spot price, average the daily high and
low prices for the month in the selected publication. (2) Use only the days and corresponding spot prices for which such
prices are published. (3) You must adjust the value for applicable location and quality
differentials, and you may adjust it for transportation costs, under
�206.112. (4) After you select an MMS-approved publication, you may not select a
different publication more often than once every 2 years, unless the
publication you use is no longer published or MMS revokes its approval of
the publication. If you are required to change publications, you must
begin a new 2-year period. (b) Production from leases in the Rocky Mountain Region. This
paragraph provides methods and options for valuing your production under
different factual situations. You must consistently apply paragraph
(b)(1), (b)(2), or (b)(3) of this section to value all of your production
from the same unit, communitization agreement, or lease (if the lease or a
portion of the lease is not part of a unit or communitization agreement)
that you cannot value under �206.102 or that you elect under �206.102(d)
to value under this section. (1) If you have an MMS-approved tendering program, you must value oil
produced from leases in the area the tendering program covers at the
highest winning bid price for tendered volumes. (i) The minimum requirements for MMS to approve your tendering program
are: (A) You must offer and sell at least 30 percent of your or your
affiliates' production from both Federal and non-Federal leases in the
area under your tendering program; and (B) You must receive at least three bids for the tendered volumes from
bidders who do not have their own tendering programs that cover some or
all of the same area. (ii) If you do not have an MMS-approved tendering program, you may
elect to value your oil under either paragraph (b)(2) or (b)(3) of this
section. After you select either paragraph (b)(2) or (b)(3) of this
section, you may not change to the other method more often than once every
2 years, unless the method you have been using is no longer applicable and
you must apply the other paragraph. If you change methods, you must begin
a new 2-year period. (2) Value is the volume-weighted average of the gross proceeds accruing
to the seller under your or your affiliates' arm's-length contracts for
the purchase or sale of production from the field or area during the
production month. (i) The total volume purchased or sold under those contracts must
exceed 50 percent of your and your affiliates' production from both
Federal and non-Federal leases in the same field or area during that
month. (ii) Before calculating the volume-weighted average, you must normalize
the quality of the oil in your or your affiliates' arm's-length purchases
or sales to the same gravity as that of the oil produced from the
lease. (3) Value is the NYMEX price (without the roll), adjusted for
applicable location and quality differentials and transportation costs
under �206.112. (4) If you demonstrate to MMS's satisfaction that paragraphs (b)(1)
through (b)(3) of this section result in an unreasonable value for your
production as a result of circumstances regarding that production, the MMS
Director may establish an alternative valuation method. (c) Production from leases not located in California, Alaska, or the
Rocky Mountain Region. (1) Value is the NYMEX price, plus the roll,
adjusted for applicable location and quality differentials and
transportation costs under �206.112. (2) If the MMS Director determines that use of the roll no longer
reflects prevailing industry practice in crude oil sales contracts or that
the most common formula used by industry to calculate the roll changes,
MMS may terminate or modify use of the roll under paragraph (c)(1) of this
section at the end of each 2-year period following July 6, 2004, through
notice published in the (d) Unreasonable value. If MMS determines that the NYMEX price
or ANS spot price does not represent a reasonable royalty value in any
particular case, MMS may establish reasonable royalty value based on other
relevant matters. (e) Production delivered to your refinery and the NYMEX price or ANS
spot price is an unreasonable value. (1) Instead of valuing your
production under paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section, you may apply
to the MMS Director to establish a value representing the market at the
refinery if: (i) You transport your oil directly to your or your affiliate's
refinery, or exchange your oil for oil delivered to your or your
affiliate's refinery; and (ii) You must value your oil under this section at the NYMEX price or
ANS spot price; and (iii) You believe that use of the NYMEX price or ANS spot price results
in an unreasonable royalty value. (2) You must provide adequate documentation and evidence demonstrating
the market value at the refinery. That evidence may include, but is not
limited to: (i) Costs of acquiring other crude oil at or for the refinery; (ii) How adjustments for quality, location, and transportation were
factored into the price paid for other oil; (iii) Volumes acquired for and refined at the refinery; and (iv) Any other appropriate evidence or documentation that MMS
requires. (3) If the MMS Director establishes a value representing market value
at the refinery, you may not take an allowance against that value under
�206.112(b) unless it is included in the Director's approval. [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2002, as amended at 67 FR 19111, Apr. 18, 2002;
69 FR 24976, May 5, 2004] (a) MMS periodically will publish in the (1) Publications buyers and sellers frequently use; (2) Publications frequently mentioned in purchase or sales
contracts; (3) Publications that use adequate survey techniques, including
development of estimates based on daily surveys of buyers and sellers of
crude oil, and, for ANS spot prices, buyers and sellers of ANS crude oil;
and (4) Publications independent from MMS, other lessors, and lessees. (b) Any publication may petition MMS to be added to the list of
acceptable publications. (c) MMS will specify the tables you must use in the acceptable
publications. (d) MMS may revoke its approval of a particular publication if it
determines that the prices or differentials published in the publication
do not accurately represent NYMEX prices or differentials or ANS spot
market prices or differentials. [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 24976, May 5,
2004] If you determine the value of your oil under this subpart, you must
retain all data relevant to the determination of royalty value. (a) You must be able to show: (1) How you calculated the value you reported, including all
adjustments for location, quality, and transportation, and (2) How you complied with these rules. (b) Recordkeeping requirements are found at part 207 of this
chapter. (c) MMS may review and audit your data, and MMS will direct you to use
a different value if it determines that the reported value is inconsistent
with the requirements of this subpart. You must place oil in marketable condition and market the oil for the
mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the Federal
Government. If you use gross proceeds under an arm's-length contract in
determining value, you must increase those gross proceeds to the extent
that the purchaser, or any other person, provides certain services that
the seller normally would be responsible to perform to place the oil in
marketable condition or to market the oil. (a) You may request a value determination from MMS regarding any
Federal lease oil production. Your request must: (1) Be in writing; (2) Identify specifically all leases involved, the record title or
operating rights owners of those leases, and the designees for those
leases; (3) Completely explain all relevant facts. You must inform MMS of any
changes to relevant facts that occur before we respond to your
request; (4) Include copies of all relevant documents; (5) Provide your analysis of the issue(s), including citations to all
relevant precedents (including adverse precedents); and (6) Suggest your proposed valuation method. (b) MMS will reply to requests expeditiously. MMS may either: (1) Issue a value determination signed by the Assistant Secretary, Land
and Minerals Management; or (2) Issue a value determination by MMS; or (3) Inform you in writing that MMS will not provide a value
determination. Situations in which MMS typically will not provide any
value determination include, but are not limited to: (i) Requests for guidance on hypothetical situations; and (ii) Matters that are the subject of pending litigation or
administrative appeals. (c)(1) A value determination signed by the Assistant Secretary, Land
and Minerals Management, is binding on both you and MMS until the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it. (2) After the Assistant Secretary issues a value determination, you
must make any adjustments in royalty payments that follow from the
determination and, if you owe additional royalties, pay late payment
interest under 30 CFR 218.54. (3) A value determination signed by the Assistant Secretary is the
final action of the Department and is subject to judicial review under 5
U.S.C. 701�706. (d) A value determination issued by MMS is binding on MMS and delegated
States with respect to the specific situation addressed in the
determination unless the MMS (for MMS-issued value determinations) or the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it. (1) A value determination by MMS is not an appealable decision or order
under 30 CFR part 290 subpart B. (2) If you receive an order requiring you to pay royalty on the same
basis as the value determination, you may appeal that order under 30 CFR
part 290 subpart B. (e) In making a value determination, MMS or the Assistant Secretary may
use any of the applicable valuation criteria in this subpart. (f) A change in an applicable statute or regulation on which any value
determination is based takes precedence over the value determination,
regardless of whether the MMS or the Assistant Secretary modifies or
rescinds the value determination. (g) The MMS or the Assistant Secretary generally will not retroactively
modify or rescind a value determination issued under paragraph (d) of this
section, unless: (1) There was a misstatement or omission of material facts; or (2) The facts subsequently developed are materially different from the
facts on which the guidance was based. (h) MMS may make requests and replies under this section available to
the public, subject to the confidentiality requirements under
�206.108. Certain information you submit to MMS regarding valuation of oil,
including transportation allowances, may be exempt from disclosure. To the
extent applicable laws and regulations permit, MMS will keep confidential
any data you submit that is privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt
from disclosure. All requests for information must be submitted under the
Freedom of Information Act regulations of the Department of the Interior
at 43 CFR part 2. (a) Transportation allowances permitted when value is based on gross
proceeds. MMS will allow a deduction for the reasonable, actual costs
to transport oil from the lease to the point off the lease under ��206.110
or 206.111, as applicable. This paragraph applies when: (1) You value oil under �206.102 based on gross proceeds from a sale at
a point off the lease, unit, or communitized area where the oil is
produced, and (2) The movement to the sales point is not gathering. (b) Transportation allowances and other adjustments that apply when
value is based on NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices. If you value oil
using NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices under �206.103, MMS will allow an
adjustment for certain location and quality differentials and certain
costs associated with transporting oil as provided under �206.112. (c) Limits on transportation allowances. (1) Except as provided
in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, your transportation allowance may not
exceed 50 percent of the value of the oil as determined under �206.102 or
�206.103 of this subpart. You may not use transportation costs incurred to
move a particular volume of production to reduce royalties owed on
production for which those costs were not incurred. (2) You may ask MMS to approve a transportation allowance in excess of
the limitation in paragraph (c)(1) of this section. You must demonstrate
that the transportation costs incurred were reasonable, actual, and
necessary. Your application for exception (using Form MMS�4393, Request to
Exceed Regulatory Allowance Limitation) must contain all relevant and
supporting documentation necessary for MMS to make a determination. You
may never reduce the royalty value of any production to zero. (d) Allocation of transportation costs. You must allocate
transportation costs among all products produced and transported as
provided in ��206.110 and 206.111. You must express transportation
allowances for oil as dollars per barrel. (e) Liability for additional payments. If MMS determines that
you took an excessive transportation allowance, then you must pay any
additional royalties due, plus interest under 30 CFR 218.54. You also
could be entitled to a credit with interest under applicable rules if you
understated your transportation allowance. If you take a deduction for
transportation on Form MMS�2014 by improperly netting the allowance
against the sales value of the oil instead of reporting the allowance as a
separate entry, MMS may assess you an amount under �206.116. [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 24976, May 5,
2004] (a) If you or your affiliate incur transportation costs under an
arm's-length transportation contract, you may claim a transportation
allowance for the reasonable, actual costs incurred as more fully
explained in paragraph (b) of this section, except as provided in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section and subject to the limitation
in �206.109(c). You must be able to demonstrate that your or your
affiliate's contract is at arm's length. You do not need MMS approval
before reporting a transportation allowance for costs incurred under an
arm's-length transportation contract. (1) If MMS determines that the contract reflects more than the
consideration actually transferred either directly or indirectly from you
or your affiliate to the transporter for the transportation, MMS may
require that you calculate the transportation allowance under
�206.111. (2) You must calculate the transportation allowance under �206.111 if
MMS determines that the consideration paid under an arm's-length
transportation contract does not reflect the reasonable value of the
transportation due to either: (i) Misconduct by or between the parties to the arm's-length contract;
or (ii) Breach of your duty to market the oil for the mutual benefit of
yourself and the lessor. (A) MMS will not use this provision to simply substitute its judgment
of the reasonable oil transportation costs incurred by you or your
affiliate under an arm's-length transportation contract. (B) The fact that the cost you or your affiliate incur in an arm's
length transaction is higher than other measures of transportation costs,
such as rates paid by others in the field or area, is insufficient to
establish breach of the duty to market unless MMS finds additional
evidence that you or your affiliate acted unreasonably or in bad faith in
transporting oil from the lease. (b) You may deduct any of the following actual costs you (including
your affiliates) incur for transporting oil. You may not use as a
deduction any cost that duplicates all or part of any other cost that you
use under this paragraph. (1) The amount that you pay under your arm's-length transportation
contract or tariff. (2) Fees paid (either in volume or in value) for actual or theoretical
line losses. (3) Fees paid for administration of a quality bank. (4) The cost of carrying on your books as inventory a volume of oil
that the pipeline operator requires you to maintain, and that you do
maintain, in the line as line fill. You must calculate this cost as
follows: (i) Multiply the volume that the pipeline requires you to maintain, and
that you do maintain, in the pipeline by the value of that volume for the
current month calculated under �206.102 or �206.103, as applicable;
and (ii) Multiply the value calculated under paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this
section by the monthly rate of return, calculated by dividing the rate of
return specified in �206.111(i)(2) by 12. (5) Fees paid to a terminal operator for loading and unloading of crude
oil into or from a vessel, vehicle, pipeline, or other conveyance. (6) Fees paid for short-term storage (30 days or less) incidental to
transportation as required by a transporter. (7) Fees paid to pump oil to another carrier's system or vehicles as
required under a tariff. (8) Transfer fees paid to a hub operator associated with physical
movement of crude oil through the hub when you do not sell the oil at the
hub. These fees do not include title transfer fees. (9) Payments for a volumetric deduction to cover shrinkage when
high-gravity petroleum (generally in excess of 51 degrees API) is mixed
with lower-gravity crude oil for transportation. (10) Costs of securing a letter of credit, or other surety, that the
pipeline requires you as a shipper to maintain. (c) You may not deduct any costs that are not actual costs of
transporting oil, including but not limited to the following: (1) Fees paid for long-term storage (more than 30 days). (2) Administrative, handling, and accounting fees associated with
terminalling. (3) Title and terminal transfer fees. (4) Fees paid to track and match receipts and deliveries at a market
center or to avoid paying title transfer fees. (5) Fees paid to brokers. (6) Fees paid to a scheduling service provider. (7) Internal costs, including salaries and related costs, rent/space
costs, office equipment costs, legal fees, and other costs to schedule,
nominate, and account for sale or movement of production. (8) Gauging fees. (d) If your arm's-length transportation contract includes more than one
liquid product, and the transportation costs attributable to each product
cannot be determined from the contract, then you must allocate the total
transportation costs to each of the liquid products transported. (1) Your allocation must use the same proportion as the ratio of the
volume of each product (excluding waste products with no value) to the
volume of all liquid products (excluding waste products with no
value). (2) You may not claim an allowance for the costs of transporting lease
production that is not royalty-bearing. (3) You may propose to MMS a cost allocation method on the basis of the
values of the products transported. MMS will approve the method unless it
is not consistent with the purposes of the regulations in this
subpart. (e) If your arm's-length transportation contract includes both gaseous
and liquid products, and the transportation costs attributable to each
product cannot be determined from the contract, then you must propose an
allocation procedure to MMS. (1) You may use your proposed procedure to calculate a transportation
allowance until MMS accepts or rejects your cost allocation. If MMS
rejects your cost allocation, you must amend your Form MMS�2014 for the
months that you used the rejected method and pay any additional royalty
and interest due. (2) You must submit your initial proposal, including all available
data, within 3 months after first claiming the allocated deductions on
Form MMS�2014. (f) If your payments for transportation under an arm's-length contract
are not on a dollar-per-unit basis, you must convert whatever
consideration is paid to a dollar-value equivalent. (g) If your arm's-length sales contract includes a provision reducing
the contract price by a transportation factor, do not separately report
the transportation factor as a transportation allowance on Form
MMS�2014. (1) You may use the transportation factor in determining your gross
proceeds for the sale of the product. (2) You must obtain MMS approval before claiming a transportation
factor in excess of 50 percent of the base price of the product. [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 24976, May 5,
2004] (a) This section applies if you or your affiliate do not have an
arm's-length transportation contract, including situations where you or
your affiliate provide your own transportation services. Calculate your
transportation allowance based on your or your affiliate's reasonable,
actual costs for transportation during the reporting period using the
procedures prescribed in this section. (b) Your or your affiliate's actual costs include the following: (1) Operating and maintenance expenses under paragraphs (d) and (e) of
this section; (2) Overhead under paragraph (f) of this section; (3) Depreciation under paragraphs (g) and (h) of this section; (4) A return on undepreciated capital investment under paragraph (i) of
this section; and (5) Once the transportation system has been depreciated below ten
percent of total capital investment, a return on ten percent of total
capital investment under paragraph (j) of this section. (6) To the extent not included in costs identified in paragraphs (d)
through (j) of this section, you may also deduct the following actual
costs. You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all or part
of any other cost that you use under this section: (i) Volumetric adjustments for actual (not theoretical) line
losses. (ii) The cost of carrying on your books as inventory a volume of oil
that the pipeline operator requires you as a shipper to maintain, and that
you do maintain, in the line as line fill. You must calculate this cost as
follows: (A) Multiply the volume that the pipeline requires you to maintain, and
that you do maintain, in the pipeline by the value of that volume for the
current month calculated under �206.102 or �206.103, as applicable;
and (B) Multiply the value calculated under paragraph (b)(6)(ii)(A) of this
section by the monthly rate of return, calculated by dividing the rate of
return specified in �206.111(i)(2) by 12. (iii) Fees paid to a non-affiliated terminal operator for loading and
unloading of crude oil into or from a vessel, vehicle, pipeline, or other
conveyance. (iv) Transfer fees paid to a hub operator associated with physical
movement of crude oil through the hub when you do not sell the oil at the
hub. These fees do not include title transfer fees. (v) A volumetric deduction to cover shrinkage when high-gravity
petroleum (generally in excess of 51 degrees API) is mixed with
lower-gravity crude oil for transportation. (vi) Fees paid to a non-affiliated quality bank administrator for
administration of a quality bank. (7) You may not deduct any costs that are not actual costs of
transporting oil, including but not limited to the following: (i) Fees paid for long-term storage (more than 30 days). (ii) Administrative, handling, and accounting fees associated with
terminalling. (iii) Title and terminal transfer fees. (iv) Fees paid to track and match receipts and deliveries at a market
center or to avoid paying title transfer fees. (v) Fees paid to brokers. (vi) Fees paid to a scheduling service provider. (vii) Internal costs, including salaries and related costs, rent/space
costs, office equipment costs, legal fees, and other costs to schedule,
nominate, and account for sale or movement of production. (viii) Theoretical line losses. (ix) Gauging fees. (c) Allowable capital costs are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and installation of capital equipment)
which are an integral part of the transportation system. (d) Allowable operating expenses include: (i) Operations supervision and engineering; (ii) Operations labor; (iii) Fuel; (iv) Utilities; (v) Materials; (vi) Ad valorem property taxes; (vii) Rent; (viii) Supplies; and (ix) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating expense
which you can document. (e) Allowable maintenance expenses include: (i) Maintenance of the transportation system; (ii) Maintenance of equipment; (iii) Maintenance labor; and (iv) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses
which you can document. (f) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (g) To compute depreciation, you may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the transportation system services, or a
unit-of-production method. After you make an election, you may not change
methods without MMS approval. You may not depreciate equipment below a
reasonable salvage value. (h) This paragraph describes the basis for your depreciation
schedule. (1) If you or your affiliate own a transportation system on June 1,
2000, you must base your depreciation schedule used in calculating actual
transportation costs for production after June 1, 2000, on your total
capital investment in the system (including your original purchase price
or construction cost and subsequent reinvestment). (2) If you or your affiliate purchased the transportation system at
arm's length before June 1, 2000, you must incorporate depreciation on the
schedule based on your purchase price (and subsequent reinvestment) into
your transportation allowance calculations for production after June 1,
2000, beginning at the point on the depreciation schedule corresponding to
that date. You must prorate your depreciation for calendar year 2000 by
claiming part-year depreciation for the period from June 1, 2000 until
December 31, 2000. You may not adjust your transportation costs for
production before June 1, 2000, using the depreciation schedule based on
your purchase price. (3) If you are the original owner of the transportation system on June
1, 2000, or if you purchased your transportation system before March 1,
1988, you must continue to use your existing depreciation schedule in
calculating actual transportation costs for production in periods after
June 1, 2000. (4) If you or your affiliate purchase a transportation system at arm's
length from the original owner after June 1, 2000, you must base your
depreciation schedule used in calculating actual transportation costs on
your total capital investment in the system (including your original
purchase price and subsequent reinvestment). You must prorate your
depreciation for the year in which you or your affiliate purchased the
system to reflect the portion of that year for which you or your affiliate
own the system. (5) If you or your affiliate purchase a transportation system at arm's
length after June 1, 2000, from anyone other than the original owner, you
must assume the depreciation schedule of the person from whom you bought
the system. Include in the depreciation schedule any subsequent
reinvestment. (i)(1) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment,
multiply the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the beginning
of the period for which you are calculating the transportation allowance
by the rate of return provided in paragraph (i)(2) of this section. (2) The rate of return is 1.3 times the industrial bond yield index for
Standard & Poor's BBB bond rating. Use the monthly average rate
published in �Standard & Poor's Bond Guide� for the first month of the
reporting period for which the allowance applies. Calculate the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent transportation allowance reporting
period. (j)(1) After a transportation system has been depreciated at or below a
value equal to ten percent of your total capital investment, you may
continue to include in the allowance calculation a cost equal to ten
percent of your total capital investment in the transportation system
multiplied by a rate of return under paragraph (i)(2) of this section. (2) You may apply this paragraph to a transportation system that before
June 1, 2000, was depreciated at or below a value equal to ten percent of
your total capital investment. (k) Calculate the deduction for transportation costs based on your or
your affiliate's cost of transporting each product through each individual
transportation system. Where more than one liquid product is transported,
allocate costs consistently and equitably to each of the liquid products
transported. Your allocation must use the same proportion as the ratio of
the volume of each liquid product (excluding waste products with no value)
to the volume of all liquid products (excluding waste products with no
value). (1) You may not take an allowance for transporting lease production
that is not royalty-bearing. (2) You may propose to MMS a cost allocation method on the basis of the
values of the products transported. MMS will approve the method if it is
consistent with the purposes of the regulations in this subpart. (l)(1) Where you transport both gaseous and liquid products through the
same transportation system, you must propose a cost allocation procedure
to MMS. (2) You may use your proposed procedure to calculate a transportation
allowance until MMS accepts or rejects your cost allocation. If MMS
rejects your cost allocation, you must amend your Form MMS�2014 for the
months that you used the rejected method and pay any additional royalty
and interest due. (3) You must submit your initial proposal, including all available
data, within 3 months after first claiming the allocated deductions on
Form MMS�2014. [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 24977, May 5,
2004] This section applies when you use NYMEX prices or ANS spot prices to
calculate the value of production under �206.103. As specified in this
section, adjust the NYMEX price to reflect the difference in value between
your lease and Cushing, Oklahoma, or adjust the ANS spot price to reflect
the difference in value between your lease and the appropriate
MMS-recognized market center at which the ANS spot price is published (for
example, Long Beach, California, or San Francisco, California). Paragraph
(a) of this section explains how you adjust the value between the lease
and the market center, and paragraph (b) of this section explains how you
adjust the value between the market center and Cushing when you use NYMEX
prices. Paragraph (c) of this section explains how adjustments may be made
for quality differentials that are not accounted for through exchange
agreements. Paragraph (d) of this section gives some examples. References
in this section to �you� include your affiliates as applicable. (a) To adjust the value between the lease and the market center: (1)(i) For oil that you exchange at arm's length between your lease and
the market center (or between any intermediate points between those
locations), you must calculate a lease-to-market center differential by
the applicable location and quality differentials derived from your
arm's-length exchange agreement applicable to production during the
production month. (ii) For oil that you exchange between your lease and the market center
(or between any intermediate points between those locations) under an
exchange agreement that is not at arm's length, you must obtain approval
from MMS for a location and quality differential. Until you obtain such
approval, you may use the location and quality differential derived from
that exchange agreement applicable to production during the production
month. If MMS prescribes a different differential, you must apply MMS's
differential to all periods for which you used your proposed differential.
You must pay any additional royalties owed resulting from using MMS's
differential plus late payment interest from the original royalty due
date, or you may report a credit for any overpaid royalties plus interest
under 30 U.S.C. 1721(h). (2) For oil that you transport between your lease and the market center
(or between any intermediate points between those locations), you may take
an allowance for the cost of transporting that oil between the relevant
points as determined under �206.110 or �206.111, as applicable. (3) If you transport or exchange at arm's length (or both transport and
exchange) at least 20 percent, but not all, of your oil produced from the
lease to a market center, determine the adjustment between the lease and
the market center for the oil that is not transported or exchanged (or
both transported and exchanged) to or through a market center as
follows: (i) Determine the volume-weighted average of the lease-to-market center
adjustment calculated under paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
for the oil that you do transport or exchange (or both transport and
exchange) from your lease to a market center. (ii) Use that volume-weighted average lease-to-market center adjustment
as the adjustment for the oil that you do not transport or exchange (or
both transport and exchange) from your lease to a market center. (4) If you transport or exchange (or both transport and exchange) less
than 20 percent of the crude oil produced from your lease between the
lease and a market center, you must propose to MMS an adjustment between
the lease and the market center for the portion of the oil that you do not
transport or exchange (or both transport and exchange) to a market center.
Until you obtain such approval, you may use your proposed adjustment. If
MMS prescribes a different adjustment, you must apply MMS's adjustment to
all periods for which you used your proposed adjustment. You must pay any
additional royalties owed resulting from using MMS's adjustment plus late
payment interest from the original royalty due date, or you may report a
credit for any overpaid royalties plus interest under 30 U.S.C.
1721(h). (5) You may not both take a transportation allowance and use a location
and quality adjustment or exchange differential for the same oil between
the same points. (b) For oil that you value using NYMEX prices, adjust the value between
the market center and Cushing, Oklahoma, as follows: (1) If you have arm's-length exchange agreements between the market
center and Cushing under which you exchange to Cushing at least 20 percent
of all the oil you own at the market center during the production month,
you must use the volume-weighted average of the location and quality
differentials from those agreements as the adjustment between the market
center and Cushing for all the oil that you produce from the leases during
that production month for which that market center is used. (2) If paragraph (b)(1) of this section does not apply, you must use
the WTI differential published in an MMS-approved publication for the
market center nearest your lease, for crude oil most similar in quality to
your production, as the adjustment between the market center and Cushing.
(For example, for light sweet crude oil produced offshore of Louisiana,
use the WTI differential for Light Louisiana Sweet crude oil at St. James,
Louisiana.) After you select an MMS-approved publication, you may not
select a different publication more often than once every 2 years, unless
the publication you use is no longer published or MMS revokes its approval
of the publication. If you are required to change publications, you must
begin a new 2-year period. (3) If neither paragraph (b)(1) nor (b)(2) of this section applies, you
may propose an alternative differential to MMS. Until you obtain such
approval, you may use your proposed differential. If MMS prescribes a
different differential, you must apply MMS's differential to all periods
for which you used your proposed differential. You must pay any additional
royalties owed resulting from using MMS's differential plus late payment
interest from the original royalty due date, or you may report a credit
for any overpaid royalties plus interest under 30 U.S.C. 1721(h). (c)(1) If you adjust for location and quality differentials or for
transportation costs under paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, also
adjust the NYMEX price or ANS spot price for quality based on premiums or
penalties determined by pipeline quality bank specifications at
intermediate commingling points or at the market center if those points
are downstream of the royalty measurement point approved by MMS or BLM, as
applicable. Make this adjustment only if and to the extent that such
adjustments were not already included in the location and quality
differentials determined from your arm's-length exchange agreements. (2) If the quality of your oil as adjusted is still different from the
quality of the representative crude oil at the market center after making
the quality adjustments described in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c)(1) of
this section, you may make further gravity adjustments using posted price
gravity tables. If quality bank adjustments do not incorporate or provide
for adjustments for sulfur content, you may make sulfur adjustments, based
on the quality of the representative crude oil at the market center, of
5.0 cents per one-tenth percent difference in sulfur content, unless MMS
approves a higher adjustment. (d) The examples in this paragraph illustrate how to apply the
requirement of this section. (1) Example. Assume that a Federal lessee produces crude oil
from a lease near Artesia, New Mexico. Further, assume that the lessee
transports the oil to Roswell, New Mexico, and then exchanges the oil to
Midland, Texas. Assume the lessee refines the oil received in exchange at
Midland. Assume that the NYMEX price is $30.00/bbl, adjusted for the roll;
that the WTI differential (Cushing to Midland) is −$.10/bbl; that the
lessee's exchange agreement between Roswell and Midland results in a
location and quality differential of −$.08/bbl; and that the lessee's
actual cost of transporting the oil from Artesia to Roswell is $.40/bbl.
In this example, the royalty value of the oil is $30.00−$.10−$.08�$.40 =
$29.42/bbl. (2) Example. Assume the same facts as in the example in
paragraph (1), except that the lessee transports and exchanges to Midland
40 percent of the production from the lease near Artesia, and transports
the remaining 60 percent directly to its own refinery in Ohio. In this
example, the 40 percent of the production would be valued at $29.42/bbl,
as explained in the previous example. In this example, the other 60
percent also would be valued at $29.42/bbl. (3) Example. Assume that a Federal lessee produces crude oil
from a lease near Bakersfield, California. Further, assume that the lessee
transports the oil to Hynes Station, and then exchanges the oil to Cushing
which it further exchanges with oil it refines. Assume that the ANS spot
price is $20.00/bbl, and that the lessee's actual cost of transporting the
oil from Bakersfield to Hynes Station is $.28/bbl. The lessee must request
approval from MMS for a location and quality adjustment between Hynes
Station and Long Beach. For example, the lessee likely would propose using
the tariff on Line 63 from Hynes Station to Long Beach as the adjustment
between those points. Assume that adjustment to be $.72, including the
sulfur and gravity bank adjustments, and that MMS approves the lessee's
request. In this example, the preliminary (because the location and
quality adjustment is subject to MMS review) royalty value of the oil is
$20.00−$.72−$.28 = $19.00/bbl. The fact that oil was exchanged to Cushing
does not change use of ANS spot prices for royalty valuation. [69 FR 24978, May 5, 2004] MMS periodically will publish in the (a) Points where MMS-approved publications publish prices useful for
index purposes; (b) Markets served; (c) Input from industry and others knowledgeable in crude oil marketing
and transportation; (d) Simplification; and (e) Other relevant matters. You or your affiliate must use a separate entry on Form MMS�2014 to
notify MMS of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your
affiliate incur. MMS may require you or your affiliate to submit
arm's-length transportation contracts, production agreements, operating
agreements, and related documents. Recordkeeping requirements are found at
part 207 of this chapter. (a) You or your affiliate must use a separate entry on Form MMS�2014 to
notify MMS of an allowance based on transportation costs you or your
affiliate incur. (b) For new transportation facilities or arrangements, base your
initial deduction on estimates of allowable oil transportation costs for
the applicable period. Use the most recently available operations data for
the transportation system or, if such data are not available, use
estimates based on data for similar transportation systems. Section
206.117 will apply when you amend your report based on your actual
costs. (c) MMS may require you or your affiliate to submit all data used to
calculate the allowance deduction. Recordkeeping requirements are found at
part 207 of this chapter. (a) If you or your affiliate deducts a transportation allowance on Form
MMS�2014 that exceeds 50 percent of the value of the oil transported
without obtaining MMS's prior approval under �206.109, you must pay
interest on the excess allowance amount taken from the date that amount is
taken to the date you or your affiliate files an exception request that
MMS approves. If you do not file an exception request, or if MMS does not
approve your request, you must pay interest on the excess allowance amount
taken from the date that amount is taken until the date you pay the
additional royalties owed. (b) If you or your affiliate takes a deduction for transportation on
Form MMS�2014 by improperly netting an allowance against the oil instead
of reporting the allowance as a separate entry, MMS may assess a civil
penalty under 30 CFR part 241. [73 FR 15890, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) If your or your affiliate's actual transportation allowance is less
than the amount you claimed on Form MMS�2014 for each month during the
allowance reporting period, you must pay additional royalties plus
interest computed under 30 CFR 218.54 from the date you took the deduction
to the date you repay the difference. (b) If the actual transportation allowance is greater than the amount
you claimed on Form MMS�2014 for any month during the allowance form
reporting period, you are entitled to a credit plus interest under
applicable rules. (a) Compute royalties based on the quantity and quality of oil as
measured at the point of settlement approved by BLM for onshore leases or
MMS for offshore leases. (b) If the value of oil determined under this subpart is based upon a
quantity or quality different from the quantity or quality at the point of
royalty settlement approved by the BLM for onshore leases or MMS for
offshore leases, adjust the value for those differences in quantity or
quality. (c) Any actual loss that you may incur before the royalty settlement
metering or measurement point is not subject to royalty if BLM or MMS, as
appropriate, determines that the loss is unavoidable. (d) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, royalties are
due on 100 percent of the volume measured at the approved point of royalty
settlement. You may not claim a reduction in that measured volume for
actual losses beyond the approved point of royalty settlement or for
theoretical losses that are claimed to have taken place either before or
after the approved point of royalty settlement. [65 FR 14088, Mar. 15, 2000, as amended at 69 FR 24979, May 5,
2004] MMS may use an operating allowance for the purpose of computing payment
obligations when specified in the notice of sale and the lease. MMS will
specify the allowance amount or formula in the notice of sale and in the
lease agreement. Source: 53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988,
unless otherwise noted.
(a) This subpart is applicable to all gas production from Federal oil
and gas leases. The purpose of this subpart is to establish the value of
production for royalty purposes consistent with the mineral leasing laws,
other applicable laws and lease terms. (b) If the regulations in this subpart are inconsistent with: (1) A Federal statute; (2) A settlement agreement between the United States and a lessee
resulting from administrative or judicial litigation; (3) A written agreement between the lessee and the MMS Director
establishing a method to determine the value of production from any lease
that MMS expects at least would approximate the value established under
this subpart; or (4) An express provision of an oil and gas lease subject to this
subpart; then the statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or
lease provision will govern to the extent of the inconsistency. (c) All royalty payments made to MMS are subject to audit and
adjustment. (d) The regulations in this subpart are intended to ensure that the
administration of oil and gas leases is discharged in accordance with the
requirements of the governing mineral leasing laws and lease terms. [61 FR 5464, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 70 FR 11877, Mar. 10,
2005] For purposes of this subpart: Affiliate means a person who controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with another person. For purposes of this
subpart: (1) Ownership or common ownership of more than 50 percent of the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership, or other forms of ownership, of
another person constitutes control. Ownership of less than 10 percent
constitutes a presumption of noncontrol that MMS may rebut. (2) If there is ownership or common ownership of 10 through 50 percent
of the voting securities or instruments of ownership, or other forms of
ownership, of another person, MMS will consider the following factors in
determining whether there is control under the circumstances of a
particular case: (i) The extent to which there are common officers or directors; (ii) With respect to the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership: The percentage of ownership or
common ownership, the relative percentage of ownership or common ownership
compared to the percentage(s) of ownership by other persons, whether a
person is the greatest single owner, or whether there is an opposing
voting bloc of greater ownership; (iii) Operation of a lease, plant, pipeline, or other facility; (iv) The extent of participation by other owners in operations and
day-to-day management of a lease, plant, pipeline, or other facility;
and (v) Other evidence of power to exercise control over or common control
with another person. (3) Regardless of any percentage of ownership or common ownership,
relatives, either by blood or marriage, are affiliates. Allowance means a deduction in determining value for royalty
purposes. Processing allowance means an allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs of processing gas determined under this subpart.
Transportation allowance means an allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs of moving unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas plant products
to a point of sale or delivery off the lease, unit area, or communitized
area, or away from a processing plant. The transportation allowance does
not include gathering costs. Area means a geographic region at least as large as the defined
limits of an oil and/or gas field, in which oil and/or gas lease products
have similar quality, economic, and legal characteristics. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement between
independent persons who are not affiliates and who have opposing economic
interests regarding that contract. To be considered arm's length for any
production month, a contract must satisfy this definition for that month,
as well as when the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting and auditing standards, of royalty payment compliance
activities of lessees or other interest holders who pay royalties, rents,
or bonuses on Federal leases. BLM means the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior. Compression means the process of raising the pressure of
gas. Condensate means liquid hydrocarbons (normally exceeding 40
degrees of API gravity) recovered at the surface without resorting to
processing. Condensate is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons that results
from condensation of petroleum hydrocarbons existing initially in a
gaseous phase in an underground reservoir. Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions thereto, between two or more persons and
enforceable by law that with due consideration creates an obligation. Field means a geographic region situated over one or more
subsurface oil and gas reservoirs encompassing at least the outermost
boundaries of all oil and gas accumulations known to be within those
reservoirs vertically projected to the land surface. Onshore fields are
usually given names and their official boundaries are often designated by
oil and gas regulatory agencies in the respective States in which the
fields are located. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) fields are named and
their boundaries are designated by MMS. Gas means any fluid, either combustible or noncombustible,
hydrocarbon or nonhydrocarbon, which is extracted from a reservoir and
which has neither independent shape nor volume, but tends to expand
indefinitely. It is a substance that exists in a gaseous or rarefied state
under standard temperature and pressure conditions. Gas plant products means separate marketable elements,
compounds, or mixtures, whether in liquid, gaseous, or solid form,
resulting from processing gas, excluding residue gas. Gathering means the movement of lease production to a central
accumulation and/or treatment point on the lease, unit or communitized
area, or to a central accumulation or treatment point off the lease, unit
or communitized area as approved by BLM or MMS OCS operations personnel
for onshore and OCS leases, respectively. Gross proceeds (for royalty payment purposes) means the total
monies and other consideration accruing to an oil and gas lessee for the
disposition of the gas, residue gas, and gas plant products produced.
Gross proceeds includes, but is not limited to, payments to the lessee for
certain services such as dehydration, measurement, and/or gathering to the
extent that the lessee is obligated to perform them at no cost to the
Federal Government. Tax reimbursements are part of the gross proceeds
accruing to a lessee even though the Federal royalty interest may be
exempt from taxation. Monies and other consideration, including the forms
of consideration identified in this paragraph, to which a lessee is
contractually or legally entitled but which it does not seek to collect
through reasonable efforts are also part of gross proceeds. Lease means any contract, profit-share arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States under
a mineral leasing law that authorizes exploration for, development or
extraction of, or removal of lease products�or the land area covered by
that authorization, whichever is required by the context. Lease products means any leased minerals attributable to,
originating from, or allocated to Outer Continental Shelf or onshore
Federal leases. Lessee means any person to whom the United States issues a
lease, and any person who has been assigned an obligation to make royalty
or other payments required by the lease. This includes any person who has
an interest in a lease as well as an operator or payor who has no interest
in the lease but who has assumed the royalty payment responsibility. Like-quality lease products means lease products which have
similar chemical, physical, and legal characteristics. Marketable condition means lease products which are sufficiently
free from impurities and otherwise in a condition that they will be
accepted by a purchaser under a sales contract typical for the field or
area. Marketing affiliate means an affiliate of the lessee whose
function is to acquire only the lessee's production and to market that
production. Minimum royalty means that minimum amount of annual royalty that
the lessee must pay as specified in the lease or in applicable leasing
regulations. Net-back method (or work-back method) means a method for
calculating market value of gas at the lease. Under this method, costs of
transportation, processing, or manufacturing are deducted from the
proceeds received for the gas, residue gas or gas plant products, and any
extracted, processed, or manufactured products, or from the value of the
gas, residue gas or gas plant products, and any extracted, processed, or
manufactured products, at the first point at which reasonable values for
any such products may be determined by a sale pursuant to an arm's-length
contract or comparison to other sales of such products, to ascertain value
at the lease. Net output means the quantity of residue gas and each gas plant
product that a processing plant produces. Net profit share (for applicable Federal leases) means the
specified share of the net profit from production of oil and gas as
provided in the agreement. Netting means the deduction of an allowance from the sales value
by reporting a net sales value, instead of correctly reporting the
deduction as a separate entry on Form MMS�2014. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) means all submerged lands lying
seaward and outside of the area of land beneath navigable waters as
defined in section 2 of the Submerged Lands Act (43 U.S.C. 1301) and of
which the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and are
subject to its jurisdiction and control. Person means any individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture (when established as a separate
entity). Posted price means the price, net of all adjustments for quality
and location, specified in publicly available price bulletins or other
price notices available as part of normal business operations for
quantities of unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas plant products in
marketable condition. Processing means any process designed to remove elements or
compounds (hydrocarbon and nonhydrocarbon) from gas, including absorption,
adsorption, or refrigeration. Field processes which normally take place on
or near the lease, such as natural pressure reduction, mechanical
separation, heating, cooling, dehydration, and compression, are not
considered processing. The changing of pressures and/or temperatures in a
reservoir is not considered processing. Residue gas means that hydrocarbon gas consisting principally of
methane resulting from processing gas. Sales type code means the contract type or general disposition
(e.g., arm's-length or non-arm's-length) of production from the lease. The
sales type code applies to the sales contract, or other disposition, and
not to the arm's-length or non-arm's-length nature of a transportation or
processing allowance. Section 6 lease means an OCS lease subject to section 6 of the
Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, as amended, 43 U.S.C. 1335. Spot sales agreement means a contract wherein a seller agrees to
sell to a buyer a specified amount of unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products at a specified price over a fixed period, usually of short
duration, which does not normally require a cancellation notice to
terminate, and which does not contain an obligation, nor imply an intent,
to continue in subsequent periods. Warranty contract means a long-term contract entered into prior
to 1970, including any amendments thereto, for the sale of gas wherein the
producer agrees to sell a specific amount of gas and the gas delivered in
satisfaction of this obligation may come from fields or sources outside of
the designated fields. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 45084, Nov. 8, 1988; 61
FR 5464, Feb. 12, 1996; 64 FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999; 70 FR 11878, Mar. 10,
2005; 73 FR 15890, Mar. 26, 2008] (a)(1) This section applies to the valuation of all gas that is not
processed and all gas that is processed but is sold or otherwise disposed
of by the lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract prior to processing
(including all gas where the lessee's arm's-length contract for the sale
of that gas prior to processing provides for the value to be determined on
the basis of a percentage of the purchaser's proceeds resulting from
processing the gas). This section also applies to processed gas that must
be valued prior to processing in accordance with �206.155 of this part.
Where the lessee's contract includes a reservation of the right to process
the gas and the lessee exercises that right, �206.153 of this part shall
apply instead of this section. (2) The value of production, for royalty purposes, of gas subject to
this subpart shall be the value of gas determined under this section less
applicable allowances. (b)(1)(i) The value of gas sold under an arm's-length contract is the
gross proceeds accruing to the lessee except as provided in paragraphs
(b)(1)(ii), (iii), and (iv) of this section. The lessee shall have the
burden of demonstrating that its contract is arm's-length. The value which
the lessee reports, for royalty purposes, is subject to monitoring,
review, and audit. For purposes of this section, gas which is sold or
otherwise transferred to the lessee's marketing affiliate and then sold by
the marketing affiliate pursuant to an arm's-length contract shall be
valued in accordance with this paragraph based upon the sale by the
marketing affiliate. Also, where the lessee's arm's-length contract for
the sale of gas prior to processing provides for the value to be
determined based upon a percentage of the purchaser's proceeds resulting
from processing the gas, the value of production, for royalty purposes,
shall never be less than a value equivalent to 100 percent of the value of
the residue gas attributable to the processing of the lessee's gas. (ii) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects the total consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the buyer to the seller for the gas. If the
contract does not reflect the total consideration, then the MMS may
require that the gas sold pursuant to that contract be valued in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this section. Value may not be less than
the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee, including the additional
consideration. (iii) If the MMS determines that the gross proceeds accruing to the
lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract do not reflect the reasonable
value of the production because of misconduct by or between the
contracting parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty
to the lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the
lessee and the lessor, then MMS shall require that the gas production be
valued pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section, and in
accordance with the notification requirements of paragraph (e) of this
section. When MMS determines that the value may be unreasonable, MMS will
notify the lessee and give the lessee an opportunity to provide written
information justifying the lessee's value. (iv) How to value over-delivered volumes under a cash-out program.
This paragraph applies to situations where a pipeline purchases gas
from a lessee according to a cash-out program under a transportation
contract. For all over-delivered volumes, the royalty value is the price
the pipeline is required to pay for volumes within the tolerances for
over-delivery specified in the transportation contract. Use the same value
for volumes that exceed the over-delivery tolerances even if those volumes
are subject to a lower price under the transportation contract. However,
if MMS determines that the price specified in the transportation contract
for over-delivered volumes is unreasonably low, the lessee must value all
over-delivered volumes under paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this
section. (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (b)(1) of this section,
the value of gas sold pursuant to a warranty contract shall be determined
by MMS, and due consideration will be given to all valuation criteria
specified in this section. The lessee must request a value determination
in accordance with paragraph (g) of this section for gas sold pursuant to
a warranty contract; provided, however, that any value determination for a
warranty contract in effect on the effective date of these regulations
shall remain in effect until modified by MMS. (3) MMS may require a lessee to certify that its arm's-length contract
provisions include all of the consideration to be paid by the buyer,
either directly or indirectly, for the gas. (c) The value of gas subject to this section which is not sold pursuant
to an arm's-length contract shall be the reasonable value determined in
accordance with the first applicable of the following methods: (1) The gross proceeds accruing to the lessee pursuant to a sale under
its non-arm's-length contract (or other disposition other than by an
arm's-length contract), provided that those gross proceeds are equivalent
to the gross proceeds derived from, or paid under, comparable arm's-length
contracts for purchases, sales, or other dispositions of like-quality gas
in the same field (or, if necessary to obtain a reasonable sample, from
the same area). In evaluating the comparability of arm's-length contracts
for the purposes of these regulations, the following factors shall be
considered: price, time of execution, duration, market or markets served,
terms, quality of gas, volume, and such other factors as may be
appropriate to reflect the value of the gas; (2) A value determined by consideration of other information relevant
in valuing like-quality gas, including gross proceeds under arm's-length
contracts for like-quality gas in the same field or nearby fields or
areas, posted prices for gas, prices received in arm's-length spot sales
of gas, other reliable public sources of price or market information, and
other information as to the particular lease operation or the saleability
of the gas; or (3) A net-back method or any other reasonable method to determine
value. (d)(1) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section, except
paragraph (h) of this section, if the maximum price permitted by Federal
law at which gas may be sold is less than the value determined pursuant to
this section, then MMS shall accept such maximum price as the value. For
purposes of this section, price limitations set by any State or local
government shall not be considered as a maximum price permitted by Federal
law. (2) The limitation prescribed in paragraph (d)(1) of this section shall
not apply to gas sold pursuant to a warranty contract and valued pursuant
to paragraph (b)(2) of this section. (e)(1) Where the value is determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of this
section, the lessee shall retain all data relevant to the determination of
royalty value. Such data shall be subject to review and audit, and MMS
will direct a lessee to use a different value if it determines that the
reported value is inconsistent with the requirements of these
regulations. (2) Any Federal lessee will make available upon request to the
authorized MMS or State representatives, to the Office of the Inspector
General of the Department of the Interior, or other person authorized to
receive such information, arm's-length sales and volume data for
like-quality production sold, purchased or otherwise obtained by the
lessee from the field or area or from nearby fields or areas. (3) A lessee shall notify MMS if it has determined value pursuant to
paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section. The notification shall be by
letter to the MMS Associate Director for Minerals Revenue Management or
his/her designee. The letter shall identify the valuation method to be
used and contain a brief description of the procedure to be followed. The
notification required by this paragraph is a one-time notification due no
later than the end of the month following the month the lessee first
reports royalties on a Form MMS�2014 using a valuation method authorized
by paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section, and each time there is a
change in a method under paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section. (f) If MMS determines that a lessee has not properly determined value,
the lessee shall pay the difference, if any, between royalty payments made
based upon the value it has used and the royalty payments that are due
based upon the value established by MMS. The lessee shall also pay
interest on that difference computed pursuant to 30 CFR 218.54. If the
lessee is entitled to a credit, MMS will provide instructions for the
taking of that credit. (g) The lessee may request a value determination from MMS. In that
event, the lessee shall propose to MMS a value determination method, and
may use that method in determining value for royalty purposes until MMS
issues its decision. The lessee shall submit all available data relevant
to its proposal. The MMS shall expeditiously determine the value based
upon the lessee's proposal and any additional information MMS deems
necessary. In making a value determination MMS may use any of the
valuation criteria authorized by this subpart. That determination shall
remain effective for the period stated therein. After MMS issues its
determination, the lessee shall make the adjustments in accordance with
paragraph (f) of this section. (h) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, under no
circumstances shall the value of production for royalty purposes be less
than the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee for lease production, less
applicable allowances. (i) The lessee must place gas in marketable condition and market the
gas for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the
Federal Government. Where the value established under this section is
determined by a lessee's gross proceeds, that value will be increased to
the extent that the gross proceeds have been reduced because the
purchaser, or any other person, is providing certain services the cost of
which ordinarily is the responsibility of the lessee to place the gas in
marketable condition or to market the gas. (j) Value shall be based on the highest price a prudent lessee can
receive through legally enforceable claims under its contract. If there is
no contract revision or amendment, and the lessee fails to take proper or
timely action to receive prices or benefits to which it is entitled, it
must pay royalty at a value based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
Contract revisions or amendments shall be in writing and signed by all
parties to an arm's-length contract. If the lessee makes timely
application for a price increase or benefit allowed under its contract but
the purchaser refuses, and the lessee takes reasonable measures, which are
documented, to force purchaser compliance, the lessee will owe no
additional royalties unless or until monies or consideration resulting
from the price increase or additional benefits are received. This
paragraph shall not be construed to permit a lessee to avoid its royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in whole
or in part or timely, for a quantity of gas. (k) Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
no review, reconciliation, monitoring, or other like process that results
in a redetermination by MMS of value under this section shall be
considered final or binding as against the Federal Government or its
beneficiaries until the audit period is formally closed. (l) Certain information submitted to MMS to support valuation
proposals, including transportation or extraordinary cost allowances, is
exempted from disclosure by the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. �552,
or other Federal law. Any data specified by law to be privileged,
confidential, or otherwise exempt will be maintained in a confidential
manner in accordance with applicable law and regulations. All requests for
information about determinations made under this subpart are to be
submitted in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act regulation of
the Department of the Interior, 43 CFR part 2. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 56 FR 46530, Sept. 13, 1991;
61 FR 5464, Feb. 12, 1996; 62 FR 65761, 65762, Dec. 16, 1997] (a)(1) This section applies to the valuation of all gas that is
processed by the lessee and any other gas production to which this subpart
applies and that is not subject to the valuation provisions of �206.152 of
this part. This section applies where the lessee's contract includes a
reservation of the right to process the gas and the lessee exercises that
right. (2) The value of production, for royalty purposes, of gas subject to
this section shall be the combined value of the residue gas and all gas
plant products determined pursuant to this section, plus the value of any
condensate recovered downstream of the point of royalty settlement without
resorting to processing determined pursuant to �206.102 of this part, less
applicable transportation allowances and processing allowances determined
pursuant to this subpart. (b)(1)(i) The value of residue gas or any gas plant product sold under
an arm's-length contract is the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee,
except as provided in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii), (iii), and (iv) of this
section. The lessee shall have the burden of demonstrating that its
contract is arm's-length. The value that the lessee reports for royalty
purposes is subject to monitoring, review, and audit. For purposes of this
section, residue gas or any gas plant product which is sold or otherwise
transferred to the lessee's marketing affiliate and then sold by the
marketing affiliate pursuant to an arm's-length contract shall be valued
in accordance with this paragraph based upon the sale by the marketing
affiliate. (ii) In conducting these reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether
or not the contract reflects the total consideration actually transferred
either directly or indirectly from the buyer to the seller for the residue
gas or gas plant product. If the contract does not reflect the total
consideration, then the MMS may require that the residue gas or gas plant
product sold pursuant to that contract be valued in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section. Value may not be less than the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee, including the additional
consideration. (iii) If the MMS determines that the gross proceeds accruing to the
lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract do not reflect the reasonable
value of the residue gas or gas plant product because of misconduct by or
between the contracting parties, or because the lessee otherwise has
breached its duty to the lessor to market the production for the mutual
benefit of the lessee and the lessor, then MMS shall require that the
residue gas or gas plant product be valued pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) or
(c)(3) of this section, and in accordance with the notification
requirements of paragraph (e) of this section. When MMS determines that
the value may be unreasonable, MMS will notify the lessee and give the
lessee an opportunity to provide written information justifying the
lessee's value. (iv) How to value over-delivered volumes under a cash-out program.
This paragraph applies to situations where a pipeline purchases gas
from a lessee according to a cash-out program under a transportation
contract. For all over-delivered volumes, the royalty value is the price
the pipeline is required to pay for volumes within the tolerances for
over-delivery specified in the transportation contract. Use the same value
for volumes that exceed the over-delivery tolerances even if those volumes
are subject to a lower price under the transportation contract. However,
if MMS determines that the price specified in the transportation contract
for over-delivered volumes is unreasonably low, the lessee must value all
over-delivered volumes under paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this
section. (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (b)(1) of this section,
the value of residue gas sold pursuant to a warranty contract shall be
determined by MMS, and due consideration will be given to all valuation
criteria specified in this section. The lessee must request a value
determination in accordance with paragraph (g) of this section for gas
sold pursuant to a warranty contract; provided, however, that any value
determination for a warranty contract in effect on the effective date of
these regulations shall remain in effect until modified by MMS. (3) MMS may require a lessee to certify that its arm's-length contract
provisions include all of the consideration to be paid by the buyer,
either directly or indirectly, for the residue gas or gas plant
product. (c) The value of residue gas or any gas plant product which is not sold
pursuant to an arm's-length contract shall be the reasonable value
determined in accordance with the first applicable of the following
methods: (1) The gross proceeds accruing to the lessee pursuant to a sale under
its non-arm's-length contract (or other disposition other than by an
arm's-length contract), provided that those gross proceeds are equivalent
to the gross proceeds derived from, or paid under, comparable arm's-length
contracts for purchases, sales, or other dispositions of like quality
residue gas or gas plant products from the same processing plant (or, if
necessary to obtain a reasonable sample, from nearby plants). In
evaluating the comparability of arm's-length contracts for the purposes of
these regulations, the following factors shall be considered: price, time
of execution, duration, market or markets served, terms, quality of
residue gas or gas plant products, volume, and such other factors as may
be appropriate to reflect the value of the residue gas or gas plant
products; (2) A value determined by consideration of other information relevant
in valuing like-quality residue gas or gas plant products, including gross
proceeds under arm's-length contracts for like-quality residue gas or gas
plant products from the same gas plant or other nearby processing plants,
posted prices for residue gas or gas plant products, prices received in
spot sales of residue gas or gas plant products, other reliable public
sources of price or market information, and other information as to the
particular lease operation or the saleability of such residue gas or gas
plant products; or (3) A net-back method or any other reasonable method to determine
value. (d)(1) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section, except
paragraph (h) of this section, if the maximum price permitted by Federal
law at which any residue gas or gas plant products may be sold is less
than the value determined pursuant to this section, then MMS shall accept
such maximum price as the value. For the purposes of this section, price
limitations set by any State or local government shall not be considered
as a maximum price permitted by Federal law. (2) The limitation prescribed by paragraph (d)(1) of this section shall
not apply to residue gas sold pursuant to a warranty contract and valued
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section. (e)(1) Where the value is determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of this
section, the lessee shall retain all data relevant to the determination of
royalty value. Such data shall be subject to review and audit, and MMS
will direct a lessee to use a different value if it determines upon review
or audit that the reported value is inconsistent with the requirements of
these regulations. (2) Any Federal lessee will make available upon request to the
authorized MMS or State representatives, to the Office of the Inspector
General of the Department of the Interior, or other persons authorized to
receive such information, arm's-length sales and volume data for
like-quality residue gas and gas plant products sold, purchased or
otherwise obtained by the lessee from the same processing plant or from
nearby processing plants. (3) A lessee shall notify MMS if it has determined any value pursuant
to paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section. The notification shall be
by letter to the MMS Associate Director for Minerals Revenue Management or
his/her designee. The letter shall identify the valuation method to be
used and contain a brief description of the procedure to be followed. The
notification required by this paragraph is a one-time notification due no
later than the end of the month following the month the lessee first
reports royalties on a Form MMS�2014 using a valuation method authorized
by paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section, and each time there is a
change in a method under paragraph (c)(2) or (c)(3) of this section. (f) If MMS determines that a lessee has not properly determined value,
the lessee shall pay the difference, if any, between royalty payments made
based upon the value it has used and the royalty payments that are due
based upon the value established by MMS. The lessee shall also pay
interest computed on that difference pursuant to 30 CFR 218.54. If the
lessee is entitled to a credit, MMS will provide instructions for the
taking of that credit. (g) The lessee may request a value determination from MMS. In that
event, the lessee shall propose to MMS a value determination method, and
may use that method in determining value for royalty purposes until MMS
issues its decision. The lessee shall submit all available data relevant
to its proposal. The MMS shall expeditiously determine the value based
upon the lessee's proposal and any additional information MMS deems
necessary. In making a value determination, MMS may use any of the
valuation criteria authorized by this subpart. That determination shall
remain effective for the period stated therein. After MMS issues its
determination, the lessee shall make the adjustments in accordance with
paragraph (f) of this section. (h) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, under no
circumstances shall the value of production for royalty purposes be less
than the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee for residue gas and/or any
gas plant products, less applicable transportation allowances and
processing allowances determined pursuant to this subpart. (i) The lessee must place residue gas and gas plant products in
marketable condition and market the residue gas and gas plant products for
the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the Federal
Government. Where the value established under this section is determined
by a lessee's gross proceeds, that value will be increased to the extent
that the gross proceeds have been reduced because the purchaser, or any
other person, is providing certain services the cost of which ordinarily
is the responsibility of the lessee to place the residue gas or gas plant
products in marketable condition or to market the residue gas and gas
plant products. (j) Value shall be based on the highest price a prudent lessee can
receive through legally enforceable claims under its contract. Absent
contract revision or amendment, if the lessee fails to take proper or
timely action to receive prices or benefits to which it is entitled it
must pay royalty at a value based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
Contract revisions or amendments shall be in writing and signed by all
parties to an arm's-length contract. If the lessee makes timely
application for a price increase or benefit allowed under its contract but
the purchaser refuses, and the lessee takes reasonable measures, which are
documented, to force purchaser compliance, the lessee will owe no
additional royalties unless or until monies or consideration resulting
from the price increase or additional benefits are received. This
paragraph shall not be construed to permit a lessee to avoid its royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in whole
or in part, or timely, for a quantity of residue gas or gas plant
product. (k) Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
no review, reconciliation, monitoring, or other like process that results
in a redetermination by MMS of value under this section shall be
considered final or binding against the Federal Government or its
beneficiaries until the audit period is formally closed. (l) Certain information submitted to MMS to support valuation
proposals, including transportation allowances, processing allowances or
extraordinary cost allowances, is exempted from disclosure by the Freedom
of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, or other Federal law. Any data specified
by law to be privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt, will be
maintained in a confidential manner in accordance with applicable law and
regulations. All requests for information about determinations made under
this part are to be submitted in accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act regulation of the Department of the Interior, 43 CFR part
2. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 56 FR 46530, Sept. 13, 1991;
61 FR 5465, Feb. 12, 1996; 62 FR 65762, Dec. 16, 1997] (a)(1) Royalties shall be computed on the basis of the quantity and
quality of unprocessed gas at the point of royalty settlement approved by
BLM or MMS for onshore and OCS leases, respectively. (2) If the value of gas determined pursuant to �206.152 of this subpart
is based upon a quantity and/or quality that is different from the
quantity and/or quality at the point of royalty settlement, as approved by
BLM or MMS, that value shall be adjusted for the differences in quantity
and/or quality. (b)(1) For residue gas and gas plant products, the quantity basis for
computing royalties due is the monthly net output of the plant even though
residue gas and/or gas plant products may be in temporary storage. (2) If the value of residue gas and/or gas plant products determined
pursuant to �206.153 of this subpart is based upon a quantity and/or
quality of residue gas and/or gas plant products that is different from
that which is attributable to a lease, determined in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section, that value shall be adjusted for the
differences in quantity and/or quality. (c) The quantity of the residue gas and gas plant products attributable
to a lease shall be determined according to the following procedure: (1) When the net output of the processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from only one lease, the quantity of the residue gas and gas
plant products on which computations of royalty are based is the net
output of the plant. (2) When the net output of a processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from more than one lease producing gas of uniform content, the
quantity of the residue gas and gas plant products allocable to each lease
shall be in the same proportions as the ratios obtained by dividing the
amount of gas delivered to the plant from each lease by the total amount
of gas delivered from all leases. (3) When the net output of a processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from more than one lease producing gas of nonuniform content, the
quantity of the residue gas allocable to each lease will be determined by
multiplying the amount of gas delivered to the plant from the lease by the
residue gas content of the gas, and dividing the arithmetical product thus
obtained by the sum of the similar arithmetical products separately
obtained for all leases from which gas is delivered to the plant, and then
multiplying the net output of the residue gas by the arithmetic quotient
obtained. The net output of gas plant products allocable to each lease
will be determined by multiplying the amount of gas delivered to the plant
from the lease by the gas plant product content of the gas, and dividing
the arithmetical product thus obtained by the sum of the similar
arithmetical products separately obtained for all leases from which gas is
delivered to the plant, and then multiplying the net output of each gas
plant product by the arithmetic quotient obtained. (4) A lessee may request MMS approval of other methods for determining
the quantity of residue gas and gas plant products allocable to each
lease. If approved, such method will be applicable to all gas production
from Federal leases that is processed in the same plant. (d)(1) No deductions may be made from the royalty volume or royalty
value for actual or theoretical losses. Any actual loss of unprocessed gas
that may be sustained prior to the royalty settlement metering or
measurement point will not be subject to royalty provided that such loss
is determined to have been unavoidable by BLM or MMS, as appropriate. (2) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(1) of this section and 30 CFR
202.151(c), royalties are due on 100 percent of the volume determined in
accordance with paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section. There can be
no reduction in that determined volume for actual losses after the
quantity basis has been determined or for theoretical losses that are
claimed to have taken place. Royalties are due on 100 percent of the value
of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, and/or gas plant products as provided
in this subpart, less applicable allowances. There can be no deduction
from the value of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, and/or gas plant
products to compensate for actual losses after the quantity basis has been
determined, or for theoretical losses that are claimed to have taken
place. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 61 FR 5465, Feb. 12,
1996] (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, where the
lessee (or a person to whom the lessee has transferred gas pursuant to a
non-arm's-length contract or without a contract) processes the lessee's
gas and after processing the gas the residue gas is not sold pursuant to
an arm's-length contract, the value, for royalty purposes, shall be the
greater of (1) the combined value, for royalty purposes, of the residue
gas and gas plant products resulting from processing the gas determined
pursuant to �206.153 of this subpart, plus the value, for royalty
purposes, of any condensate recovered downstream of the point of royalty
settlement without resorting to processing determined pursuant to �206.102
of this subpart; or (2) the value, for royalty purposes, of the gas prior
to processing determined in accordance with �206.152 of this subpart. (b) The requirement for accounting for comparison contained in the
terms of leases will govern as provided in �206.150(b) of this subpart.
When accounting for comparison is required by the lease terms, such
accounting for comparison shall be determined in accordance with paragraph
(a) of this section. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 61 FR 5465, Feb. 12,
1996] (a) Where the value of gas has been determined pursuant to �206.152 or
�206.153 of this subpart at a point (e.g., sales point or point of value
determination) off the lease, MMS shall allow a deduction for the
reasonable actual costs incurred by the lessee to transport unprocessed
gas, residue gas, and gas plant products from a lease to a point off the
lease including, if appropriate, transportation from the lease to a gas
processing plant off the lease and from the plant to a point away from the
plant. (b) Transportation costs must be allocated among all products produced
and transported as provided in �206.157. (c)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, for
unprocessed gas valued in accordance with �206.152 of this subpart, the
transportation allowance deduction on the basis of a sales type code may
not exceed 50 percent of the value of the unprocessed gas determined under
�206.152 of this subpart. (2) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, for gas
production valued in accordance with �206.153 of this subpart, the
transportation allowance deduction on the basis of a sales type code may
not exceed 50 percent of the value of the residue gas or gas plant product
determined under �206.153 of this subpart. For purposes of this section,
natural gas liquids will be considered one product. (3) Upon request of a lessee, MMS may approve a transportation
allowance deduction in excess of the limitations prescribed by paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section. The lessee must demonstrate that the
transportation costs incurred in excess of the limitations prescribed in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section were reasonable, actual, and
necessary. An application for exception (using Form MMS�4393, Request to
Exceed Regulatory Allowance Limitation) must contain all relevant and
supporting documentation necessary for MMS to make a determination. Under
no circumstances may the value for royalty purposes under any sales type
code be reduced to zero. (d) If, after a review or audit, MMS determines that a lessee has
improperly determined a transportation allowance authorized by this
subpart, then the lessee must pay any additional royalties, plus interest,
determined in accordance with 30 CFR 218.54, or will be entitled to a
credit, with interest. If the lessee takes a deduction for transportation
on Form MMS�2014 by improperly netting the allowance against the sales
value of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, and gas plant products instead
of reporting the allowance as a separate entry, MMS may assess a civil
penalty under 30 CFR part 241. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 61 FR 5465, Feb. 12, 1996; 64
FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999; 73 FR 15890, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) Arm's-length transportation contracts. (1)(i) For
transportation costs incurred by a lessee under an arm's-length contract,
the transportation allowance shall be the reasonable, actual costs
incurred by the lessee for transporting the unprocessed gas, residue gas
and/or gas plant products under that contract, except as provided in
paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (a)(1)(iii) of this section, subject to
monitoring, review, audit, and adjustment. The lessee shall have the
burden of demonstrating that its contract is arm's-length. MMS' prior
approval is not required before a lessee may deduct costs incurred under
an arm's-length contract. Such allowances shall be subject to the
provisions of paragraph (f) of this section. The lessee must claim a
transportation allowance by reporting it as a separate entry on the Form
MMS�2014. (ii) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether or not
the contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred
either directly or indirectly from the lessee to the transporter for the
transportation. If the contract reflects more than the total
consideration, then the MMS may require that the transportation allowance
be determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. (iii) If the MMS determines that the consideration paid pursuant to an
arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the reasonable value
of the transportation because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the
lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and
the lessor, then MMS shall require that the transportation allowance be
determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS
determines that the value of the transportation may be unreasonable, MMS
will notify the lessee and give the lessee an opportunity to provide
written information justifying the lessee's transportation costs. (2)(i) If an arm's-length transportation contract includes more than
one product in a gaseous phase and the transportation costs attributable
to each product cannot be determined from the contract, the total
transportation costs shall be allocated in a consistent and equitable
manner to each of the products transported in the same proportion as the
ratio of the volume of each product (excluding waste products which have
no value) to the volume of all products in the gaseous phase (excluding
waste products which have no value). Except as provided in this paragraph,
no allowance may be taken for the costs of transporting lease production
which is not royalty bearing without MMS approval. (ii) Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph (i), the lessee may
propose to MMS a cost allocation method on the basis of the values of the
products transported. MMS shall approve the method unless it determines
that it is not consistent with the purposes of the regulations in this
part. (3) If an arm's-length transportation contract includes both gaseous
and liquid products and the transportation costs attributable to each
cannot be determined from the contract, the lessee shall propose an
allocation procedure to MMS. The lessee may use the transportation
allowance determined in accordance with its proposed allocation procedure
until MMS issues its determination on the acceptability of the cost
allocation. The lessee shall submit all relevant data to support its
proposal. MMS shall then determine the gas transportation allowance based
upon the lessee's proposal and any additional information MMS deems
necessary. The lessee must submit the allocation proposal within 3 months
of claiming the allocated deduction on the Form MMS�2014. (4) Where the lessee's payments for transportation under an
arm's-length contract are not based on a dollar per unit, the lessee shall
convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent for
the purposes of this section. (5) Where an arm's-length sales contract price or a posted price
includes a provision whereby the listed price is reduced by a
transportation factor, MMS will not consider the transportation factor to
be a transportation allowance. The transportation factor may be used in
determining the lessee's gross proceeds for the sale of the product. The
transportation factor may not exceed 50 percent of the base price of the
product without MMS approval. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length transportation contract or has no contract, including
those situations where the lessee performs transportation services for
itself, the transportation allowance will be based upon the lessee's
reasonable actual costs as provided in this paragraph. All transportation
allowances deducted under a non-arm's-length or no contract situation are
subject to monitoring, review, audit, and adjustment. The lessee must
claim a transportation allowance by reporting it as a separate entry on
the Form MMS�2014. When necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a lessee
to modify its estimated or actual transportation allowance deduction. (2) The transportation allowance for non-arm's-length or no-contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for
transportation during the reporting period, including operating and
maintenance expenses, overhead, and either depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, or a cost equal to the initial depreciable
investment in the transportation system multiplied by a rate of return in
accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. Allowable capital
costs are generally those costs for depreciable fixed assets (including
costs of delivery and installation of capital equipment) which are an
integral part of the transportation system. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes; rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the
transportation system; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and
other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the
lessee can document. (iii) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either depreciation or a return on depreciable
capital investment. After a lessee has elected to use either method for a
transportation system, the lessee may not later elect to change to the
other alternative without approval of the MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the transportation system services, or a unit
of production method. After an election is made, the lessee may not change
methods without MMS approval. A change in ownership of a transportation
system shall not alter the depreciation schedule established by the
original transporter/lessee for purposes of the allowance calculation.
With or without a change in ownership, a transportation system shall be
depreciated only once. Equipment shall not be depreciated below a
reasonable salvage value. (B) The MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the transportation system multiplied by the
rate of return determined pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section.
No allowance shall be provided for depreciation. This alternative shall
apply only to transportation facilities first placed in service after
March 1, 1988. (v) The rate of return must be 1.3 times the industrial rate associated
with Standard & Poor's BBB rating. The BBB rate must be the monthly
average rate as published in Standard & Poor's Bond Guide for the
first month for which the allowance is applicable. The rate must be
redetermined at the beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (3)(i) The deduction for transportation costs shall be determined on
the basis of the lessee's cost of transporting each product through each
individual transportation system. Where more than one product in a gaseous
phase is transported, the allocation of costs to each of the products
transported shall be made in a consistent and equitable manner in the same
proportion as the ratio of the volume of each product (excluding waste
products which have no value) to the volume of all products in the gaseous
phase (excluding waste products which have no value). Except as provided
in this paragraph, the lessee may not take an allowance for transporting a
product which is not royalty bearing without MMS approval. (ii) Notwithstanding the requirements of paragraph (b)(3)(i), the
lessee may propose to the MMS a cost allocation method on the basis of the
values of the products transported. MMS shall approve the method unless it
determines that it is not consistent with the purposes of the regulations
in this part. (4) Where both gaseous and liquid products are transported through the
same transportation system, the lessee shall propose a cost allocation
procedure to MMS. The lessee may use the transportation allowance
determined in accordance with its proposed allocation procedure until MMS
issues its determination on the acceptability of the cost allocation. The
lessee shall submit all relevant data to support its proposal. MMS shall
then determine the transportation allowance based upon the lessee's
proposal and any additional information MMS deems necessary. The lessee
must submit the allocation proposal within 3 months of claiming the
allocated deduction on the Form MMS�2014. (5) You may apply for an exception from the requirement to compute
actual costs under paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4) of this section. (i) The MMS will grant the exception if: (A) The transportation system has a tariff filed with the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) or a state regulatory agency, that
FERC or the state regulatory agency has permitted to become effective,
and (B) Third parties are paying prices, including discounted prices, under
the tariff to transport gas on the system under arm's-length
transportation contracts. (ii) If MMS approves the exception, you must calculate your
transportation allowance for each production month based on the lesser of
the volume-weighted average of the rates paid by the third parties under
arm's-length transportation contracts during that production month or the
non-arm's-length payment by the lessee to the pipeline. (iii) If during any production month there are no prices paid under the
tariff by third parties to transport gas on the system under arm's-length
transportation contracts, you may use the volume-weighted average of the
rates paid by third parties under arm's-length transportation contracts in
the most recent preceding production month in which the tariff remains in
effect and third parties paid such rates, for up to five successive
production months. You must use the non-arm's-length payment by the lessee
to the pipeline if it is less than the volume-weighted average of the
rates paid by third parties under arm's-length contracts. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) You must use a separate entry on Form MMS�2014 to notify MMS of a
transportation allowance. (ii) The MMS may require you to submit arm's-length transportation
contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and related
documents. Recordkeeping requirements are found at part 207 of this
chapter. (iii) You may not use a transportation allowance that was in effect
before March 1, 1988. You must use the provisions of this subpart to
determine your transportation allowance. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (i) You must use a separate
entry on Form MMS�2014 to notify MMS of a transportation allowance. (ii) For new transportation facilities or arrangements, base your
initial deduction on estimates of allowable gas transportation costs for
the applicable period. Use the most recently available operations data for
the transportation system or, if such data are not available, use
estimates based on data for similar transportation systems. Paragraph (e)
of this section will apply when you amend your report based on your actual
costs. (iii) The MMS may require you to submit all data used to calculate the
allowance deduction. Recordkeeping requirements are found at part 207 of
this chapter. (iv) If you are authorized under paragraph (b)(5) of this section to
use an exception to the requirement to calculate your actual
transportation costs, you must follow the reporting requirements of
paragraph (c)(1) of this section. (v) You may not use a transportation allowance that was in effect
before March 1, 1988. You must use the provisions of this subpart to
determine your transportation allowance. (d) Interest and assessments. (1) If a lessee deducts a
transportation allowance on its Form MMS�2014 that exceeds 50 percent of
the value of the gas transported without obtaining prior approval of MMS
under �206.156, the lessee shall pay interest on the excess allowance
amount taken from the date such amount is taken to the date the lessee
files an exception request with MMS. (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a transportation allowance which
results in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the
amount of that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.54. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual transportation allowance is
less than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�2014 for each month
during the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall be required to pay
additional royalties due plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.54 from
the allowance reporting period when the lessee took the deduction to the
date the lessee repays the difference to MMS. If the actual transportation
allowance is greater than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�2014
for each month during the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall be
entitled to a credit without interest. (2) For lessees transporting production from onshore Federal leases,
the lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�2014 to reflect actual costs,
together with any payment, in accordance with instructions provided by
MMS. (3) For lessees transporting gas production from leases on the OCS, if
the lessee's estimated transportation allowance exceeds the allowance
based on actual costs, the lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�2014 to
reflect actual costs, together with its payment, in accordance with
instructions provided by MMS. If the lessee's estimated transportation
allowance is less than the allowance based on actual costs, the refund
procedure will be specified by MMS. (f) Allowable costs in determining transportation allowances.
You may include, but are not limited to (subject to the requirements
of paragraph (g) of this section), the following costs in determining the
arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this section
or the non-arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (b) of
this section. You may not use any cost as a deduction that duplicates all
or part of any other cost that you use under this paragraph. (1) Firm demand charges paid to pipelines. You may deduct firm
demand charges or capacity reservation fees paid to a pipeline, including
charges or fees for unused firm capacity that you have not sold before you
report your allowance. If you receive a payment from any party for release
or sale of firm capacity after reporting a transportation allowance that
included the cost of that unused firm capacity, or if you receive a
payment or credit from the pipeline for penalty refunds, rate case
refunds, or other reasons, you must reduce the firm demand charge claimed
on the Form MMS�2014 by the amount of that payment. You must modify the
Form MMS�2014 by the amount received or credited for the affected
reporting period, and pay any resulting royalty and late payment interest
due; (2) Gas supply realignment (GSR) costs. The GSR costs result
from a pipeline reforming or terminating supply contracts with producers
to implement the restructuring requirements of FERC Orders in 18 CFR part
284; (3) Commodity charges. The commodity charge allows the pipeline
to recover the costs of providing service; (4) Wheeling costs. Hub operators charge a wheeling cost for
transporting gas from one pipeline to either the same or another pipeline
through a market center or hub. A hub is a connected manifold of pipelines
through which a series of incoming pipelines are interconnected to a
series of outgoing pipelines; (5) Gas Research Institute (GRI) fees. The GRI conducts
research, development, and commercialization programs on natural gas
related topics for the benefit of the U.S. gas industry and gas customers.
GRI fees are allowable provided such fees are mandatory in FERC-approved
tariffs; (6) Annual Charge Adjustment (ACA) fees. FERC charges these fees
to pipelines to pay for its operating expenses; (7) Payments (either volumetric or in value) for actual or
theoretical losses. However, theoretical losses are not deductible in
non-arm's-length transportation arrangements unless the transportation
allowance is based on arm's-length transportation rates charged under a
FERC- or state regulatory-approved tariff under paragraph (b)(5) of this
section. If you receive volumes or credit for line gain, you must reduce
your transportation allowance accordingly and pay any resulting royalties
and late payment interest due; (8) Temporary storage services. This includes short duration
storage services offered by market centers or hubs (commonly referred to
as �parking� or �banking�), or other temporary storage services provided
by pipeline transporters, whether actual or provided as a matter of
accounting. Temporary storage is limited to 30 days or less; and (9) Supplemental costs for compression, dehydration, and treatment
of gas. MMS allows these costs only if such services are required for
transportation and exceed the services necessary to place production into
marketable condition required under ��206.152(i) and 206.153(i) of this
part. (10) Costs of surety. You may deduct the costs of securing a
letter of credit, or other surety, that the pipeline requires you as a
shipper to maintain under an arm's-length transportation contract. (g) Nonallowable costs in determining transportation allowances.
Lessees may not include the following costs in determining the
arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this section
or the non-arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (b) of
this section: (1) Fees or costs incurred for storage. This includes storing
production in a storage facility, whether on or off the lease, for more
than 30 days; (2) Aggregator/marketer fees. This includes fees you pay to
another person (including your affiliates) to market your gas, including
purchasing and reselling the gas, or finding or maintaining a market for
the gas production; (3) Penalties you incur as shipper. These penalties include, but
are not limited to: (i) Over-delivery cash-out penalties. This includes the
difference between the price the pipeline pays you for over-delivered
volumes outside the tolerances and the price you receive for
over-delivered volumes within the tolerances; (ii) Scheduling penalties. This includes penalties you incur for
differences between daily volumes delivered into the pipeline and volumes
scheduled or nominated at a receipt or delivery point; (iii) Imbalance penalties. This includes penalties you incur
(generally on a monthly basis) for differences between volumes delivered
into the pipeline and volumes scheduled or nominated at a receipt or
delivery point; and (iv) Operational penalties. This includes fees you incur for
violation of the pipeline's curtailment or operational orders issued to
protect the operational integrity of the pipeline; (4) Intra-hub transfer fees. These are fees you pay to hub
operators for administrative services (e.g., title transfer tracking)
necessary to account for the sale of gas within a hub; (5) Fees paid to brokers. This includes fees paid to parties who
arrange marketing or transportation, if such fees are separately
identified from aggregator/marketer fees; (6) Fees paid to scheduling service providers. This includes
fees paid to parties who provide scheduling services, if such fees are
separately identified from aggregator/marketer fees; (7) Internal costs. This includes salaries and related costs,
rent/space costs, office equipment costs, legal fees, and other costs to
schedule, nominate, and account for sale or movement of production;
and (8) Other nonallowable costs. Any cost you incur for services
you are required to provide at no cost to the lessor. (h) Other transportation cost determinations. Use this section
when calculating transportation costs to establish value using a netback
procedure or any other procedure that requires deduction of transportation
costs. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 45762, Nov. 14, 1988;
61 FR 5465, Feb. 12, 1996; 62 FR 65762, Dec. 16, 1997; 70 FR 11878, Mar.
10, 2005; 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) Where the value of gas is determined pursuant to �206.153 of this
subpart, a deduction shall be allowed for the reasonable actual costs of
processing. (b) Processing costs must be allocated among the gas plant products. A
separate processing allowance must be determined for each gas plant
product and processing plant relationship. Natural gas liquids (NGL's)
shall be considered as one product. (c)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, the
processing allowance shall not be applied against the value of the residue
gas. Where there is no residue gas MMS may designate an appropriate gas
plant product against which no allowance may be applied. (2) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, the
processing allowance deduction on the basis of an individual product shall
not exceed 66 (3) Upon request of a lessee, MMS may approve a processing allowance in
excess of the limitation prescribed by paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
The lessee must demonstrate that the processing costs incurred in excess
of the limitation prescribed in paragraph (c)(2) of this section were
reasonable, actual, and necessary. An application for exception (using
Form MMS�4393, Request to Exceed Regulatory Allowance Limitation) shall
contain all relevant and supporting documentation for MMS to make a
determination. Under no circumstances shall the value for royalty purposes
of any gas plant product be reduced to zero. (d)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, no
processing cost deduction shall be allowed for the costs of placing lease
products in marketable condition, including dehydration, separation,
compression, or storage, even if those functions are performed off the
lease or at a processing plant. Where gas is processed for the removal of
acid gases, commonly referred to as �sweetening,� no processing cost
deduction shall be allowed for such costs unless the acid gases removed
are further processed into a gas plant product. In such event, the lessee
shall be eligible for a processing allowance as determined in accordance
with this subpart. However, MMS will not grant any processing allowance
for processing lease production which is not royalty bearing. (2)(i) If the lessee incurs extraordinary costs for processing gas
production from a gas production operation, it may apply to MMS for an
allowance for those costs which shall be in addition to any other
processing allowance to which the lessee is entitled pursuant to this
section. Such an allowance may be granted only if the lessee can
demonstrate that the costs are, by reference to standard industry
conditions and practice, extraordinary, unusual, or unconventional. (ii) Prior MMS approval to continue an extraordinary processing cost
allowance is not required. However, to retain the authority to deduct the
allowance the lessee must report the deduction to MMS in a form and manner
prescribed by MMS. (e) If MMS determines that a lessee has improperly determined a
processing allowance authorized by this subpart, then the lessee must pay
any additional royalties, plus interest determined under 30 CFR 218.54, or
will be entitled to a credit with interest. If the lessee takes a
deduction for processing on Form MMS�2014 by improperly netting the
allowance against the sales value of the gas plant products instead of
reporting the allowance as a separate entry, MMS may assess a civil
penalty under 30 CFR part 241. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 61 FR 5466, Feb. 12, 1996; 64
FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999; 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) Arm's-length processing contracts. (1)(i) For processing
costs incurred by a lessee under an arm's-length contract, the processing
allowance shall be the reasonable actual costs incurred by the lessee for
processing the gas under that contract, except as provided in paragraphs
(a)(1)(ii) and (a)(1)(iii) of this section, subject to monitoring, review,
audit, and adjustment. The lessee shall have the burden of demonstrating
that its contract is arm's-length. MMS' prior approval is not required
before a lessee may deduct costs incurred under an arm's-length contract.
The lessee must claim a processing allowance by reporting it as a separate
entry on the Form MMS�2014. (ii) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the lessee to the processor for the
processing. If the contract reflects more than the total consideration,
then the MMS may require that the processing allowance be determined in
accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. (iii) If MMS determines that the consideration paid pursuant to an
arm's-length processing contract does not reflect the reasonable value of
the processing because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the
lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and
lessor, then MMS shall require that the processing allowance be determined
in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS determines that
the value of the processing may be unreasonable, MMS will notify the
lessee and give the lessee an opportunity to provide written information
justifying the lessee's processing costs. (2) If an arm's-length processing contract includes more than one gas
plant product and the processing costs attributable to each product can be
determined from the contract, then the processing costs for each gas plant
product shall be determined in accordance with the contract. No allowance
may be taken for the costs of processing lease production which is not
royalty-bearing. (3) If an arm's-length processing contract includes more than one gas
plant product and the processing costs attributable to each product cannot
be determined from the contract, the lessee shall propose an allocation
procedure to MMS. The lessee may use its proposed allocation procedure
until MMS issues its determination. The lessee shall submit all relevant
data to support its proposal. MMS shall then determine the processing
allowance based upon the lessee's proposal and any additional information
MMS deems necessary. No processing allowance will be granted for the costs
of processing lease production which is not royalty bearing. The lessee
must submit the allocation proposal within 3 months of claiming the
allocated deduction on Form MMS�2014. (4) Where the lessee's payments for processing under an arm's-length
contract are not based on a dollar per unit basis, the lessee shall
convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent for
the purposes of this section. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length processing contract or has no contract, including those
situations where the lessee performs processing for itself, the processing
allowance will be based upon the lessee's reasonable actual costs as
provided in this paragraph. All processing allowances deducted under a
non-arm's-length or no-contract situation are subject to monitoring,
review, audit, and adjustment. The lessee must claim a processing
allowance by reflecting it as a separate entry on the Form MMS�2014. When
necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a lessee to modify its estimated
or actual processing allowance. (2) The processing allowance for non-arm's-length or no-contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for processing
during the reporting period, including operating and maintenance expenses,
overhead, and either depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital
investment in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, or
a cost equal to the initial depreciable investment in the processing plant
multiplied by a rate of return in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B)
of this section. Allowable capital costs are generally those costs for
depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery and installation of
capital equipment) which are an integral part of the processing plant. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes; rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the
processing plant; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and other
directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the lessee
can document. (iii) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the processing plant is an allowable expense. State and
Federal income taxes and severance taxes, including royalties, are not
allowable expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either depreciation or a return on depreciable
capital investment. When a lessee has elected to use either method for a
processing plant, the lessee may not later elect to change to the other
alternative without approval of the MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the processing plant services, or a
unit-of-production method. After an election is made, the lessee may not
change methods without MMS approval. A change in ownership of a processing
plant shall not alter the depreciation schedule established by the
original processor/lessee for purposes of the allowance calculation. With
or without a change in ownership, a processing plant shall be depreciated
only once. Equipment shall not be depreciated below a reasonable salvage
value. (B) The MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
initial capital investment in the processing plant multiplied by the rate
of return determined pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section. No
allowance shall be provided for depreciation. This alternative shall apply
only to plants first placed in service after March 1, 1988. (v) The rate of return must be the industrial rate associated with
Standard and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return must be the monthly
average rate as published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first
month for which the allowance is applicable. The rate must be redetermined
at the beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (3) The processing allowance for each gas plant product shall be
determined based on the lessee's reasonable and actual cost of processing
the gas. Allocation of costs to each gas plant product shall be based upon
generally accepted accounting principles. The lessee may not take an
allowance for the costs of processing lease production which is not
royalty bearing. (4) A lessee may apply to MMS for an exception from the requirement
that it compute actual costs in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(3) of this section. The MMS may grant the exception only if: (i) The
lessee has arm's-length contracts for processing other gas production at
the same processing plant; and (ii) at least 50 percent of the gas
processed annually at the plant is processed pursuant to arm's-length
processing contracts; if the MMS grants the exception, the lessee shall
use as its processing allowance the volume weighted average prices charged
other persons pursuant to arm's-length contracts for processing at the
same plant. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) The lessee must notify MMS of an allowance based on incurred costs
by using a separate entry on the Form MMS�2014. (ii) The MMS may require that a lessee submit arm's-length processing
contracts and related documents. Documents shall be submitted within a
reasonable time, as determined by MMS. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (i) The lessee must notify
MMS of an allowance based on the incurred costs by using a separate entry
on the Form MMS�2014. (ii) For new processing plants, the lessee's initial deduction shall
include estimates of the allowable gas processing costs for the applicable
period. Cost estimates shall be based upon the most recently available
operations data for the plant or, if such data are not available, the
lessee shall use estimates based upon industry data for similar gas
processing plants. (iii) Upon request by MMS, the lessee shall submit all data used to
prepare the allowance deduction. The data shall be provided within a
reasonable period of time, as determined by MMS. (iv) If the lessee is authorized to use the volume weighted average
prices charged other persons as its processing allowance in accordance
with paragraph (b)(4) of this section, it shall follow the reporting
requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this section. (d) Interest. (1) If a lessee deducts a processing allowance on
its Form MMS�2014 that exceeds 66 (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a processing allowance which
results in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the
amount of that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.54. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual processing allowance is less
than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�2014 for each month
during the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall pay additional
royalties due plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.54 from the
allowance reporting period when the lessee took the deduction to the date
the lessee repays the difference to MMS. If the actual processing
allowance is greater than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�2014
for each month during the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall be
entitled to a credit with interest. (2) For lessees processing production from onshore Federal leases, the
lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�2014 to reflect actual costs,
together with any payment, in accordance with instructions provided by
MMS. (3) For lessees processing gas production from leases on the OCS, if
the lessee's estimated processing allowance exceeds the allowance based on
actual costs, the lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�2014 to reflect
actual costs, together with its payment, in accordance with instructions
provided by MMS. If the lessee's estimated costs were less than the actual
costs, the refund procedure will be specified by MMS. (f) Other processing cost determinations. The provisions of this
section shall apply to determine processing costs when establishing value
using a net back valuation procedure or any other procedure that requires
deduction of processing costs. [53 FR 1272, Jan. 15, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 45762, Nov. 14, 1988;
61 FR 5466, Feb. 12, 1996; 64 FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999; 73 FR 15891, Mar.
26, 2008] Notwithstanding any other provisions in these regulations, an operating
allowance may be used for the purpose of computing payment obligations
when specified in the notice of sale and the lease. The allowance amount
or formula shall be specified in the notice of sale and in the lease
agreement. [61 FR 3804, Feb. 2, 1996] Source: 64 FR 43515, Aug. 10, 1999,
unless otherwise noted.
This subpart contains royalty valuation provisions applicable to Indian
lessees. (a) This subpart applies to all gas production from Indian (tribal and
allotted) oil and gas leases (except leases on the Osage Indian
Reservation). The purpose of this subpart is to establish the value of
production for royalty purposes consistent with the mineral leasing laws,
other applicable laws, and lease terms. This subpart does not apply to
Federal leases. (b) If the specific provisions of any Federal statute, treaty,
negotiated agreement, settlement agreement resulting from any
administrative or judicial proceeding, or Indian oil and gas lease are
inconsistent with any regulation in this subpart, then the Federal
statute, treaty, negotiated agreement, settlement agreement, or lease will
govern to the extent of that inconsistency. (c) You may calculate the value of production for royalty purposes
under methods other than those the regulations in this title require, but
only if you, the tribal lessor, and MMS jointly agree to the valuation
methodology. For leases on Indian allotted lands, you and MMS must agree
to the valuation methodology. (d) All royalty payments you make to MMS are subject to monitoring,
review, audit, and adjustment. (e) The regulations in this subpart are intended to ensure that the
trust responsibilities of the United States with respect to the
administration of Indian oil and gas leases are discharged in accordance
with the requirements of the governing mineral leasing laws, treaties, and
lease terms. The following definitions apply to this subpart and to subpart J of
part 202 of this title: Accounting for comparison means the same as dual accounting. Active spot market means a market where one or more
MMS-acceptable publications publish bidweek prices (or if bidweek prices
are not available, first of the month prices) for at least one
index-pricing point in the index zone. Allowance means a deduction in determining value for royalty
purposes. Processing allowance means an allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs of processing gas determined under this subpart.
Transportation allowance means an allowance for the reasonable, actual
cost of transportation determined under this subpart. Approved Federal Agreement (AFA) means a unit or communitization
agreement approved under departmental regulations. Area means a geographic region at least as large as the defined
limits of an oil or gas field, in which oil or gas lease products have
similar quality, economic, or legal characteristics. An area may be all
lands within the boundaries of an Indian reservation. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement that has
been arrived at in the marketplace between independent, nonaffiliated
persons with opposing economic interests regarding that contract. For
purposes of this subpart, two persons are affiliated if one person
controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with another
person. The following percentages (based on the instruments of ownership
of the voting securities of an entity, or based on other forms of
ownership) determine if persons are affiliated: (1) Ownership in excess of 50 percent constitutes control. (2) Ownership of 10 through 50 percent creates a presumption of
control. (3) Ownership of less than 10 percent creates a presumption of
noncontrol which MMS may rebut if it demonstrates actual or legal control,
including the existence of interlocking directorates. Notwithstanding any
other provisions of this subpart, contracts between relatives, either by
blood or by marriage, are not arm's-length contracts. MMS may require the
lessee to certify the percentage of ownership or control of the entity. To
be considered arm's-length for any production month, a contract must meet
the requirements of this definition for that production month as well as
when the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted under generally accepted
accounting and auditing standards, of royalty payment compliance
activities of lessees or other persons who pay royalties, rents, or
bonuses on Indian leases. BIA means the Bureau of Indian Affairs of the Department of the
Interior. BLM means the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior. Compression means raising the pressure of gas. Condensate means liquid hydrocarbons (normally exceeding 40
degrees of API gravity) recovered at the surface without resorting to
processing. Condensate is the mixture of liquid hydrocarbons that results
from condensation of petroleum hydrocarbons existing initially in a
gaseous phase in an underground reservoir. Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions thereto, between two or more persons and
enforceable by law that with due consideration creates an obligation. Dedicated means a contractual commitment to deliver gas
production (or a specified portion of production) from a lease or well
when that production is specified in a sales contract and that
production must be sold pursuant to that contract to the extent that
production occurs from that lease or well. Drip condensate means any condensate recovered downstream of the
facility measurement point without resorting to processing. Drip
condensate includes condensate recovered as a result of its becoming a
liquid during the transportation of the gas removed from the lease or
recovered at the inlet of a gas processing plant by mechanical means,
often referred to as scrubber condensate. Dual Accounting (or accounting for comparison ) refers to
the requirement to pay royalty based on a value which is the higher of the
value of gas prior to processing less any applicable allowances as
compared to the combined value of drip condensate, residue gas, and gas
plant products after processing, less applicable allowances. Entitlement (or entitled share ) means the gas production
from a lease, or allocable to lease acreage under the terms of an AFA,
multiplied by the operating rights owner's percentage of interest
ownership in the lease or the acreage. Facility measurement point (or point of royalty settlement
) means the point where the BLM-approved measurement device is located
for determining the volume of gas removed from the lease. The facility
measurement point may be on the lease or off-lease with BLM approval. Field means a geographic region situated over one or more
subsurface oil and gas reservoirs encompassing at least the outermost
boundaries of all oil and gas accumulations known to be within those
reservoirs vertically projected to the land surface. Onshore fields are
usually given names and their official boundaries are often designated by
oil and gas regulatory agencies in the respective States in which the
fields are located. Gas means any fluid, either combustible or noncombustible,
hydrocarbon or nonhydrocarbon, which is extracted from a reservoir and
which has neither independent shape nor volume, but tends to expand
indefinitely. It is a substance that exists in a gaseous or rarefied state
under standard temperature and pressure conditions. Gas plant products means separate marketable elements,
compounds, or mixtures, whether in liquid, gaseous, or solid form,
resulting from processing gas. However, it does not include residue
gas. Gathering means the movement of lease production to a central
accumulation or treatment point on the lease, unit, or communitized area;
or a central accumulation or treatment point off the lease, unit, or
communitized area as approved by BLM operations personnel. Gross proceeds (for royalty payment purposes) means the total
monies and other consideration accruing to an oil and gas lessee for the
disposition of unprocessed gas, residue gas, and gas plant products
produced. Gross proceeds includes, but is not limited to, payments to the
lessee for certain services such as compression, dehydration, measurement,
or field gathering to the extent that the lessee is obligated to perform
them at no cost to the Indian lessor, and payments for gas processing
rights. Gross proceeds, as applied to gas, also includes but is not
limited to reimbursements for severance taxes and other reimbursements.
Tax reimbursements are part of the gross proceeds accruing to a lessee
even though the Indian royalty interest is exempt from taxation. Monies
and other consideration, including the forms of consideration identified
in this paragraph, to which a lessee is contractually or legally entitled
but which it does not seek to collect through reasonable efforts are also
part of gross proceeds. Index means the calculated composite price ($/MMBtu) of
spot-market sales published by a publication that meets MMS-established
criteria for acceptability at the index-pricing point. Index-pricing point (IPP) means any point on a pipeline for
which there is an index. Index zone means a field or an area with an active spot market
and published indices applicable to that field or area that are acceptable
to MMS under �206.172(d)(2). Indian allottee means any Indian for whom land or an interest in
land is held in trust by the United States or who holds title subject to
Federal restriction against alienation. Indian tribe means any Indian tribe, band, nation, pueblo,
community, rancheria, colony, or other group of Indians for which any land
or interest in land is held in trust by the United States or which is
subject to Federal restriction against alienation. Lease means any contract, profit-share arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States under
a mineral leasing law that authorizes exploration for, development or
extraction of, or removal of lease products�or the land area covered by
that authorization, whichever is required by the context. For purposes of
this subpart, this definition excludes Federal leases. Lease products means any leased minerals attributable to,
originating from, or allocated to a lease. Lessee means any person to whom the United States, a tribe,
and/or individual Indian landowner issues a lease, and any person who has
been assigned an obligation to make royalty or other payments required by
the lease. This includes any person who has an interest in a lease
(including operating rights owners) as well as an operator or payor who
has no interest in the lease but who has assumed the royalty payment
responsibility. Like-quality lease products means lease products which have
similar chemical, physical, and legal characteristics. Marketable condition means a condition in which lease products
are sufficiently free from impurities and otherwise so conditioned that a
purchaser will accept them under a sales contract typical for the field or
area. MMS means the Minerals Management Service, Department of the
Interior. MMS includes, where appropriate, tribal auditors acting under
agreements under the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act of 1982,
30 U.S.C. 1701 et seq. or other applicable agreements. Minimum royalty means that minimum amount of annual royalty that
the lessee must pay as specified in the lease or in applicable leasing
regulations. Natural gas liquids (NGL's) means those gas plant products
consisting of ethane, propane, butane, or heavier liquid hydrocarbons. Net-back method (or work-back method ) means a method for
calculating market value of gas at the lease under which costs of
transportation, processing, and manufacturing are deducted from the
proceeds received for, or the value of, the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products, and any extracted, processed, or manufactured products, at the
first point at which reasonable values for any such products may be
determined by a sale under an arm's-length contract or comparison to other
sales of such products. Net output means the quantity of residue gas and each gas plant
product that a processing plant produces. Net profit share means the specified share of the net profit
from production of oil and gas as provided in the agreement. Operating rights owner (or working interest owner ) means
any person who owns operating rights in a lease subject to this subpart. A
record title owner is the owner of operating rights under a lease except
to the extent that the operating rights or a portion thereof have been
transferred from record title (see BLM regulations at 43 CFR
3100.0�5(d)). Person means any individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture (when established as a separate
entity). Point of royalty measurement means the same as facility
measurement point. Processing means any process designed to remove elements or
compounds (hydrocarbon and nonhydrocarbon) from gas, including absorption,
adsorption, or refrigeration. Field processes which normally take place on
or near the lease, such as natural pressure reduction, mechanical
separation, heating, cooling, dehydration, desulphurization (or
�sweetening�), and compression, are not considered processing. The
changing of pressures and/or temperatures in a reservoir is not considered
processing. Residue gas means that hydrocarbon gas consisting principally of
methane resulting from processing gas. Sales type code means the contract type or general disposition
(e.g., arm's-length or non-arm's-length) of production from the lease. The
sales type code applies to the sales contract, or other disposition, and
not to the arm's-length or non-arm's-length nature of a transportation or
processing allowance. Spot sales agreement means a contract wherein a seller agrees to
sell to a buyer a specified amount of unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas
plant products at a specified price over a fixed period, usually of short
duration. It also does not normally require a cancellation notice to
terminate, and does not contain an obligation, or imply an intent, to
continue in subsequent periods. Takes means when the operating rights owner sells or removes
production from, or allocated to, the lease, or when such sale or removal
occurs for the benefit of an operating rights owner. Work-back method means the same as net-back method. [64 FR 43515, Aug. 10, 1999, as amended at 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26,
2008] (a) What leases this section applies to. This section explains
how lessees must value, for royalty purposes, gas produced from Indian
leases located in an index zone. For other leases, value must be
determined under �206.174. (1) You must use the valuation provision of this section if your lease
is in an index zone and meets one of the following two requirements: (i) Has a major portion provision; (ii) Does not have a major portion provision, but provides for the
Secretary to determine the value of production. (2) This section does not apply to carbon dioxide, nitrogen, or other
non-hydrocarbon components of the gas stream. However, if they are
recovered and sold separately from the gas stream, you must determine the
value of these products under �206.174. (b) Valuing residue gas and gas before processing. (1) Except as
provided in paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) of this section, this paragraph
(b) explains how you must value the following four types of gas: (i) Gas production before processing; (ii) Gas production that you certify on Form MMS�4410, Certification
for Not Performing Accounting for Comparison (Dual Accounting), is not
processed before it flows into a pipeline with an index but which may be
processed later; (iii) Residue gas after processing; and (iv) Gas that is never processed. (2) The value of gas production that is not sold under an arm's-length
dedicated contract is the index-based value determined under paragraph (d)
of this section unless the gas was subject to a previous contract which
was part of a gas contract settlement. If the previous contract was
subject to a gas contract settlement and if the royalty-bearing contract
settlement proceeds per MMBtu added to the 80 percent of the safety net
prices calculated at �206.172(e)(4)(i) exceeds the index-based value that
applies to the gas under this section (including any adjustments required
under �206.176), then the value of the gas is the higher of the value
determined under this section (including any adjustments required under
�206.176) or �206.174. (3) The value of gas production that is sold under an arm's-length
dedicated contract is the higher of the index-based value under paragraph
(d) of this section or the value of that production determined under
�206.174(b). (c) Valuing gas that is processed before it flows into a pipeline
with an index. Except as provided in paragraphs (e), (f), and (g) of
this section, this paragraph (c) explains how you must value gas that is
processed before it flows into a pipeline with an index. You must value
this gas production based on the higher of the following two values: (1) The value of the gas before processing determined under paragraph
(b) of this section. (2) The value of the gas after processing, which is either the
alternative dual accounting value under �206.173 or the sum of the
following three values: (i) The value of the residue gas determined under paragraph (b)(2) or
(3) of this section, as applicable; (ii) The value of the gas plant products determined under �206.174,
less any applicable processing and/or transportation allowances determined
under this subpart; and (iii) The value of any drip condensate associated with the processed
gas determined under subpart B of this part. (d) Determining the index-based value for gas production. (1) To
determine the index-based value per MMBtu for production from a lease in
an index zone, you must use the following procedures: (i) For each MMS-approved publication, calculate the average of the
highest reported prices for all index-pricing points in the index zone,
except for any prices excluded under paragraph (d)(6) of this section; (ii) Sum the averages calculated in paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section
and divide by the number of publications; and (iii) Reduce the number calculated under paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this
section by 10 percent, but not by less than 10 cents per MMBtu or more
than 30 cents per MMBtu. The result is the index-based value per MMBtu for
production from all leases in that index zone. (2) MMS will publish in the (i) Areas for which MMS-approved publications establish index prices
that accurately reflect the value of production in the field or area where
the production occurs; (ii) Common markets served; (iii) Common pipeline systems; (iv) Simplification; and (v) Easy identification in MMS's systems, such as counties or Indian
reservations. (3) If market conditions change so that an index-based method for
determining value is no longer appropriate for an index zone, MMS will
hold a technical conference to consider disqualification of an index zone.
MMS will publish notice in the (4) MMS periodically will publish in the (i) Publications buyers and sellers frequently use; (ii) Publications frequently referenced in purchase or sales
contracts; (iii) Publications that use adequate survey techniques, including the
gathering of information from a substantial number of sales; (iv) Publications that publish the range of reported prices they use to
calculate their index; and (v) Publications independent from DOI, lessors, and lessees. (5) Any publication may petition MMS to be added to the list of
acceptable publications. (6) MMS may exclude an individual index price for an index zone in an
MMS-approved publication if MMS determines that the index price does not
accurately reflect the value of production in that index zone. MMS will
publish a list of excluded indices in the (7) MMS will reference which tables in the publications you must use
for determining the associated index prices. (8) The index-based values determined under this paragraph are not
subject to deductions for transportation or processing allowances
determined under ��206.177, 206.178, 206.179, and 206.180. (e) Determining the minimum value for royalty purposes of gas sold
beyond the first index pricing point. (1) Notwithstanding any other
provision of this section, the value for royalty purposes of gas
production from an Indian lease that is sold beyond the first index
pricing point through which it flows cannot be less than the value
determined under this paragraph (e). (2) By June 30 following any calendar year, you must calculate for each
month of that calendar year your safety net price per MMBtu using the
procedures in paragraph (e)(3) of this section. You must calculate a
safety net price for each month and for each index zone where you have an
Indian lease for which you report and pay royalties. (3) Your safety net price (S) for an index zone is the volume-weighted
average contract price per delivered MMBtu under your or your affiliate's
arm's-length contracts for the disposition of residue gas or unprocessed
gas produced from your Indian leases in that index zone as computed under
this paragraph (e)(3). (i) Include in your calculation only sales under those contracts that
establish a delivery point beyond the first index pricing point through
which the gas flows, and that include any gas produced from or allocable
to one or more of your Indian leases in that index zone, even if the
contract also includes gas produced from Federal, State, or fee
properties. Include in your volume-weighted average calculation those
volumes that are allocable to your Indian leases in that index zone. (ii) Do not reduce the contract price for any transportation costs
incurred to deliver the gas to the purchaser. (iii) For purposes of this paragraph (e), the contract price will not
include the following amounts: (A) Any amounts you receive in compromise or settlement of a
predecessor contract for that gas; (B) Deductions for you or any other person to put gas production into
marketable condition or to market the gas; and (C) Any amounts related to marketable securities associated with the
sales contract. (4) Next, you must determine for each month the safety net differential
(SND). You must perform this calculation separately for each index
zone. (i) For each index zone, the safety net differential is equal to: SND =
[(0.80 � S) − (1.25 � I)] where (I) is the index-based value determined
under 30 CFR 206.172(d). (ii) If the safety net differential is positive you owe additional
royalties. (5)(i) To calculate the additional royalties you owe, make the
following calculation for each of your Indian leases in that index zone
that produced gas that was sold beyond the first index-pricing point
through which the gas flowed and that was used in the calculation in
paragraph (e)(3) of this section:
Lease royalties owed = SND � V � R, where R = the lease royalty rate
and V = the volume allocable to the lease which produced gas that was sold
beyond the first index pricing point. (ii) If gas produced from any of your Indian leases is commingled or
pooled with gas produced from non-Indian properties, and if any of the
combined gas is sold at a delivery point beyond the first index pricing
point through which the gas flows, then the volume allocable to each
Indian lease for which gas was sold beyond the first index pricing point
in the calculation under paragraph (e)(5)(i) of this section is the volume
produced from the lease multiplied by the proportion that the total volume
of gas sold beyond the first index pricing point bears to the total volume
of gas commingled or pooled from all properties. (iii) Add the numbers calculated for each lease under paragraph
(e)(5)(i) of this section. The total is the additional royalty you
owe. (6) You have the following responsibilities to comply with the minimum
value for royalty purposes: (i) You must report the safety net price for each index zone to MMS on
Form MMS�4411, Safety Net Report, no later than June 30 following each
calendar year; (ii) You must pay and report on Form MMS�2014 additional royalties due
no later than June 30 following each calendar year; and (iii) MMS may order you to amend your safety net price within one year
from the date your Form MMS�4411 is due or is filed, whichever is later.
If MMS does not order any amendments within that one-year period, your
safety net price calculation is final. (f) Excluding some or all tribal leases from valuation under this
section. (1) An Indian tribe may ask MMS to exclude some or all of its
leases from valuation under this section. MMS will consult with BIA
regarding the request. (i) If MMS approves the request for your lease, you must value your
production under �206.174 beginning with production on the first day of
the second month following the date MMS publishes notice of its decision
in the (ii) If an Indian tribe requests exclusion from an index zone for less
than all of its leases, MMS will approve the request only if the excluded
leases may be segregated into one or more groups based on separate fields
within the reservation. (2) An Indian tribe may ask MMS to terminate exclusion of its leases
from valuation under this section. MMS will consult with BIA regarding the
request. (i) If MMS approves the request, you must value your production under
�206.172 beginning with production on the first day of the second month
following the date MMS publishes notice of its decision in the (ii) Termination of an exclusion under paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this
section cannot take effect earlier than 1 year after the first day of the
production month that the exclusion was effective. (3) The Indian tribe's request to MMS under either paragraph (f)(1) or
(2) of this section must be in the form of a tribal resolution. (g) Excluding Indian allotted leases from valuation under this
section. (1)(i) MMS may exclude any Indian allotted leases from
valuation under this section. MMS will consult with BIA regarding the
exclusion. (ii) If MMS excludes your lease, you must value your production under
�206.174 beginning with production on the first day of the second month
following the date MMS publishes notice of its decision in the (iii) If MMS excludes any Indian allotted leases under this paragraph
(g)(1), it will exclude all Indian allotted leases in the same field. (2)(i) MMS may terminate the exclusion of any Indian allotted leases
from valuation under this section. MMS will consult with BIA regarding the
termination. (ii) If MMS terminates the exclusion, you must value your production
under �206.172 beginning with production on the first day of the second
month following the date MMS publishes notice of its decision in the (a) Electing a dual accounting method. (1) If you are required
to perform the accounting for comparison (dual accounting) under �206.176,
you have two choices. You may elect to perform the dual accounting
calculation according to either �206.176(a) (called actual dual
accounting), or paragraph (b) of this section (called the alternative
methodology for dual accounting). (2) You must make a separate election to use the alternative
methodology for dual accounting for your Indian leases in each
MMS-designated area. Your election for a designated area must apply to all
of your Indian leases in that area. (i) MMS will publish in the (A) Alabama-Coushatta; (B) Blackfeet Reservation; (C) Crow Reservation; (D) Fort Belknap Reservation; (E) Fort Berthold Reservation; (F) Fort Peck Reservation; (G) Jicarilla Apache Reservation; (H) MMS-designated groups of counties in the State of Oklahoma; (I) Navajo Reservation; (J) Northern Cheyenne Reservation; (K) Rocky Boys Reservation; (L) Southern Ute Reservation; (M) Turtle Mountain Reservation; (N) Ute Mountain Ute Reservation; (O) Uintah and Ouray Reservation; (P) Wind River Reservation; and (Q) Any other area that MMS designates. MMS will publish a new area
designation in the (ii) You may elect to begin using the alternative methodology for dual
accounting at the beginning of any month. The first election to use the
alternative methodology will be effective from the time of election
through the end of the following calendar year. Thereafter, each election
to use the alternative methodology must remain in effect for 2 calendar
years. You may return to the actual dual accounting method only at the
beginning of the next election period or with the written approval of MMS
and the tribal lessor for tribal leases, and MMS for Indian allottee
leases in the designated area. (iii) When you elect to use the alternative methodology for a
designated area, you must also use the alternative methodology for any new
wells commenced and any new leases acquired in the designated area during
the term of the election. (b) Calculating value using the alternative methodology for dual
accounting. (1) The alternative methodology adjusts the value of gas
before processing determined under either �206.172 or �206.174 to provide
the value of the gas after processing. You must use the value of the gas
after processing for royalty payment purposes. The amount of the increase
depends on your relationship with the owner(s) of the plant where the gas
is processed. If you have no direct or indirect ownership interest in the
processing plant, then the increase is lower, as provided in the table in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section. If you have a direct or indirect
ownership interest in the plant where the gas is processed, the increase
is higher, as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section. (2) To calculate the value of the gas after processing using the
alternative methodology for dual accounting, you must apply the increase
to the value before processing, determined in either �206.172 or �206.174,
as follows: (i) Value of gas after processing = (value determined under either
�206.172 or �206.174, as applicable) � (1 + increment for dual
accounting); and (ii) In this equation, the increment for dual accounting is the number
you take from the applicable Btu range, determined under paragraph (b)(3)
of this section, in the following table: (3) The applicable Btu for purposes of this section is the volume
weighted-average Btu for the lease computed from measurements at the
facility measurement point(s) for gas production from the lease. (4) If any of your gas from the lease is processed during a month, use
the following two paragraphs to determine which amounts are subject to
dual accounting and which dual accounting method you must use. (i) Weighted-average Btu content determined under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section is greater than 1,000 Btu's per cubic foot (Btu/cf). All gas
production from the lease is subject to dual accounting and you must use
the alternative method for all that gas production if you elected to use
the alternative method under this section. (ii) Weighted-average Btu content determined under paragraph (b)(3) of
this section is less than or equal to 1,000 Btu/cf. Only the volumes of
lease production measured at facility measurement points whose quality
exceeds 1,000 Btu/cf are subject to dual accounting, and you may use the
alternative methodology for these volumes. For gas measured at facility
measurement points for these leases where the quality is equal to or less
than 1,000 Btu/cf, you are not required to do dual accounting. (a) Situations in which an index-based method cannot be used.
(1) Gas production must be valued under this section in the following
situations. (i) Your lease is not in an index zone (or MMS has excluded your lease
from an index zone). (ii) If your lease is in an index zone and you sell your gas under an
arm's-length dedicated contract, then the value of your gas is the higher
of the value received under the dedicated contract determined under
�206.174(b) or the value under �206.172. (iii) Also use this section to value any other gas production that
cannot be valued under �206.172, as well as gas plant products, and to
value components of the gas stream that have no Btu value (for example,
carbon dioxide, nitrogen, etc.). (2) The value for royalty purposes of gas production subject to this
subpart is the value of gas determined under this section less applicable
allowances determined under this subpart. (3) You must determine the value of gas production that is processed
and is subject to accounting for comparison using the procedure in
�206.176. (4) This paragraph applies if your lease has a major portion provision.
It also applies if your lease does not have a major portion provision but
the lease provides for the Secretary to determine value. (i) The value of production you must initially report and pay is the
value determined in accordance with the other paragraphs of this
section. (ii) MMS will determine the major portion value and notify you in the (iii) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(4)(iv) of this section, MMS
will calculate the major portion value for each designated area (which are
the same designated areas as under �206.173) using values reported for
unprocessed gas and residue gas on Form MMS�2014 for gas produced from
leases on that Indian reservation or other designated area. MMS will array
the reported prices from highest to lowest price. The major portion value
is that price at which 25 percent (by volume) of the gas (starting from
the highest) is sold. MMS cannot unilaterally change the major portion
value after you are notified in writing of what that value is for your
leases. (iv) MMS may calculate the major portion value using different data
than the data described in paragraph (a)(4)(iii) of this section or data
to augment the data described in paragraph (a)(4)(iii) of this section.
This may include price data reported to the State tax authority or price
data from leases MMS has reviewed in the designated area. MMS may use this
alternate or the augmented data source beginning with production on the
first day of the month following the date MMS publishes notice in the (b) Arm's-length contracts. (1) The value of gas, residue gas,
or any gas plant product you sell under an arm's-length contract is the
gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate, except as provided in
paragraphs (b)(1)(ii)�(iv) of this section. (i) You have the burden of demonstrating that your contract is
arm's-length. (ii) In conducting reviews and audits for gas valued based upon gross
proceeds under this paragraph, MMS will examine whether or not your
contract reflects the total consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the buyer to you or your affiliate for the
gas, residue gas, or gas plant product. If the contract does not reflect
the total consideration, then MMS may require that the gas, residue gas,
or gas plant product sold under that contract be valued in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section. Value may not be less than the gross
proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate, including the additional
consideration. (iii) If MMS determines for gas valued under this paragraph that the
gross proceeds accruing to you or your affiliate under an arm's-length
contract do not reflect the value of the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products because of misconduct by or between the contracting parties, or
because you otherwise have breached your duty to the lessor to market the
production for the mutual benefit of you and the lessor, then MMS will
require that the gas, residue gas, or gas plant product be valued under
paragraphs (c)(2) or (3) of this section. In these circumstances, MMS will
notify you and give you an opportunity to provide written information
justifying your value. (iv) This paragraph applies to situations where a pipeline purchases
gas from a lessee according to a cash-out program under a transportation
contract. For all over-delivered volumes, the royalty value is the price
the pipeline is required to pay for volumes within the tolerances for
over-delivery specified in the transportation contract. Use the same value
for volumes that exceed the over-delivery tolerances even if those volumes
are subject to a lower price specified in the transportation contract.
However, if MMS determines that the price specified in the transportation
contract for over-delivered volumes is unreasonably low, the lessees must
value all over-delivered volumes under paragraph (c)(2) or (3) of this
section. (2) MMS may require you to certify that your arm's-length contract
provisions include all of the consideration the buyer pays, either
directly or indirectly, for the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
product. (c) Non-arm's-length contracts. If your gas, residue gas, or any
gas plant product is not sold under an arm's-length contract, then you
must value the production using the first applicable method of the
following three methods: (1) The gross proceeds accruing to you under your non-arm's-length
contract sale (or other disposition other than by an arm's-length
contract), provided that those gross proceeds are equivalent to the gross
proceeds derived from, or paid under, comparable arm's-length contracts
for purchases, sales, or other dispositions of like-quality gas in the
same field (or, if necessary to obtain a reasonable sample, from the same
area). For residue gas or gas plant products, the comparable arm's-length
contracts must be for gas from the same processing plant (or, if necessary
to obtain a reasonable sample, from nearby plants). In evaluating the
comparability of arm's-length contracts for the purposes of these
regulations, the following factors will be considered: price, time of
execution, duration, market or markets served, terms, quality of gas,
residue gas, or gas plant products, volume, and such other factors as may
be appropriate to reflect the value of the gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products. (2) A value determined by consideration of other information relevant
in valuing like-quality gas, residue gas, or gas plant products, including
gross proceeds under arm's-length contracts for like-quality gas in the
same field or nearby fields or areas, or for residue gas or gas plant
products from the same gas plant or other nearby processing plants. Other
factors to consider include prices received in spot sales of gas, residue
gas or gas plant products, other reliable public sources of price or
market information, and other information as to the particular lease
operation or the salability of such gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products. (3) A net-back method or any other reasonable method to determine
value. (d) Supporting data. If you determine the value of production
under paragraph (c) of this section, you must retain all data relevant to
the determination of royalty value. (1) Such data will be subject to review and audit, and MMS will direct
you to use a different value if we determine upon review or audit that the
value you reported is inconsistent with the requirements of these
regulations. (2) You must make all such data available upon request to the
authorized MMS or Indian representatives, to the Office of the Inspector
General of the Department, or other authorized persons. This includes your
arm's-length sales and volume data for like-quality gas, residue gas, and
gas plant products that are sold, purchased, or otherwise obtained from
the same processing plant or from nearby processing plants, or from the
same or nearby field or area. (e) Improper values. If MMS determines that you have not
properly determined value, you must pay the difference, if any, between
royalty payments made based upon the value you used and the royalty
payments that are due based upon the value MMS established. You also must
pay interest computed on that difference under 30 CFR 218.54. If you are
entitled to a credit, MMS will provide instructions on how to take that
credit. (f) Value guidance. You may ask MMS for guidance in determining
value. You may propose a valuation method to MMS. Submit all available
data related to your proposal and any additional information MMS deems
necessary. MMS will promptly review your proposal and provide you with a
non-binding determination of the guidance you request. (g) Minimum value of production. (1) For gas, residue gas, and
gas plant products valued under this section, under no circumstances may
the value of production for royalty purposes be less than the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee (including its affiliates) for gas,
residue gas and/or any gas plant products, less applicable transportation
allowances and processing allowances determined under this subpart. (2) For gas plant products valued under this section and not valued
under �206.173, the alternative methodology for dual accounting, the
minimum value of production for each gas plant product is as follows: (i) Leases in certain States and areas have specific minimum
values. (A) For production from leases in Colorado in the San Juan Basin, New
Mexico, and Texas, the monthly average minimum price reported in
commercial price bulletins for the gas plant product at Mont Belvieu,
Texas, minus 8.0 cents per gallon. (B) For production in Arizona, in Colorado outside the San Juan Basin,
Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah, and
Wyoming, the monthly average minimum price reported in commercial price
bulletins for the gas plant product at Conway, Kansas, minus 7.0 cents per
gallon; (ii) You may use any commercial price bulletin, but you must use the
same bulletin for all of the calendar year. If the commercial price
bulletin you are using stops publication, you may use a different
commercial price bulletin for the remaining part of the calendar year; and
(iii) If you use a commercial price bulletin that is published monthly,
the monthly average minimum price is the bulletin's minimum price. If you
use a commercial price bulletin that is published weekly, the monthly
average minimum price is the arithmetic average of the bulletin's weekly
minimum prices. If you use a commercial price bulletin that is published
daily, the monthly average minimum price is the arithmetic average of the
bulletin's minimum prices for each Wednesday in the month. (h) Marketable condition/Marketing. You are required to place
gas, residue gas, and gas plant products in marketable condition and
market the gas for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no
cost to the Indian lessor. When your gross proceeds establish the value
under this section, that value must be increased to the extent that the
gross proceeds have been reduced because the purchaser, or any other
person, is providing certain services to place the gas, residue gas, or
gas plant products in marketable condition or to market the gas, the cost
of which ordinarily is your responsibility. (i) Highest obtainable price or benefit. For gas, residue gas,
and gas plant products valued under this section, value must be based on
the highest price a prudent lessee can receive through legally enforceable
claims under its contract. Absent contract revision or amendment, if you
fail to take proper or timely action to receive prices or benefits to
which you are entitled, you must pay royalty at a value based upon that
obtainable price or benefit. Contract revisions or amendments must be in
writing and signed by all parties to an arm's-length contract. If you make
timely application for a price increase or benefit allowed under your
contract but the purchaser refuses, and you take reasonable measures,
which are documented, to force purchaser compliance, you will owe no
additional royalties unless or until monies or consideration resulting
from the price increase or additional benefits are received. This
paragraph is not intended to permit you to avoid your royalty payment
obligation in situations where your purchaser fails to pay, in whole or in
part, or timely, for a quantity of gas, residue gas, or gas plant
product. (j) Non-binding MMS reviews. Notwithstanding any provision in
these regulations to the contrary, no review, reconciliation, monitoring,
or other like process that results in an MMS redetermination of value
under this section will be considered final or binding against the Federal
Government or its beneficiaries until the audit period is formally
closed. (k) Confidential information. Certain information submitted to
MMS to support valuation proposals, including transportation allowances
and processing allowances, may be exempted from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, or other Federal law. Any data
specified by law to be privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt, will
be maintained in a confidential manner in accordance with applicable laws
and regulations. All requests for information about determinations made
under this subpart must be submitted in accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act regulation of the Department of the Interior, 43 CFR part
2. [64 FR 43515, Aug. 10, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 62614, Oct. 19,
2000] (a) For unprocessed gas, you must pay royalties on the quantity and
quality at the facility measurement point BLM either allowed or
approved. (b) For residue gas and gas plant products, you must pay royalties on
your share of the monthly net output of the plant even though residue gas
and/or gas plant products may be in temporary storage. (c) If you have no ownership interest in the processing plant and you
do not operate the plant, you may use the contract volume allocation to
determine your share of plant products. (d) If you have an ownership interest in the plant or if you operate
it, use the following procedure to determine the quantity of the residue
gas and gas plant products attributable to you for royalty payment
purposes: (1) When the net output of the processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from only one lease, the quantity of the residue gas and gas
plant products on which you must pay royalty is the net output of the
plant. (2) When the net output of a processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from more than one lease producing gas of uniform content, the
quantity of the residue gas and gas plant products allocable to each lease
must be in the same proportions as the ratios obtained by dividing the
amount of gas delivered to the plant from each lease by the total amount
of gas delivered from all leases. (3) When the net output of a processing plant is derived from gas
obtained from more than one lease producing gas of non-uniform content,
the volumes of residue gas and gas plant products allocable to each lease
are based on theoretical volumes of residue gas and gas plant products
measured in the lease gas stream. You must calculate the portion of net
plant output of residue gas and gas plant products attributable to each
lease as follows: (i) First, compute the theoretical volumes of residue gas and of gas
plant products attributable to the lease by multiplying the lease volume
of the gas stream by the tested residue gas content (mole percentage) or
gas plant product (GPM) content of the gas stream; (ii) Second, calculate the theoretical volumes of residue gas and of
gas plant products delivered from all leases by summing the theoretical
volumes of residue gas and of gas plant products delivered from each
lease; and (iii) Third, calculate the theoretical quantities of net plant output
of residue gas and of gas plant products attributable to each lease by
multiplying the net plant output of residue gas, or gas plant products, by
the ratio in which the theoretical volumes of residue gas, or gas plant
products, is the numerator and the theoretical volume of residue gas, or
gas plant products, delivered from all leases is the denominator. (4) You may request MMS approval of other methods for determining the
quantity of residue gas and gas plant products allocable to each lease. If
MMS approves a different method, it will be applicable to all gas
production from your Indian leases that is processed in the same
plant. (e) You may not take any deductions from the royalty volume or royalty
value for actual or theoretical losses. Any actual loss of unprocessed gas
incurred prior to the facility measurement point will not be subject to
royalty if BLM determines that the loss was unavoidable. (a) This section applies if the gas produced from your Indian lease is
processed and that Indian lease requires accounting for comparison (also
referred to as actual dual accounting). Except as provided in paragraphs
(b) and (c) of this section, the actual dual accounting value, for royalty
purposes, is the greater of the following two values: (1) The combined value of the following products: (i) The residue gas and gas plant products resulting from processing
the gas determined under either �206.172 or �206.174, less any applicable
allowances; and (ii) Any drip condensate associated with the processed gas recovered
downstream of the point of royalty settlement without resorting to
processing determined under �206.52, less applicable allowances. (2) The value of the gas prior to processing determined under either
�206.172 or �206.174, including any applicable allowances. (b) If you are required to account for comparison, you may elect to use
the alternative dual accounting methodology provided for in �206.173
instead of the provisions in paragraph (a) of this section. (c) Accounting for comparison is not required for gas if no gas from
the lease is processed until after the gas flows into a pipeline with an
index located in an index zone or into a mainline pipeline not in an index
zone. If you do not perform dual accounting, you must certify to MMS that
gas flows into such a pipeline before it is processed. (d) Except as provided in paragraph (e) of this section, if you value
any gas production from a lease for a month using the dual accounting
provisions of this section or the alternative dual accounting methodology
of �206.173, then the value of that gas is the minimum value for any other
gas production from that lease for that month flowing through the same
facility measurement point. (e) If the weighted-average Btu quality for your lease is less than
1,000 Btu's per cubic foot, see �206.173(b)(4)(ii) to determine if you
must perform a dual accounting calculation. (a) When you value gas under �206.174 at a point off the lease, unit,
or communitized area (for example, sales point or point of value
determination), you may deduct from value a transportation allowance to
reflect the value, for royalty purposes, at the lease, unit, or
communitized area. The allowance is based on the reasonable actual costs
you incurred to transport unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas plant
products from a lease to a point off the lease, unit, or communitized
area. This would include, if appropriate, transportation from the lease to
a gas processing plant off the lease, unit, or communitized area and from
the plant to a point away from the plant. You may not deduct any allowance
for gathering costs. (b) You must allocate transportation costs among all products you
produce and transport as provided in �206.178. (c)(1) Except as provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (3) of this section,
your transportation allowance deduction for each sales type code may not
exceed 50 percent of the value of the unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas
plant product. For purposes of this section, natural gas liquids are
considered one product. (2) If you ask MMS, MMS may approve a transportation allowance
deduction in excess of the limitations in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section. To receive this approval, you must demonstrate that the
transportation costs incurred in excess of the limitations in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section were reasonable, actual, and necessary. Under no
circumstances may an allowance reduce the value for royalty purposes under
any sales type code to zero. (3) Your application for exception (using Form MMS�4393, Request to
Exceed Regulatory Allowance Limitation) must contain all relevant and
supporting documentation necessary for MMS to make a determination. (d) If MMS conducts a review or audit and determines that you have
improperly determined a transportation allowance authorized by this
subpart, then you will be required to pay any additional royalties, plus
interest determined in accordance with 30 CFR 218.54. Alternatively, you
may be entitled to a credit, but you will not receive any interest on your
overpayment. [64 FR 43515, Aug. 10, 1999, as amended at 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26,
2008] (a) Determining a transportation allowance under an arm's-length
contract. (1) This paragraph explains how to determine your allowance
if you have an arm's-length transportation contract. (i) If you have an arm's-length contract for transportation of your
production, the transportation allowance is the reasonable, actual costs
you incur for transporting the unprocessed gas, residue gas and/or gas
plant products under that contract. Paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (iii) of
this section provide a limited exception. You have the burden of
demonstrating that your contract is arm's-length. Your allowances also are
subject to paragraph (e) of this section. You are required to submit to
MMS a copy of your arm's-length transportation contract(s) and all
subsequent amendments to the contract(s) within 2 months of the date MMS
receives your report which claims the allowance on the Form MMS�2014. (ii) When either MMS or a tribe conducts reviews and audits, they will
examine whether or not the contract reflects more than the consideration
actually transferred either directly or indirectly from you to the
transporter of the transportation. If the contract reflects more than the
total consideration, then MMS may require that the transportation
allowance be determined under paragraph (b) of this section. (iii) If MMS determines that the consideration paid under an
arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the value of the
transportation because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because you otherwise have breached your duty to the lessor to
market the production for the mutual benefit of you and the lessor, then
MMS will require that the transportation allowance be determined under
paragraph (b) of this section. In these circumstances, MMS will notify you
and give you an opportunity to provide written information justifying your
transportation costs. (2) This paragraph explains how to allocate the costs to each product
if your arm's-length transportation contract includes more than one
product in a gaseous phase and the transportation costs attributable to
each product cannot be determined from the contract. (i) If your arm's-length transportation contract includes more than one
product in a gaseous phase and the transportation costs attributable to
each product cannot be determined from the contract, the total
transportation costs must be allocated in a consistent and equitable
manner to each of the products transported. To make this allocation, use
the same proportion as the ratio that the volume of each product
(excluding waste products which have no value) bears to the volume of all
products in the gaseous phase (excluding waste products which have no
value). Except as provided in this paragraph, you cannot take an allowance
for the costs of transporting lease production that is not royalty bearing
without MMS approval, or without lessor approval on tribal leases. (ii) As an alternative to paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section, you may
propose to MMS a cost allocation method based on the values of the
products transported. MMS will approve the method if we determine that it
meets one of the two following requirements: (A) The methodology in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section cannot be
applied; and (B) Your proposal is more reasonable than the methodology in paragraph
(a)(2)(i) of this section. (3) This paragraph explains how to allocate costs to each product if
your arm's-length transportation contract includes both gaseous and liquid
products and the transportation costs attributable to each cannot be
determined from the contract. (i) If your arm's-length transportation contract includes both gaseous
and liquid products and the transportation costs attributable to each
cannot be determined from the contract, you must propose an allocation
procedure to MMS. You may use the transportation allowance determined in
accordance with your proposed allocation procedure until MMS decides
whether to accept your cost allocation. (ii) You are required to submit all relevant data to support your
allocation proposal. MMS will then determine the gas transportation
allowance based upon your proposal and any additional information MMS
deems necessary. (4) If your payments for transportation under an arm's-length contract
are not based on a dollar per unit price, you must convert whatever
consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent for the purposes of
this section. (5) Where an arm's-length sales contract price includes a reduction for
a transportation factor, MMS will not consider the transportation factor
to be a transportation allowance. You may use the transportation factor to
determine your gross proceeds for the sale of the product. However, the
transportation factor may not exceed 50 percent of the base price of the
product without MMS approval. (b) Determining a transportation allowance under a non-arm's-length
or no contract. (1) This paragraph explains how to determine your
allowance if you have a non-arm's-length transportation contract or no
contract. (i) When you have a non-arm's-length transportation contract or no
contract, including those situations where you perform transportation
services for yourself, the transportation allowance is based upon your
reasonable, allowable, actual costs for transportation as provided in this
paragraph. (ii) All transportation allowances deducted under a non-arm's-length or
no contract situation are subject to monitoring, review, audit, and
adjustment. You must submit the actual cost information to support the
allowance to MMS on Form MMS�4295, Gas Transportation Allowance Report,
within 3 months after the end of the 12-month period to which the
allowance applies. However, MMS may approve a longer time period. MMS will
monitor the allowance deductions to ensure that deductions are reasonable
and allowable. When necessary or appropriate, MMS may require you to
modify your actual transportation allowance deduction. (2) This paragraph explains what actual transportation costs are
allowable under a non-arm's-length contract or no contract situation. The
transportation allowance for non-arm's-length or no-contract situations is
based upon your actual costs for transportation during the reporting
period. Allowable costs include operating and maintenance expenses,
overhead, and either depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital
investment (in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section),
or a cost equal to the initial depreciable investment in the
transportation system multiplied by a rate of return in accordance with
paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. Allowable capital costs are
generally those costs for depreciable fixed assets (including costs of
delivery and installation of capital equipment) that are an integral part
of the transportation system. (i) Allowable operating expenses include operations supervision and
engineering, operations labor, fuel, utilities, materials, ad valorem
property taxes, rent, supplies, and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense that you can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include maintenance of the
transportation system, maintenance of equipment, maintenance labor, and
other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses that you
can document. (iii) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (iv) You may use either depreciation with a return on undepreciated
capital investment or a return on depreciable capital investment. After
you have elected to use either method for a transportation system, you may
not later elect to change to the other alternative without MMS
approval. (A) To compute depreciation, you may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves that the transportation system services, or a unit of
production method. Once you make an election, you may not change methods
without MMS approval. A change in ownership of a transportation system
will not alter the depreciation schedule that the original
transporter/lessee established for purposes of the allowance calculation.
With or without a change in ownership, a transportation system may be
depreciated only once. Equipment may not be depreciated below a reasonable
salvage value. To compute a return on undepreciated capital investment,
you will multiply the undepreciated capital investment in the
transportation system by the rate of return determined under paragraph
(b)(2)(v) of this section. (B) To compute a return on depreciable capital investment, you will
multiply the initial capital investment in the transportation system by
the rate of return determined under paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section.
No allowance will be provided for depreciation. This alternative will
apply only to transportation facilities first placed in service after
March 1, 1988. (v) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with Standard
and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return is the monthly average rate as
published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first month of
the reporting period for which the allowance is applicable and is
effective during the reporting period. The rate must be redetermined at
the beginning of each subsequent transportation allowance reporting period
that is determined under paragraph (b)(4) of this section. (3) This paragraph explains how to allocate transportation costs to
each product and transportation system. (i) The deduction for transportation costs must be determined based on
your cost of transporting each product through each individual
transportation system. If you transport more than one product in a gaseous
phase, the allocation of costs to each of the products transported must be
made in a consistent and equitable manner. The allocation should be in the
same proportion that the volume of each product (excluding waste products
that have no value) bears to the volume of all products in the gaseous
phase (excluding waste products that have no value). Except as provided in
this paragraph, you may not take an allowance for transporting a product
that is not royalty bearing without MMS approval. (ii) As an alternative to the requirements of paragraph (b)(3)(i) of
this section, you may propose to MMS a cost allocation method based on the
values of the products transported. MMS will approve the method upon
determining that it meets one of the two following requirements: (A) The methodology in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section cannot be
applied; and (B) Your proposal is more reasonable than the method in paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section. (4) Your transportation allowance under this paragraph (b) must be
determined based upon a calendar year or other period if you and MMS agree
to an alternative. (5) If you transport both gaseous and liquid products through the same
transportation system, you must propose a cost allocation procedure to
MMS. You may use the transportation allowance determined in accordance
with your proposed allocation procedure until MMS issues its determination
on the acceptability of the cost allocation. You are required to submit
all relevant data to support your proposal. MMS will then determine the
transportation allowance based upon your proposal and any additional
information MMS deems necessary. (c) Using the alternative transportation calculation when you have a
non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) As an alternative to computing
your transportation allowance under paragraph (b) of this section, you may
use as the transportation allowance 10 percent of your gross proceeds but
not to exceed 30 cents per MMBtu. (2) Your election to use the alternative transportation allowance
calculation in paragraph (c)(1) of this section must be made at the
beginning of a month and must remain in effect for an entire calendar
year. Your first election will remain in effect until the end of the
succeeding calendar year, except for elections effective January 1 that
will be effective only for that calendar year. (d) Reporting your transportation allowance. (1) If MMS
requests, you must submit all data used to determine your transportation
allowance. The data must be provided within a reasonable period of time
that MMS will determine. (2) You must report transportation allowances as a separate entry on
Form MMS�2014. MMS may approve a different reporting procedure on allottee
leases, and with lessor approval on tribal leases. (e) Adjusting incorrect allowances. If for any month the
transportation allowance you are entitled to is less than the amount you
took on Form MMS�2014, you are required to report and pay additional
royalties due, plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.54 from the first
day of the first month you deducted the improper transportation allowance
until the date you pay the royalties due. If the transportation allowance
you are entitled to is greater than the amount you took on Form MMS�2014
for any royalties during the reporting period, you are entitled to a
credit. No interest will be paid on the overpayment. (f) Determining allowable costs for transportation allowances.
Lessees may include, but are not limited to, the following costs in
determining the arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (a)
of this section or the non-arm's-length transportation allowance under
paragraph (b) of this section: (1) Firm demand charges paid to pipelines. You must limit the
allowable costs for the firm demand charges to the applicable rate per
MMBtu multiplied by the actual volumes transported. You may not include
any losses incurred for previously purchased but unused firm capacity. You
also may not include any gains associated with releasing firm capacity. If
you receive a payment or credit from the pipeline for penalty refunds,
rate case refunds, or other reasons, you must reduce the firm demand
charge claimed on the Form MMS�2014. You must modify the Form MMS�2014 by
the amount received or credited for the affected reporting period. (2) Gas supply realignment (GSR) costs. The GSR costs result
from a pipeline reforming or terminating supply contracts with producers
to implement the restructuring requirements of FERC orders in 18 CFR part
284. (3) Commodity charges. The commodity charge allows the pipeline
to recover the costs of providing service. (4) Wheeling costs. Hub operators charge a wheeling cost for
transporting gas from one pipeline to either the same or another pipeline
through a market center or hub. A hub is a connected manifold of pipelines
through which a series of incoming pipelines are interconnected to a
series of outgoing pipelines. (5) Gas Research Institute (GRI) fees. The GRI conducts
research, development, and commercialization programs on natural gas
related topics for the benefit of the U.S. gas industry and gas customers.
GRI fees are allowable provided such fees are mandatory in FERC-approved
tariffs. (6) Annual Charge Adjustment (ACA) fees. FERC charges these fees
to pipelines to pay for its operating expenses. (7) Payments (either volumetric or in value) for actual or
theoretical losses. This paragraph does not apply to non-arm's-length
transportation arrangements. (8) Temporary storage services. This includes short duration
storage services offered by market centers or hubs (commonly referred to
as �parking� or �banking�), or other temporary storage services provided
by pipeline transporters, whether actual or provided as a matter of
accounting. Temporary storage is limited to 30 days or less. (9) Supplemental costs for compression, dehydration, and treatment
of gas. MMS allows these costs only if such services are required for
transportation and exceed the services necessary to place production into
marketable condition required under �206.174(h). (g) Determining nonallowable costs for transportation allowances.
Lessees may not include the following costs in determining the
arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (a) of this section
or the non-arm's-length transportation allowance under paragraph (b) of
this section: (1) Fees or costs incurred for storage. This includes storing
production in a storage facility, whether on or off the lease, for more
than 30 days. (2) Aggregater/marketer fees. This includes fees you pay to
another person (including your affiliates) to market your gas, including
purchasing and reselling the gas, or finding or maintaining a market for
the gas production. (3) Penalties you incur as shipper. These penalties include, but
are not limited to the following: (i) Over-delivery cash-out penalties. This includes the
difference between the price the pipeline pays you for over-delivered
volumes outside the tolerances and the price you receive for
over-delivered volumes within tolerances. (ii) Scheduling penalties. This includes penalties you incur for
differences between daily volumes delivered into the pipeline and volumes
scheduled or nominated at a receipt or delivery point. (iii) Imbalance penalties. This includes penalties you incur
(generally on a monthly basis) for differences between volumes delivered
into the pipeline and volumes scheduled or nominated at a receipt or
delivery point. (iv) Operational penalties. This includes fees you incur for
violation of the pipeline's curtailment or operational orders issued to
protect the operational integrity of the pipeline. (4) Intra-hub transfer fees. These are fees you pay to hub
operators for administrative services (e.g., title transfer tracking)
necessary to account for the sale of gas within a hub. (5) Other nonallowable costs. Any cost you incur for services
you are required to provide at no cost to the lessor. (h) Other transportation cost determinations. You must follow
the provisions of this section to determine transportation costs when
establishing value using either a net-back valuation procedure or any
other procedure that allows deduction of actual transportation costs. [64 FR 43515, Aug. 10, 1999, as amended at 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26,
2008] (a) When you value any gas plant product under �206.174, you may deduct
from value the reasonable actual costs of processing. (b) You must allocate processing costs among the gas plant products.
You must determine a separate processing allowance for each gas plant
product and processing plant relationship. Natural gas liquids are
considered as one product. (c) The processing allowance deduction based on an individual product
may not exceed 66 2/3 percent of the value of each gas plant product
determined under �206.174. Before you calculate the 66 2/3 percent limit,
you must first reduce the value for any transportation allowances related
to post-processing transportation authorized under �206.177. (d) Processing cost deductions will not be allowed for placing lease
products in marketable condition. These costs include among others,
dehydration, separation, compression upstream of the facility measurement
point, or storage, even if those functions are performed off the lease or
at a processing plant. Costs for the removal of acid gases, commonly
referred to as sweetening, are not allowed unless the acid gases removed
are further processed into a gas plant product. In such event, you will be
eligible for a processing allowance determined under this subpart.
However, MMS will not grant any processing allowance for processing lease
production that is not royalty bearing. (e) You will be allowed a reasonable amount of residue gas royalty free
for operation of the processing plant, but no allowance will be made for
expenses incidental to marketing, except as provided in 30 CFR part 206.
In those situations where a processing plant processes gas from more than
one lease, only that proportionate share of your residue gas necessary for
the operation of the processing plant will be allowed royalty free. (f) You do not owe royalty on residue gas, or any gas plant product
resulting from processing gas, that is reinjected into a reservoir within
the same lease, unit, or approved Federal agreement, until such time as
those products are finally produced from the reservoir for sale or other
disposition. This paragraph applies only when the reinjection is included
in a BLM-approved plan of development or operations. (g) If MMS determines that you have determined an improper processing
allowance authorized by this subpart, then you will be required to pay any
additional royalties plus late payment interest determined under 30 CFR
218.54. Alternatively, you may be entitled to a credit, but you will not
receive any interest on your overpayment. (a) Determining a processing allowance if you have an arms's-length
processing contract. (1) This paragraph explains how you determine an
allowance under an arm's-length processing contract. (i) The processing allowance is the reasonable actual costs you incur
to process the gas under that contract. Paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (iii) of
this section provide a limited exception. You have the burden of
demonstrating that your contract is arm's-length. You are required to
submit to MMS a copy of your arm's-length contract(s) and all subsequent
amendments to the contract(s) within 2 months of the date MMS receives
your first report that deducts the allowance on the Form MMS�2014. (ii) When MMS conducts reviews and audits, we will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from you to the processor for the processing. If
the contract reflects more than the total consideration, then MMS may
require that the processing allowance be determined under paragraph (b) of
this section. (iii) If MMS determines that the consideration paid under an
arm's-length processing contract does not reflect the value of the
processing because of misconduct by or between the contracting parties, or
because you otherwise have breached your duty to the lessor to market the
production for the mutual benefit of you and the lessor, then MMS will
require that the processing allowance be determined under paragraph (b) of
this section. In these circumstances, MMS will notify you and give you an
opportunity to provide written information justifying your processing
costs. (2) If your arm's-length processing contract includes more than one gas
plant product and the processing costs attributable to each product can be
determined from the contract, then the processing costs for each gas plant
product must be determined in accordance with the contract. You may not
take an allowance for the costs of processing lease production that is not
royalty-bearing. (3) If your arm's-length processing contract includes more than one gas
plant product and the processing costs attributable to each product cannot
be determined from the contract, you must propose an allocation procedure
to MMS. You may use your proposed allocation procedure until MMS issues
its determination. You are required to submit all relevant data to support
your proposal. MMS will then determine the processing allowance based upon
your proposal and any additional information MMS deems necessary. You may
not take a processing allowance for the costs of processing lease
production that is not royalty-bearing. (4) If your payments for processing under an arm's-length contract are
not based on a dollar per unit price, you must convert whatever
consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent for the purposes of
this section. (b) Determining a processing allowance if you have a
non-arm's-length contract or no contract. (1) This paragraph applies
if you have a non-arm's-length processing contract or no contract,
including those situations where you perform processing for yourself. (i) If you have a non-arm's-length contract or no contract, the
processing allowance is based upon your reasonable actual costs of
processing as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. (ii) All processing allowances deducted under a non-arm's-length or
no-contract situation are subject to monitoring, review, audit, and
adjustment. You must submit the actual cost information to support the
allowance to MMS on Form MMS�4109, Gas Processing Allowance Summary
Report, within 3 months after the end of the 12-month period for which the
allowance applies. MMS may approve a longer time period. MMS will monitor
the allowance deduction to ensure that deductions are reasonable and
allowable. When necessary or appropriate, MMS may require you to modify
your processing allowance. (2) The processing allowance for non-arm's-length or no-contract
situations is based upon your actual costs for processing during the
reporting period. Allowable costs include operating and maintenance
expenses, overhead, and either depreciation and a return on undepreciated
capital investment (in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) of this
section), or a cost equal to the initial depreciable investment in the
processing plant multiplied by a rate of return in accordance with
paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. Allowable capital costs are
generally those costs for depreciable fixed assets (including costs of
delivery and installation of capital equipment) that are an integral part
of the processing plant. (i) Allowable operating expenses include operations supervision and
engineering, operations labor, fuel, utilities, materials, ad valorem
property taxes, rent, supplies, and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense that the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include maintenance of the
processing plant, maintenance of equipment, maintenance labor, and other
directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses that you can
document. (iii) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the processing plant is an allowable expense. State and
Federal income taxes and severance taxes, including royalties, are not
allowable expenses. (iv) You may use either depreciation with a return on undepreciable
capital investment or a return on depreciable capital investment. After
you elect to use either method for a processing plant, you may not later
elect to change to the other alternative without MMS approval. (A) To compute depreciation, you may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves that the processing plant services, or a
unit-of-production method. Once you make an election, you may not change
methods without MMS approval. A change in ownership of a processing plant
will not alter the depreciation schedule that the original
processor/lessee established for purposes of the allowance calculation.
However, for processing plants you or your affiliate purchase that do not
have a previously claimed MMS depreciation schedule, you may treat the
processing plant as a newly installed facility for depreciation purposes.
A processing plant may be depreciated only once, regardless of whether
there is a change in ownership. Equipment may not be depreciated below a
reasonable salvage value. To compute a return on undepreciated capital
investment, you must multiply the undepreciable capital investment in the
processing plant by the rate of return determined under paragraph
(b)(2)(v) of this section. (B) To compute a return on depreciable capital investment, you must
multiply the initial capital investment in the processing plant by the
rate of return determined under paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section. No
allowance will be provided for depreciation. This alternative will apply
only to plants first placed in service after March 1, 1988. (v) The rate of return is the industrial rate associated with Standard
and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return is the monthly average rate as
published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first month for which
the allowance is applicable. The rate must be redetermined at the
beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (3) Your processing allowance under this paragraph (b) must be
determined based upon a calendar year or other period if you and MMS agree
to an alternative. (4) The processing allowance for each gas plant product must be
determined based on your reasonable and actual cost of processing the gas.
You must base your allocation of costs to each gas plant product upon
generally accepted accounting principles. You may not take an allowance
for the costs of processing lease production that is not
royalty-bearing. (c) Reporting your processing allowance. (1) If MMS requests,
you must submit all data used to determine your processing allowance. The
data must be provided within a reasonable period of time, as MMS
determines. (2) You must report gas processing allowances as a separate entry on
the Form MMS�2014. MMS may approve a different reporting procedure for
allottee leases, and with lessor approval on tribal leases. (d) Adjusting incorrect processing allowances. If for any month
the gas processing allowance you are entitled to is less than the amount
you took on Form MMS�2014, you are required to pay additional royalties,
plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.54 from the first day of the first
month you deducted a processing allowance until the date you pay the
royalties due. If the processing allowance you are entitled is greater
than the amount you took on Form MMS�2014, you are entitled to a credit.
However, no interest will be paid on the overpayment. (e) Other processing cost determinations. You must follow the
provisions of this section to determine processing costs when establishing
value using either a net-back valuation procedure or any other procedure
that requires deduction of actual processing costs. [64 FR 43515, Aug. 10, 1999, as amended at 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26,
2008] Where accounting for comparison (dual accounting) is required for gas
production from a lease but neither you nor someone acting on your behalf
processes the gas, and you have elected to perform actual dual accounting
under �206.176, you must use the first applicable of the following methods
to establish processing costs for dual accounting purposes: (a) The average of the costs established in your current arm's-length
processing agreements for gas from the lease, provided that some gas has
previously been processed under these agreements. (b) The average of the costs established in your current arm's-length
processing agreements for gas from the lease, provided that the agreements
are in effect for plants to which the lease is physically connected and
under which gas from other leases in the field or area is being or has
been processed. (c) A proposed comparable processing fee submitted to either the tribe
and MMS (for tribal leases) or MMS (for allotted leases) with your
supporting documentation submitted to MMS. If MMS does not take action on
your proposal within 120 days, the proposal will be deemed to be denied
and subject to appeal to the MMS Director under 30 CFR part 290. (d) Processing costs based on the regulations in ��206.179 and
206.180. Source: 54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989,
unless otherwise noted.
(a) This subpart is applicable to all coal produced from Federal coal
leases. The purpose of this subpart is to establish the value of coal
produced for royalty purposes, of all coal from Federal leases consistent
with the mineral leasing laws, other applicable laws and lease terms. (b) If the specific provisions of any statute or settlement agreement
between the United States and a lessee resulting from administrative or
judicial litigation, or any coal lease subject to the requirements of this
subpart, are inconsistent with any regulation in this subpart then the
statute, lease provision, or settlement shall govern to the extent of that
inconsistency. (c) All royalty payments made to the Minerals Management Service (MMS)
are subject to later audit and adjustment. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 5479, Feb. 12, 1996; 67
FR 19111, Apr. 18, 2002] Ad valorem lease means a lease where the royalty due to the
lessor is based upon a percentage of the amount or value of the coal. Allowance means a deduction used in determining value for
royalty purposes. Coal washing allowance means an allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs incurred by the lessee for coal washing.
Transportation allowance means an allowance for the reasonable, actual
costs incurred by the lessee for moving coal to a point of sale or point
of delivery remote from both the lease and mine or wash plant. Area means a geographic region in which coal has similar quality
and economic characteristics. Area boundaries are not officially
designated and the areas are not necessarily named. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement that has
been arrived at in the marketplace between independent, nonaffiliated
persons with opposing economic interests regarding that contract. For
purposes of this subpart, two persons are affiliated if one person
controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with another
person. For purposes of this subpart, based on the instruments of
ownership of the voting securities of an entity, or based on other forms
of ownership: (a) Ownership in excess of 50 percent constitutes control; (b) Ownership of 10 through 50 percent creates a presumption of
control; and (c) Ownership of less than 10 percent creates a presumption of
noncontrol which MMS may rebut if it demonstrates actual or legal control,
including the existence of interlocking directorates. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this subpart, contracts between
relatives, either by blood or by marriage, are not arm's-length contracts.
The MMS may require the lessee to certify ownership control. To be
considered arm's-length for any production month, a contract must meet the
requirements of this definition for that production month as well as when
the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting and auditing standards, of royalty payment compliance
activities of lessees or other interest holders who pay royalties, rents,
or bonuses on Federal leases. BLM means the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior. Coal means coal of all ranks from lignite through
anthracite. Coal washing means any treatment to remove impurities from coal.
Coal washing may include, but is not limited to, operations such as
flotation, air, water, or heavy media separation; drying; and related
handling (or combination thereof). Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions thereto, between two or more persons and
enforceable by law that with due consideration creates an obligation. Gross proceeds (for royalty payment purposes) means the total
monies and other consideration accruing to a coal lessee for the
production and disposition of the coal produced. Gross proceeds includes,
but is not limited to, payments to the lessee for certain services such as
crushing, sizing, screening, storing, mixing, loading, treatment with
substances including chemicals or oils, and other preparation of the coal
to the extent that the lessee is obligated to perform them at no cost to
the Federal Government. Gross proceeds, as applied to coal, also includes
but is not limited to reimbursements for royalties, taxes or fees, and
other reimbursements. Tax reimbursements are part of the gross proceeds
accruing to a lessee even though the Federal royalty interest may be
exempt from taxation. Monies and other consideration, including the forms
of consideration identified in this paragraph, to which a lessee is
contractually or legally entitled but which it does not seek to collect
through reasonable efforts are also part of gross proceeds. Lease means any contract, profit-share arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States for a
Federal coal resource under a mineral leasing law that authorizes
exploration for, development or extraction of, or removal of coal�or the
land covered by that authorization, whichever is required by the
context. Lessee means any person to whom the United States issues a
lease, and any person who has been assigned an obligation to make royalty
or other payments required by the lease. This includes any person who has
an interest in a lease as well as an operator or payor who has no interest
in the lease but who has assumed the royalty payment responsibility. Like-quality coal means coal that has similar chemical and
physical characteristics. Marketable condition means coal that is sufficiently free from
impurities and otherwise in a condition that it will be accepted by a
purchaser under a sales contract typical for that area. Mine means an underground or surface excavation or series of
excavations and the surface or underground support facilities that
contribute directly or indirectly to mining, production, preparation, and
handling of lease products. Net-back method means a method for calculating market value of
coal at the lease or mine. Under this method, costs of transportation,
washing, handling, etc., are deducted from the ultimate proceeds received
for the coal at the first point at which reasonable values for the coal
may be determined by a sale pursuant to an arm's-length contract or by
comparison to other sales of coal, to ascertain value at the mine. Net output means the quantity of washed coal that a washing
plant produces. Netting is the deduction of an allowance from the sales value by
reporting a one line net sales value, instead of correctly reporting the
deduction as a separate line item on the Form MMS�4430. Person means by individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture. Sales type code means the contract type or general disposition
(e.g., arm's-length or non-arm's-length) of production from the lease. The
sales type code applies to the sales contract, or other disposition, and
not to the arm's-length or non-arm's-length nature of a transportation or
washing allowance. Spot market price means the price received under any sales
transaction when planned or actual deliveries span a short period of time,
usually not exceeding one year. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 35433, Aug. 30, 1990;
61 FR 5479, Feb. 12, 1996; 64 FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999; 66 FR 45769, Aug.
30, 2001; 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] The information collection requirements contained in this subpart have
been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq. The forms, filing date, and approved OMB control
numbers are identified in 30 CFR 210�Forms and Reports. [73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) All coal (except coal unavoidably lost as determined by BLM under
43 CFR part 3400) from a Federal lease subject to this part is subject to
royalty. This includes coal used, sold, or otherwise disposed of by the
lessee on or off the lease. (b) If a lessee receives compensation for unavoidably lost coal through
insurance coverage or other arrangements, royalties at the rate specified
in the lease are to be paid on the amount of compensation received for the
coal. No royalty is due on insurance compensation received by the lessee
for other losses. (c) If waste piles or slurry ponds are reworked to recover coal, the
lessee shall pay royalty at the rate specified in the lease at the time
the recovered coal is used, sold, or otherwise finally disposed of. The
royalty rate shall be that rate applicable to the production method used
to initially mine coal in the waste pile or slurry pond; i.e. ,
underground mining method or surface mining method. Coal in waste pits or
slurry ponds initially mined from Federal leases shall be allocated to
such leases regardless of whether it is stored on Federal lands. The
lessee shall maintain accurate records to determine to which individual
Federal lease coal in the waste pit or slurry pond should be allocated.
However, nothing in this section requires payment of a royalty on coal for
which a royalty has already been paid. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 5479, Feb. 12,
1996] For all leases subject to this subpart, the quantity of coal on which
royalty is due shall be measured in short tons (of 2,000 pounds each) by
methods prescribed by the BLM. Coal quantity information will be reported
on appropriate forms required under 30 CFR part 210�Forms and Reports. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 57 FR 52720, Nov. 5, 1992; 66
FR 45769, Aug. 30, 2001; 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) For all leases subject to this subpart, royalty shall be computed
on the basis of the quantity and quality of Federal coal in marketable
condition measured at the point of royalty measurement as determined
jointly by BLM and MMS. (b) Coal produced and added to stockpiles or inventory does not require
payment of royalty until such coal is later used, sold, or otherwise
finally disposed of. MMS may ask BLM to increase the lease bond to protect
the lessor's interest when BLM determines that stockpiles or inventory
become excessive so as to increase the risk of degradation of the
resource. (c) The lessee shall pay royalty at a rate specified in the lease at
the time the coal is used, sold, or otherwise finally disposed of, unless
otherwise provided for at �206.256(d) of this subpart. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 5480, Feb. 12,
1996] (a) This section is applicable to coal leases on Federal lands which
provide for the determination of royalty on a cents-per-ton (or other
quantity) basis. (b) The royalty for coal from leases subject to this section shall be
based on the dollar rate per ton prescribed in the lease. That dollar rate
shall be applicable to the actual quantity of coal used, sold, or
otherwise finally disposed of, including coal which is avoidably lost as
determine by BLM pursuant to 43 CFR part 3400. (c) For leases subject to this section, there shall be no allowances
for transportation, removal of impurities, coal washing, or any other
processing or preparation of the coal. (d) When a coal lease is readjusted pursuant to 43 CFR part 3400 and
the royalty valuation method changes from a cents-per-ton basis to an ad
valorem basis, coal which is produced prior to the effective date of
readjustment and sold or used within 30 days of the effective date of
readjustment shall be valued pursuant to this section. All coal that is
not used, sold, or otherwise finally disposed of within 30 days after the
effective date of readjustment shall be valued pursuant to the provisions
of �206.257 of this subpart, and royalties shall be paid at the royalty
rate specified in the readjusted lease. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 5480, Feb. 12,
1996] (a) This section is applicable to coal leases on Federal lands which
provide for the determination of royalty as a percentage of the amount of
value of coal (ad valorem). The value for royalty purposes of coal from
such leases shall be the value of coal determined under this section, less
applicable coal washing allowances and transportation allowances
determined under ��206.258 through 206.262 of this subpart, or any
allowance authorized by �206.265 of this subpart. The royalty due shall be
equal to the value for royalty purposes multiplied by the royalty rate in
the lease. (b)(1) The value of coal that is sold pursuant to an arm's-length
contract shall be the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee, except as
provided in paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), and (b)(5) of this section. The
lessee shall have the burden of demonstrating that its contract is
arm's-length. The value which the lessee reports, for royalty purposes, is
subject to monitoring, review, and audit. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects the total consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the buyer to the seller for the coal produced.
If the contract does not reflect the total consideration, then the MMS may
require that the coal sold pursuant to that contract be valued in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this section. Value may not be based on
less than the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee for the coal
production, including the additional consideration. (3) If the MMS determines that the gross proceeds accruing to the
lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract do not reflect the reasonable
value of the production because of misconduct by or between the
contracting parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty
to the lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the
lessee and the lessor, then MMS shall require that the coal production be
valued pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) (ii), (iii), (iv), or (v) of this
section, and in accordance with the notification requirements of paragraph
(d)(3) of this section. When MMS determines that the value may be
unreasonable, MMS will notify the lessee and give the lessee an
opportunity to provide written information justifying the lessee's
reported coal value. (4) The MMS may require a lessee to certify that its arm's-length
contract provisions include all of the consideration to be paid by the
buyer, either directly or indirectly, for the coal production. (5) The value of production for royalty purposes shall not include
payments received by the lessee pursuant to a contract which the lessee
demonstrates, to MMS's satisfaction, were not part of the total
consideration paid for the purchase of coal production. (c)(1) The value of coal from leases subject to this section and which
is not sold pursuant to an arm's-length contract shall be determined in
accordance with this section. (2) If the value of the coal cannot be determined pursuant to paragraph
(b) of this section, then the value shall be determined through
application of other valuation criteria. The criteria shall be considered
in the following order, and the value shall be based upon the first
applicable criterion: (i) The gross proceeds accruing to the lessee pursuant to a sale under
its non-arm's-length contract (or other disposition of produced coal by
other than an arm's-length contract), provided that those gross proceeds
are within the range of the gross proceeds derived from, or paid under,
comparable arm's-length contracts between buyers and sellers neither of
whom is affiliated with the lessee for sales, purchases, or other
dispositions of like-quality coal produced in the area. In evaluating the
comparability of arm's-length contracts for the purposes of these
regulations, the following factors shall be considered: Price, time of
execution, duration, market or markets served, terms, quality of coal,
quantity, and such other factors as may be appropriate to reflect the
value of the coal; (ii) Prices reported for that coal to a public utility commission; (iii) Prices reported for that coal to the Energy Information
Administration of the Department of Energy; (iv) Other relevant matters including, but not limited to, published or
publicly available spot market prices, or information submitted by the
lessee concerning circumstances unique to a particular lease operation or
the saleability of certain types of coal; (v) If a reasonable value cannot be determined using paragraphs (c)(2)
(i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) of this section, then a net-back method or any
other reasonable method shall be used to determine value. (3) When the value of coal is determined pursuant to paragraph (c)(2)
of this section, that value determination shall be consistent with the
provisions contained in paragraph (b)(5) of this section. (d)(1) Where the value is determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of this
section, that value does not require MMS's prior approval. However, the
lessee shall retain all data relevant to the determination of royalty
value. Such data shall be subject to review and audit, and MMS will direct
a lessee to use a different value if it determines that the reported value
is inconsistent with the requirements of these regulations. (2) Any Federal lessee will make available upon request to the
authorized MMS or State representatives, to the Inspector General of the
Department of the Interior or other persons authorized to receive such
information, arm's-length sales value and sales quantity data for
like-quality coal sold, purchased, or otherwise obtained by the lessee
from the area. (3) A lessee shall notify MMS if it has determined value pursuant to
paragraphs (c)(2) (ii), (iii), (iv), or (v) of this section. The
notification shall be by letter to the Associate Director for Minerals
Revenue Management of his/her designee. The letter shall identify the
valuation method to be used and contain a brief description of the
procedure to be followed. The notification required by this section is a
one-time notification due no later than the month the lessee first reports
royalties on the Form MMS�4430 using a valuation method authorized by
paragraphs (c)(2) (ii), (iii), (iv), or (v) of this section, and each time
there is a change in a method under paragraphs (c)(2) (iv) or (v) of this
section. (e) If MMS determines that a lessee has not properly determined value,
the lessee shall be liable for the difference, if any, between royalty
payments made based upon the value it has used and the royalty payments
that are due based upon the value established by MMS. The lessee shall
also be liable for interest computed pursuant to 30 CFR 218.202. If the
lessee is entitled to a credit, MMS will provide instructions for the
taking of that credit. (f) The lessee may request a value determination from MMS. In that
event, the lessee shall propose to MMS a value determination method, and
may use that method in determining value for royalty purposes until MMS
issues its decision. The lessee shall submit all available data relevant
to its proposal. The MMS shall expeditiously determine the value based
upon the lessee's proposal and any additional information MMS deems
necessary. That determination shall remain effective for the period stated
therein. After MMS issues its determination, the lessee shall make the
adjustments in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section. (g) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section, under no
circumstances shall the value for royalty purposes be less than the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee for the disposition of produced coal less
applicable provisions of paragraph (b)(5) of this section and less
applicable allowances determined pursuant to ��206.258 through 206.262 and
�206.265 of this subpart. (h) The lessee is required to place coal in marketable condition at no
cost to the Federal Government. Where the value established under this
section is determined by a lessee's gross proceeds, that value shall be
increased to the extent that the gross proceeds has been reduced because
the purchaser, or any other person, is providing certain services, the
cost of which ordinarily is the responsibility of the lessee to place the
coal in marketable condition. (i) Value shall be based on the highest price a prudent lessee can
receive through legally enforceable claims under its contract. Absent
contract revision or amendment, if the lessee fails to take proper or
timely action to receive prices or benefits to which it is entitled, it
must pay royalty at a value based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
Contract revisions or amendments shall be in writing and signed by all
parties to an arm's-length contract, and may be retroactively applied to
value for royalty purposes for a period not to exceed two years, unless
MMS approves a longer period. If the lessee makes timely application for a
price increase allowed under its contract but the purchaser refuses, and
the lessee takes reasonable measures, which are documented, to force
purchaser compliance, the lessee will owe no additional royalties unless
or until monies or consideration resulting from the price increase are
received. This paragraph shall not be construed to permit a lessee to
avoid its royalty payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails
to pay, in whole or in part or timely, for a quantity of coal. (j) Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
no review, reconciliation, monitoring, or other like process that results
in a redetermination by MMS of value under this section shall be
considered final or binding as against the Federal Government or its
beneficiaries until the audit period is formally closed. (k) Certain information submitted to MMS to support valuation
proposals, including transportation, coal washing, or other allowances
under �206.265 of this subpart, is exempted from disclosure by the Freedom
of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 522. Any data specified by the Act to be
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt shall be maintained in a
confidential manner in accordance with applicable law and regulations. All
requests for information about determinations made under this part are to
be submitted in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act regulation
of the Department of the Interior, 43 CFR part 2. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 35433, Aug. 30, 1990;
57 FR 52720, Nov. 5, 1992; 61 FR 5480, Feb. 12, 1996; 66 FR 45769, Aug.
30, 2001] (a) For ad valorem leases subject to �206.257 of this subpart, MMS
shall, as authorized by this section, allow a deduction in determining
value for royalty purposes for the reasonable, actual costs incurred to
wash coal, unless the value determined pursuant to �206.257 of this
subpart was based upon like-quality unwashed coal. Under no circumstances
will the authorized washing allowance and the transportation allowance
reduce the value for royalty purposes to zero. (b) If MMS determines that a lessee has improperly determined a washing
allowance authorized by this section, then the lessee shall be liable for
any additional royalties, plus interest determined in accordance with 30
CFR 218.202, or shall be entitled to a credit without interest. (c) Lessees shall not disproportionately allocate washing costs to
Federal leases. (d) No cost normally associated with mining operations and which are
necessary for placing coal in marketable condition shall be allowed as a
cost of washing. (e) Coal washing costs shall only be recognized as allowances when the
washed coal is sold and royalties are reported and paid. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 5480, Feb. 12, 1996; 64
FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999] (a) Arm's-length contracts. (1) For washing costs incurred by a
lessee under an arm's-length contract, the washing allowance shall be the
reasonable actual costs incurred by the lessee for washing the coal under
that contract, subject to monitoring, review, audit, and possible future
adjustment. The lessee shall have the burden of demonstrating that its
contract is arm's-length. MMS' prior approval is not required before a
lessee may deduct costs incurred under an arm's-length contract. The
lessee must claim a washing allowance by reporting it as a separate line
entry on the Form MMS�4430. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the lessee to the washer for the washing. If
the contract reflects more than the total consideration paid, then the MMS
may require that the washing allowance be determined in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section. (3) If the MMS determines that the consideration paid pursuant to an
arm's-length washing contract does not reflect the reasonable value of the
washing because of misconduct by or between the contracting parties, or
because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the lessor to market
the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor, then
MMS shall require that the washing allowance be determined in accordance
with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS determines that the value of
the washing may be unreasonable, MMS will notify the lessee and give the
lessee an opportunity to provide written information justifying the
lessee's washing costs. (4) Where the lessee's payments for washing under an arm's-length
contract are not based on a dollar-per-unit basis, the lessee shall
convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent.
Washing allowances shall be expressed as a cost per ton of coal
washed. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length contract or has no contract, including those situations
where the lessee performs washing for itself, the washing allowance will
be based upon the lessee's reasonable actual costs. All washing allowances
deducted under a non-arm's-length or no contract situation are subject to
monitoring, review, audit, and possible future adjustment. The lessee must
claim a washing allowance by reporting it as a separate line entry on the
Form MMS�4430. When necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a lessee to
modify its estimated or actual washing allowance. (2) The washing allowance for non-arm's-length or no contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for washing
during the reported period, including operating and maintenance expenses,
overhead, and either depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital
investment in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv) (A) of this section, or
a cost equal to the depreciable investment in the wash plant multiplied by
the rate of return in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this
section. Allowable capital costs are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and installation of capital equipment)
which are an integral part of the wash plant. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes, rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the wash
plant; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and other directly
allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the lessee can
document. (iii) Overhead attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the wash plant is an allowable expense. State and Federal
income taxes and severance taxes, including royalities, are not allowable
expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) or (B) of this
section. After a lessee has elected to use either method for a wash plant,
the lessee may not later elect to change to the other alternative without
approval of the MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the wash plant services, whichever is
appropriate, or a unit of production method. After an election is made,
the lessee may not change methods without MMS approval. A change in
ownership of a wash plant shall not alter the depreciation schedule
established by the original operator/lessee for purposes of the allowance
calculation. With or without a change in ownership, a wash plant shall be
depreciated only once. Equipment shall not be depreciated below a
reasonable salvage value. (B) The MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
capital investment in the wash plant multiplied by the rate of return
determined pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section. No allowance
shall be provided for depreciation. This alternative shall apply only to
plants first placed in service or acquired after March 1, 1989. (v) The rate of return must be the industrial rate associated with
Standard and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return must be the monthly
average rate as published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first
month for which the allowance is applicable. The rate must be redetermined
at the beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (3) The washing allowance for coal shall be determined based on the
lessee's reasonable and actual cost of washing the coal. The lessee may
not take an allowance for the costs of washing lease production that is
not royalty bearing. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) The lessee must notify MMS of an allowance based on incurred costs
by using a separate line entry on the Form MMS�4430. (ii) The MMS may require that a lessee submit arm's-length washing
contracts and related documents. Documents shall be submitted within a
reasonable time, as determined by MMS. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (i) The lessee must notify
MMS of an allowance based on the incurred costs by using a separate line
entry on the Form MMS�4430. (ii) For new washing facilities or arrangements, the lessee's initial
washing deduction shall include estimates of the allowable coal washing
costs for the applicable period. Cost estimates shall be based upon the
most recently available operations data for the washing system or, if such
data are not available, the lessee shall use estimates based upon industry
data for similar washing systems. (iii) Upon request by MMS, the lessee shall submit all data used to
prepare the allowance deduction. The data shall be provided within a
reasonable period of time, as determined by MMS. (d) Interest and assessments. (1) If a lessee nets a washing
allowance on the Form MMS�4430, then the lessee shall be assessed an
amount up to 10 percent of the allowance netted not to exceed $250 per
lease sales type code per sales period. (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a washing allowance which results
in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the amount of
that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.202. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual coal washing allowance is
less than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�4430 for each month
during the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall pay additional
royalties due plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.202 from the date
when the lessee took the deduction to the date the lessee repays the
difference to MMS. If the actual washing allowance is greater than the
amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�4430 for each month during the
allowance reporting period, the lessee shall be entitled to a credit
without interest. (2) The lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�4430 to reflect actual
costs, together with any payment, in accordance with instructions provided
by MMS. (f) Other washing cost determinations. The provisions of this
section shall apply to determine washing costs when establishing value
using a net-back valuation procedure or any other procedure that requires
deduction of washing costs. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 57 FR 52720, Nov. 5, 1992; 61
FR 5480, Feb. 12, 1996; 64 FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999; 66 FR 45769, Aug. 30,
2001; 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) When coal is subjected to washing, the washed coal must be
allocated to the leases from which it was extracted. (b) When the net output of coal from a washing plant is derived from
coal obtained from only one lease, the quantity of washed coal allocable
to the lease will be based on the net output of the washing plant. (c) When the net output of coal from a washing plant is derived from
coal obtained from more than one lease, unless determined otherwise by
BLM, the quantity of net output of washed coal allocable to each lease
will be based on the ratio of measured quantities of coal delivered to the
washing plant and washed from each lease compared to the total measured
quantities of coal delivered to the washing plant and washed. (a) For ad valorem leases subject to �206.257 of this subpart, where
the value for royalty purposes has been determined at a point remote from
the lease or mine, MMS shall, as authorized by this section, allow a
deduction in determining value for royalty purposes for the reasonable,
actual costs incurred to: (1) Transport the coal from a Federal lease to a sales point which is
remote from both the lease and mine; or (2) Transport the coal from a Federal lease to a wash plant when that
plant is remote from both the lease and mine and, if applicable, from the
wash plant to a remote sales point. In-mine transportation costs shall not
be included in the transportation allowance. (b) Under no circumstances will the authorized washing allowance and
the transportation allowance reduce the value for royalty purposes to
zero. (c)(1) When coal transported from a mine to a wash plant is eligible
for a transportation allowance in accordance with this section, the lessee
is not required to allocate transportation costs between the quantity of
clean coal output and the rejected waste material. The transportation
allowance shall be authorized for the total production which is
transported. Transportation allowances shall be expressed as a cost per
ton of cleaned coal transported. (2) For coal that is not washed at a wash plant, the transportation
allowance shall be authorized for the total production which is
transported. Transportation allowances shall be expressed as a cost per
ton of coal transported. (3) Transportation costs shall only be recognized as allowances when
the transported coal is sold and royalties are reported and paid. (d) If, after a review and/or audit, MMS determines that a lessee has
improperly determined a transportation allowance authorized by this
section, then the lessee shall pay any additional royalties, plus
interest, determined in accordance with 30 CFR 218.202, or shall be
entitled to a credit, without interest. (e) Lessees shall not disproportionately allocate transportation costs
to Federal leases. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996; 64
FR 43288, Aug. 10, 1999] (a) Arm's-length contracts. (1) For transportation costs
incurred by a lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract, the
transportation allowance shall be the reasonable, actual costs incurred by
the lessee for transporting the coal under that contract, subject to
monitoring, review, audit, and possible future adjustment. The lessee
shall have the burden of demonstrating that its contract is arm's-length.
The lessee must claim a transportation allowance by reporting it as a
separate line entry on the Form MMS�4430. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the lessee to the transporter for the
transportation. If the contract reflects more than the total consideration
paid, then the MMS may require that the transportation allowance be
determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. (3) If the MMS determines that the consideration paid pursuant to an
arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the reasonable value
of the transportation because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the
lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and
the lessor, then MMS shall require that the transportation allowance be
determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS
determines that the value of the transportation may be unreasonable, MMS
will notify the lessee and give the lessee an opportunity to provide
written information justifying the lessee's transportation costs. (4) Where the lessee's payments for transportation under an
arm's-length contract are not based on a dollar-per-unit basis, the lessee
shall convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent
for the purposes of this section. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract �(1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length contract or has no contract, including those situations
where the lessee performs transportation services for itself, the
transportation allowance will be based upon the lessee's reasonable actual
costs. All transportation allowances deducted under a non-arm's-length or
no contract situation are subject to monitoring, review, audit, and
possible future adjustment. The lessee must claim a transportation
allowance by reporting it as a separate line entry on the Form MMS�4430.
When necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a lessee to modify its
estimated or actual transportation allowance deduction. (2) The transportation allowance for non-arm's-length or no-contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for
transportation during the reporting period, including operating and
maintenance expenses, overhead, and either depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, or a cost equal to the depreciable
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of return
in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. Allowable
capital costs are generally those for depreciable fixed assets (including
costs of delivery and installation of capital equipment) which are an
integral part of the transportation system. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes; rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the
transportation system; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and
other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the
lessee can document. (iii) Overhead attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) or paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. After a lessee has elected to use either
method for a transportation system, the lessee may not later elect to
change to the other alternative without approval of the MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the transportation system services, whichever
is appropriate, or a unit of production method. After an election is made,
the lessee may not change methods without MMS approval. A change in
ownership of a transportation system shall not alter the depreciation
schedule established by the original transporter/lessee for purposes of
the allowance calculation. With or without a change in ownership, a
transportation system shall be depreciated only once. Equipment shall not
be depreciated below a reasonable salvage value. (B) The MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the allowable
capital investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of
return determined pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(B)(v) of this section. No
allowance shall be provided for depreciation. This alternative shall apply
only to transportation facilities first placed in service or acquired
after March 1, 1989. (v) The rate of return must be the industrial rate associated with
Standard and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return must be the monthly
average rate as published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first
month for which the allowance is applicable. The rate must be redetermined
at the beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (3) A lessee may apply to MMS for exception from the requirement that
it compute actual costs in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of
this section. MMS will grant the exception only if the lessee has a rate
for the transportation approved by a Federal agency or by a State
regulatory agency (for Federal leases). MMS shall deny the exception
request if it determines that the rate is excessive as compared to
arm's-length transportation charges by systems, owned by the lessee or
others, providing similar transportation services in that area. If there
are no arm's-length transportation charges, MMS shall deny the exception
request if: (i) No Federal or State regulatory agency costs analysis exists and the
Federal or State regulatory agency, as applicable, has declined to
investigate under MMS timely objections upon filing; and (ii) The rate significantly exceeds the lessee's actual costs for
transportation as determined under this section. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) The lessee must notify MMS of an allowance based on incurred costs
by using a separate line entry on the Form MMS�4430. (ii) The MMS may require that a lessee submit arm's-length
transportation contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and
related documents. Documents shall be submitted within a reasonable time,
as determined by MMS. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract �(i) The lessee must notify
MMS of an allowance based on the incurred costs by using a separate line
entry on Form MMS�4430. (ii) For new transportation facilities or arrangements, the lessee's
initial deduction shall include estimates of the allowable coal
transportation costs for the applicable period. Cost estimates shall be
based upon the most recently available operations data for the
transportation system or, if such data are not available, the lessee shall
use estimates based upon industry data for similar transportation
systems. (iii) Upon request by MMS, the lessee shall submit all data used to
prepare the allowance deduction. The data shall be provided within a
reasonable period of time, as determined by MMS. (iv) If the lessee is authorized to use its Federal- or
State-agency-approved rate as its transportation cost in accordance with
paragraph (b)(3) of this section, it shall follow the reporting
requirements of paragraph (c)(1) of this section. (d) Interest and assessments. (1) If a lessee nets a
transportation allowance on Form MMS�4430, the lessee shall be assessed an
amount of up to 10 percent of the allowance netted not to exceed $250 per
lease sales type code per sales period. (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a transportation allowance which
results in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the
amount of that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.202. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual coal transportation allowance
is less than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�4430 for each
month during the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall pay
additional royalties due plus interest computed under 30 CFR 218.202 from
the date when the lessee took the deduction to the date the lessee repays
the difference to MMS. If the actual transportation allowance is greater
than amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�4430 for each month during
the allowance reporting period, the lessee shall be entitled to a credit
without interest. (2) The lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�4430 to reflect actual
costs, together with any payments, in accordance with instructions
provided by MMS. (f) Other transportation cost determinations. The provisions of
this section shall apply to determine transportation costs when
establishing value using a net-back valuation procedure or any other
procedure that requires deduction of transportation costs. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 57 FR 41864, Sept. 14, 1992;
57 FR 52720, Nov. 5, 1992; 61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996; 64 FR 43288, Aug.
10, 1999; 66 FR 45769, Aug. 30, 2001; 73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] If an ad valorem Federal coal lease is developed by in-situ or surface
gasification or liquefaction technology, the lessee shall propose the
value of coal for royalty purposes to MMS. The MMS will review the
lessee's proposal and issue a value determination. The lessee may use its
proposed value until MMS issues a value determination. [54 FR 1523, Jan. 13, 1989, as amended at 65 FR 43289, Aug. 10,
1999] If, prior to use, sale, or other disposition, the lessee enhances the
value of coal after the coal has been placed in marketable condition in
accordance with �206.257(h) of this subpart, the lessee shall notify MMS
that such processing is occurring or will occur. The value of that
production shall be determined as follows: (a) A value established for the feedstock coal in marketable condition
by application of the provisions of �206.257(c)(2)(i-iv) of this subpart;
or, (b) In the event that a value cannot be established in accordance with
subsection (a), then the value of production will be determined in
accordance with �206.257(c)(2)(v) of this subpart and the value shall be
the lessee's gross proceeds accruing from the disposition of the enhanced
product, reduced by MMS-approved processing costs and procedures including
a rate of return on investment equal to two times the Standard and Poor's
BBB bond rate applicable under �206.259(b)(2)(v) of this subpart. (a) The gross value for royalty purposes shall be the sale or contract
unit price times the number of units sold, Provided, however, That
where the authorized officer determines: (1) That a contract of sale or other business arrangement between the
lessee and a purchaser of some or all of the commodities produced from the
lease is not a bona fide transaction between independent parties because
it is based in whole or in part upon considerations other than the value
of the commodities, or (2) That no bona fide sales price is received for some or all of such
commodities because the lessee is consuming them, the authorized officer
shall determine their gross value, taking into account: (i) All prices
received by the lessee in all bona fide transactions, (ii) Prices paid for
commodities of like quality produced from the same general area, and (iii)
Such other relevant factors as the authorized officer may deem
appropriate; and Provided further, That in a situation where an
estimated value is used, the authorized officer shall require the payment
of such additional royalties, or allow such credits or refunds as may be
necessary to adjust royalty payment to reflect the actual gross value. (b) The lessee is required to certify that the values reported for
royalty purposes are bona fide sales not involving considerations other
than the sale of the mineral, and he may be required by the authorized
officer to supply supporting information. [43 FR 10341, Mar. 13, 1978. Redesignated at 48 FR 36588, Aug. 12,
1983, and amended at 48 FR 44795, Sept. 30, 1983. Further redesignated at
51 FR 15212, Apr. 22, 1986. Redesignated at 53 FR 39461, Oct. 7,
1988] Source: 72 FR 24459, May 2, 2007,
unless otherwise noted.
(a) This subpart applies to all geothermal resources produced from
Federal geothermal leases issued pursuant to the Geothermal Steam Act of
1970 (GSA), as amended by the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct) (30 U.S.C.
1001 et seq. ). The purpose of this subpart is to prescribe how to
calculate royalties and direct use fees for geothermal production. (b) The MMS may audit and adjust all royalty and fee payments. (c) In some cases, the regulations in this subpart may be inconsistent
with a statute, settlement agreement, written agreement, or lease
provision. If this happens, the statute, settlement agreement, written
agreement, or lease provision will govern to the extent of the
inconsistency. For purposes of this paragraph, the following definitions
apply: (1) �Settlement agreement� means a settlement agreement between the
United States and a lessee resulting from administrative or judicial
litigation. (2) �Written agreement� means a written agreement between the lessee
and the MMS Director or Assistant Secretary, Land and Minerals Management
of the Department of the Interior that: (i) Establishes a method to determine the royalty from any lease that
MMS expects at least would approximate the value or royalty established
under this subpart; and (ii) Includes a value or gross proceeds determination under �206.364 of
this subpart. For purposes of this subpart, the following terms have the meanings
indicated. Affiliate means a person who controls, is controlled by, or is
under common control with another person. For purposes of this
subpart: (1) Ownership or common ownership of more than 50 percent of the voting
securities, or instruments of ownership, or other forms of ownership, of
another person constitutes control. Ownership of less than 10 percent
constitutes a presumption of noncontrol that MMS may rebut. (2) If there is ownership or common ownership of 10 through 50 percent
of the voting securities, or instruments of ownership, or other forms of
ownership of another person, MMS will consider the following factors in
determining whether there is control under the circumstances of a
particular case: (i) The extent to which there are common officers or directors; (ii) With respect to the voting securities, or instruments of
ownership, or other forms of ownership: the percentage of ownership or
common ownership, the relative percentage of ownership or common ownership
compared to the percentage(s) of ownership by other persons, whether a
person is the greatest single owner, or whether there is an opposing
voting bloc of greater ownership; (iii) Operation of a lease, plant, pipeline, or other facility; (iv) The extent of participation by other owners in operations and
day-to-day management of a lease, plant, pipeline, or other facility;
and (v) Other evidence of power to exercise control over or common control
with another person. (3) Regardless of any percentage of ownership or common ownership,
relatives, either by blood or marriage, are affiliates. Allowance means a deduction in determining value for royalty
purposes. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement between
independent persons who are not affiliates and who have opposing economic
interests regarding that contract. To be considered arm's length for any
production month, a contract must satisfy this definition for that month,
as well as when the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting and auditing standards, of royalty or fee payment
compliance activities of lessees or other interest holders who pay
royalties, fees, rents, or bonuses on Federal geothermal leases. Byproducts means minerals (exclusive of oil, hydrocarbon gas,
and helium), found in solution or in association with geothermal steam,
that no person would extract and produce by themselves because they are
worth less than 75 percent of the value of the geothermal steam or because
extraction and production would be too difficult. Byproduct recovery facility means a facility where byproducts
are placed in marketable condition. Byproduct transportation allowance means an allowance for the
reasonable, actual costs of moving byproducts to a point of sale or
delivery off the lease, unit area, or communitized area, or away from a
byproduct recovery facility. The byproduct transportation allowance does
not include gathering costs. You must report a byproduct transportation
allowance as a separate discrete field on the Form MMS�2014. Class I lease means: (1) A lease that BLM issued before August 8, 2005, for which the lessee
has not converted the royalty rate terms under 43 CFR 3212.25; or (2) A lease that BLM issued in response to an application that was
pending on August 8, 2005, for which the lessee has not made an election
under 43 CFR 3200.8(b). Class II lease means: A lease that BLM issued after August 8, 2005, except for a lease issued
in response to an application that was pending on August 8, 2005, for
which the lessee does not make an election under 43 CFR 3200.8(b). Class III lease means: A lease that BLM issued before August 8, 2005, for which the lessee has
converted to the royalty rate or direct use fee terms under 43 CFR
3212.25. Commercial production or generation of electricity means
generation of electricity that is sold or is subject to sale, including
the electricity or energy that is reasonably required to produce the
resource used in production of electricity for sale or to convert
geothermal energy into electrical energy for sale. Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions thereto, between two or more persons and
enforceable by law that with due consideration creates an obligation. Deduction means a subtraction the lessee uses to determine the
value of geothermal resources produced from a Class I lease that the
lessee uses to generate electricity. Delivered electricity means the amount of electricity in
kilowatt-hours delivered to the purchaser. Direct use means the utilization of geothermal resources for
commercial, residential, agricultural, public facilities, or other energy
needs, other than the commercial production or generation of
electricity. Direct use facility means a facility that uses the heat or other
energy of the geothermal resource for direct use purposes. Electrical facility means a power plant or other facility that
uses a geothermal resource to generate electricity. Field means the land surface vertically projected over a
subsurface geothermal reservoir encompassing at least the outermost
boundaries of all geothermal accumulations known to be within that
reservoir. Geothermal fields are usually given names and their official
boundaries are often designated by regulatory agencies in the respective
States in which the fields are located. Gathering means the movement of lease production from the
wellhead to the point of utilization. Generating deduction means a deduction for the lessee's
reasonable, actual costs of generating plant tailgate electricity. Geothermal resources means: (1) All products of geothermal processes, including indigenous steam,
hot water, and hot brines; (2) Steam and other gases, hot water, and hot brines resulting from
water, gas, or other fluids artificially introduced into geothermal
formations; (3) Heat or other associated energy found in geothermal formations;
and (4) Any byproducts. Gross proceeds (for royalty payment purposes) means the total
monies and other consideration accruing to a geothermal lessee for the
sale of electricity or geothermal resource. Gross proceeds includes, but
is not limited to: (1) Payments to the lessee for certain services such as effluent
injection, field operation and maintenance, drilling or workover of wells,
or field gathering to the extent that the lessee is obligated to perform
such functions at no cost to the Federal Government; (2) Reimbursements for production taxes and other taxes. Tax
reimbursements are part of gross proceeds accruing to a lessee even though
the Federal royalty interest may be exempt from taxation; and (3) Any monies and other consideration, including the forms of
consideration identified in this paragraph, to which a lessee is
contractually or legally entitled but which it does not seek to collect
through reasonable efforts. Lease means a geothermal lease issued under the authority of the
GSA, unless the context indicates otherwise. Lessee (you) means any person to whom the United States issues a
geothermal lease, and any person who has been assigned an obligation to
make royalty, fee, or other payments required by the lease. This includes
any person who has an interest in a geothermal lease as well as an
operator or payor who has no interest in the lease but who has assumed the
royalty, fee, or other payment responsibility. This also includes any
affiliate of the lessee that uses the geothermal resource to generate
electricity, in a direct use process, or to recover byproducts, or any
affiliate that sells or transports lease production. Marketable condition means lease products that are sufficiently
free from impurities and otherwise in a condition that they will be
accepted by a purchaser under a sales contract typical for the disposition
from the field or area of such lease products. Person means any individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture (when established as a separate
entity). Plant parasitic electricity means electricity used to operate a
power plant that is used for commercial production or generation of
electricity. Plant tailgate electricity means the amount of electricity in
kilowatt-hours generated by a power plant exclusive of plant parasitic
electricity, but inclusive of any electricity generated by the power plant
and returned to the lease for lease operations. Plant tailgate electricity
should be measured at, or calculated for, the high voltage side of the
transformer in the plant switchyard. Point of utilization means the power plant or direct use
facility in which the geothermal resource is utilized. Public purpose means a program carried out by a State, tribal,
or local government for the purpose of providing facilities or services
for the benefit of the public in connection with, but not limited to,
public health, safety or welfare, other than the commercial generation of
electricity. Use of lands or facilities for habitation, cultivation, trade
or manufacturing is permissible only when necessary for and integral to (
i.e. , an essential part of) the public purpose. Public safety or welfare means a program carried out or promoted
by a public agency for public purposes involving, directly or indirectly,
protection, safety, and law enforcement activities, and the criminal
justice system of a given political area. Public safety or welfare may
include, but is not limited to, programs carried out by: (1) Public police departments; (2) Sheriffs' offices; (3) The courts; (4) Penal and correctional institutions (including juvenile
facilities); (5) State and local civil defense organizations; and (6) Fire departments and rescue squads (including volunteer fire
departments and rescue squads supported in whole or in part with public
funds). Reasonable alternative fuel means a conventional fuel (such as
coal, oil, gas, or wood) that would normally be used as a source of heat
in direct use operations. Secretary means the Secretary of the Interior or any person duly
authorized to exercise the powers vested in that office. Transmission deduction means a deduction for the lessee's
reasonable actual costs incurred to wheel or transmit the electricity from
the lessee's power plant to the purchaser's delivery point. Wheeling means the transmission of electricity from a power
plant to the point of delivery. (a) If you sold geothermal resources produced from a Class I, II, or
III lease at arm's length that the purchaser uses to generate electricity,
then the royalty on the geothermal resources is the gross proceeds
accruing to you from the sale of the geothermal resource to the
arm's-length purchaser multiplied by either: (1) The royalty rate in your lease; or (2) The royalty rate that BLM prescribes or calculates under 43 CFR
3211.17. See �206.361 for additional provisions applicable to determining
gross proceeds under arm's-length sales. (b) If you use the geothermal resource in your own power plant for the
generation and sale of electricity, the following provisions apply (1) For Class I leases, you must determine the royalty on produced
geothermal resources in accordance with the first applicable of the
following paragraphs: (i) The gross proceeds accruing to you from the arm's-length sale of
the electricity less applicable deductions determined under �206.353 and
�206.354 of this part, multiplied by the royalty rate in your lease. See
�206.361 for additional provisions applicable to determining gross
proceeds under arm's-length sales. Under no circumstances may the
deductions reduce the royalty value of the geothermal resource to zero;
or (ii) A royalty determined by any other reasonable method approved by
MMS under �206.364 of this subpart. (2) For Class II and Class III leases, the royalty on geothermal
resources produced is your gross proceeds from the sale of electricity
multiplied by the royalty rate BLM prescribed for your lease under 43 CFR
3211.17. See �206.361 for additional provisions applicable to determining
gross proceeds under arm's-length sales. You may not reduce gross proceeds
by any deductions. (a) If you determine the value of your geothermal resources under
�206.352(b)(1)(i) of this subpart, you may subtract a transmission
deduction from the gross proceeds you received for the sale of electricity
to determine the plant tailgate value of the electricity. (1) The transmission deduction consists of either or both of two
components: (i) Transmission line costs as determined under paragraph (b) of this
section; and (ii) Wheeling costs if the electricity is transmitted across a third
party's transmission line under an arm's-length wheeling agreement. (2) You may deduct the actual costs you (including your affiliate(s))
incur for transmitting electricity under your arm's-length wheeling
contract. (b) To determine your transmission line cost, you must follow the
requirements of paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section. (1) Your transmission line costs are your actual costs associated with
the construction and operation of a transmission line for the purpose of
transmitting electricity attributable and allocable to your power plant
utilizing Federal geothermal resources. (i) You must determine the monthly transmission line cost component of
the transmission deduction by multiplying the annual transmission line
cost rate (in dollars per kilowatt-hour) by the amount of electricity
delivered for the reporting month. (ii) You must redetermine the transmission line cost rate annually
either at the beginning of the same month of the year in which the power
plant was placed into service or at a time concurrent with the beginning
of your annual corporate accounting period. The period you select must
coincide with the same period you chose for the generating deduction under
�206.354(b)(1). After you choose a deduction period, you may not later
elect to use a different deduction period without MMS approval. (2) Your actual transmission line costs during the reporting period
include: (i) Operating and maintenance expenses under paragraphs (d) and (e) of
this section; (ii) Overhead under paragraph (f) of this section; and either (iii) Depreciation under paragraphs (g) and (h) of this section and a
return on undepreciated capital investment under paragraphs (g) and (i) of
this section or (iv) A return on the capital investment in the transmission line under
paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section. (c)(1) Allowable capital costs under paragraph (b) of this section are
generally those for depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery
and installation of capital equipment) that are an integral part of the
transmission line. (2)(i) You may include a return on capital you invested in the purchase
of real estate for transmission facilities if: (A) Such purchase is necessary; and (B) The surface is not part of the Federal lease. (ii) The rate of return will be the same rate determined under
paragraph (k) of this section. (d) Allowable operating expenses include: (1) Operations supervision and engineering; (2) Operations labor; (3) Fuel; (4) Utilities; (5) Materials; (6) Ad valorem property taxes; (7) Rent; (8) Supplies; and (9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating or
maintenance expense that you can document. (e) Allowable maintenance expenses include: (1) Maintenance of the transmission line; (2) Maintenance of equipment; (3) Maintenance labor; and (4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document. (f) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transmission line is an allowable expense. State and
Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (g) To compute costs associated with capital investment, a lessee may
use either depreciation with a return on undepreciated capital investment,
or a return on capital investment in the transmission line. After a lessee
has elected to use either method, the lessee may not later elect to change
to the other alternative without MMS approval. (h)(1) To compute depreciation, you must use a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of the geothermal project, usually
the term of the electricity sales contract, or other depreciation period
acceptable to MMS. You may not depreciate equipment below a reasonable
salvage value. (2) A change in ownership of a transmission line does not alter the
depreciation schedule established by the original lessee-owner for
purposes of computing transmission line costs. (3) With or without a change in ownership, you may depreciate a
transmission line only once. (i) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment, multiply
the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the beginning of the
period for which you are calculating the transmission deduction by the
rate of return provided in paragraph (k) of this section. (j) To compute a return on capital investment in the transmission line,
multiply the allowable capital investment in the transmission line by the
rate of return determined pursuant to paragraph (k) of this section. There
is no allowance for depreciation. (k) The rate of return must be 2.0 multiplied by the industrial rate
associated with Standard & Poor's BBB rating. The BBB rate must be the
monthly average rate as published in Standard & Poor's Bond Guide for
the first month for which the allowance is applicable. Redetermine the
rate at the beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (l) Calculate the deduction for transmission costs based on your cost
of transmitting electricity through each individual transmission line. (m)(1) For new transmission facilities or arrangements, base your
initial deduction on estimates of allowable electricity transmission costs
for the applicable period. Use the most recently available operations data
for the transmission line or, if such data are not available, use
estimates based on data for similar transmission lines. (2) When actual cost information is available, you must amend your
prior Form MMS�2014 reports to reflect actual transmission costs
deductions for each month for which you reported and paid based on
estimated transmission costs. You must pay any additional royalties due
(together with interest computed under �218.302). You are entitled to a
credit for or refund of any overpaid royalties. (n) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS may require you to submit
arm's-length transmission contracts, production agreements, operating
agreements, and related documents and all other data used to calculate the
deduction. You must comply with any such requirements within the time MMS
specifies. Recordkeeping requirements are found at part 212 of this
chapter. (o) At the completion of transmission line dismantlement and salvage
operations, you may report a credit for or request a refund of royalties
in an amount equal to the royalty rate times the amount by which actual
transmission line dismantlement costs exceed actual income attributable to
salvage of the transmission line. (a) If you determine the value of your geothermal resources under
�206.352(b)(1)(i) of this subpart, you may deduct your reasonable actual
costs incurred to generate electricity from the plant tailgate value of
the electricity (usually the transmission-reduced value of the delivered
electricity). You may deduct the actual costs you incur for generating
electricity under your arm's-length power plant contract. (b)(1) You must base your generating costs deduction on your actual
annual costs associated with the construction and operation of a
geothermal power plant. (i) You must determine your monthly generating deduction by multiplying
the annual generating cost rate (in dollars per kilowatt-hour) by the
amount of plant tailgate electricity measured (or computed) for the
reporting month. The generating cost rate is determined from the annual
amount of your plant tailgate electricity. (ii) You must redetermine your generating cost rate annually either at
the beginning of the same month of the year in which the power plant was
placed into service or at a time concurrent with the beginning of your
annual corporate accounting period. The period you select must coincide
with the same period chosen for the transmission deduction under
�206.353(b)(1). After you choose a deduction period, you may not later
elect to use a different deduction period without MMS approval. (2) Your generating costs are your actual power plant costs during the
reporting period, including: (i) Operating and maintenance expenses under paragraphs (d) and (e) of
this section; (ii) Overhead under paragraph (f) of this section; and either (iii) Depreciation under paragraphs (g) and (h) of this section and a
return on undepreciated capital investment under paragraphs (g) and (i) of
this section; or (iv) A return on capital investment in the power plant under paragraphs
(g) and (j) of this section. (c)(1) Allowable capital costs under paragraph (b) of this section are
generally those for depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery
and installation of capital equipment) that are an integral part of the
power plant or are required by the design specifications of the power
conversion cycle. (2)(i) You may include a return on capital you invested in the purchase
of real estate for a power plant site if: (A) The purchase is necessary; and, (B) The surface is not part of the Federal lease. (ii) The rate of return will be the same rate determined under
paragraph (k) of this section. (3) You may not deduct the costs of gathering systems and other
production-related facilities. (d) Allowable operating expenses include: (1) Operations supervision and engineering; (2) Operations labor; (3) Auxiliary fuel and/or utilities used to operate the power plant
during down time; (4) Utilities; (5) Materials; (6) Ad valorem property taxes; (7) Rent; (8) Supplies; and (9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating
expense. (e) Allowable maintenance expenses include: (1) Maintenance of the power plant; (2) Maintenance of equipment; (3) Maintenance labor; and (4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document. (f) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the power plant is an allowable expense. State and Federal
income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including royalties, are
not allowable expenses. (g) To compute costs associated with capital investment, a lessee may
use either depreciation with a return on undepreciated capital investment,
or a return on capital investment in the power plant. After a lessee has
elected to use either method, the lessee may not later elect to change to
the other alternative without MMS approval. (h)(1) To compute depreciation, you must use a straight-line
depreciation method based on the life of the geothermal project, usually
the term of the electricity sales contract, or other depreciation period
acceptable to MMS. You may not depreciate equipment below a reasonable
salvage value. (2) A change in ownership of the power plant does not alter the
depreciation schedule established by the original lessee-owner for
purposes of computing generating costs. (3) With or without a change in ownership, you may depreciate a power
plant only once. (i) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment, multiply
the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the beginning of the
period for which you are calculating the generating deduction allowance by
the rate of return provided in paragraph (k) of this section. (j) To compute a return on capital investment in the power plant,
multiply the allowable capital investment in the power plant by the rate
of return determined pursuant to paragraph (k) of this section. There is
no allowance for depreciation. (k) The rate of return must be 2.0 multiplied by the industrial rate
associated with Standard & Poor's BBB rating. The BBB rate must be the
monthly average rate as published in Standard & Poor's Bond Guide for
the first month for which the allowance is applicable. You must
redetermine the rate at the beginning of each subsequent calendar
year. (l) Calculate the deduction for generating costs based on your cost of
generating electricity through each individual power plant. (m)(1) For new power plants or arrangements, base your initial
deduction on estimates of allowable electricity generation costs for the
applicable period. Use the most recently available operations data for the
power plant or, if such data are not available, use estimates based on
data for similar power plants. (2) When actual cost information is available, you must amend your
prior Form MMS�2014 reports to reflect actual generating cost deductions
for each month for which you reported and paid based on estimated
generating costs. You must pay any additional royalties due (together with
interest computed under �218.302). You are entitled to a credit for or
refund of any overpaid royalties. (n) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS may require you to submit
arm's-length power plant contracts, production agreements, operating
agreements, related documents and all other data used to calculate the
deduction. You must comply with any such requirements within the time MMS
specifies. Recordkeeping requirements are found at part 212 of this
chapter. (o) At the completion of power plant dismantlement and salvage
operations, you may report a credit for or request a refund of royalty in
an amount equal to the royalty rate times the amount by which actual power
plant dismantlement costs exceed actual income attributable to salvage of
the power plant. If you sell geothermal resources produced from Class I, II, or III
leases at arm's length to a purchaser for direct use, then the royalty on
the geothermal resource is the gross proceeds accruing to you from the
sale of the geothermal resource to the arm's-length purchaser multiplied
by the royalty rate in your lease or that BLM prescribes under 43 CFR
3211.18. See �206.361 for additional provisions applicable to determining
gross proceeds under arm's-length sales. If you use the geothermal resource for direct use: (a) For Class I leases, you must determine the royalty due on
geothermal resources in accordance with the first applicable of the
following three paragraphs. (1) The weighted average of the gross proceeds established in
arm's-length contracts for the purchase of significant quantities of
geothermal resources to operate the lessee's same direct-use facility
multiplied by the royalty rate in your lease. In evaluating the
acceptability of arm's-length contracts, the following factors will be
considered: time of execution, duration, terms, volume, quality of
resource, and such other factors as may be appropriate to reflect the
value of the resource. (2) The equivalent value of the least expensive, reasonable alternative
energy source (fuel) multiplied by the royalty rate in your lease. The
equivalent value of the least expensive, reasonable alternative energy
source will be based on the amount of thermal energy that would otherwise
be used by the direct use facility in place of the geothermal resource.
That amount of thermal energy (in Btu) displaced by the geothermal
resource will be determined by the equation: Where hinis the enthalpy in Btu/lb at the direct use
facility inlet (based on measured inlet temperature), houtis
the enthalpy in Btu/lb at the facility outlet (based on measured outlet
temperature), density is in lbs/cu ft based on inlet temperature, the
factor 0.113681 (cu ft/gal) converts gallons to cubic feet, and volume is
the quantity of geothermal fluid in gallons produced at the wellhead or
measured at an approved point. The efficiency factor of the alternative
energy source will be 0.7 for coal and 0.8 for oil, natural gas, and other
fuels derived from oil and natural gas, or an efficiency factor proposed
by the lessee and approved by MMS. The methods of measuring resource
parameters (temperature, volume, etc.) and the frequency of computing and
accumulating the amount of thermal energy displaced will be determined and
approved by BLM under 43 CFR 3275.13�3275.17. (3) A royalty determined by any other reasonable method approved by MMS
or the Assistant Secretary, Land and Minerals Management of the Department
of the Interior, under �206.364 of this part. (b) For geothermal resources produced from Class II and Class III
leases, you must multiply the appropriate fee from the schedule in
subparagraph (b)(1) of this section by the number of gallons or pounds you
produce from the direct use lease each month. (1) You must use the following fee schedule to calculate fees due under
this section: Direct Use Fee Schedule [Hot water] (i) For direct use geothermal resources with an average monthly inlet
temperature of 130 �F or less, you must pay only the lease rental. (ii) The MMS, in consultation with BLM, will develop and publish a
revised fee schedule in the (iii) The MMS, in consultation with BLM, will calculate revised fees
schedules using the following formulas:
Where: RV= Royalty due as a function of produced volume in the fee
schedule, expressed as dollars per million (106 ) gallons; Rm= Royalty due as a function of produced mass in the fee
schedule, expressed as dollars per million (106 ) pounds; ρ[rho] = Water density at inlet temperature expressed as lbs per
gallon; Tin= Measured inlet temperature in �F (as required by BLM
under 43 CFR part 3275); Tout= Established assumed outlet temperature of 130�F; e = Boiler Efficiency Factor for coal of 70 percent; Pprbc= The 3-year historical average of Powder River Basin
spot coal prices, as published by the Energy Information Administration,
or other recognized authoritative reference source of coal prices, in
dollars (per MMBtu); Frr= The assumed Lease Royalty Rate of 10
percent. (2) The fee that you report is subject to monitoring, review, and
audit. (3) The schedule of fees established under this paragraph will apply to
any Class III lease with respect to any royalty payments previously made
when the lease was a Class I lease that were due and owing, and were paid,
on or after July 16, 2003. To use this provision, you must provide MMS
data showing the amount of geothermal production in pounds or gallons of
geothermal fluid to input into the fee schedule (see 43 CFR part
3276). (i) If the royalties you previously paid are less than the fees due
under this section, you must pay the difference plus interest on that
difference computed under �218.302. (ii) If the royalties you previously paid are more than the fees due
under this section, then you are entitled to a refund or credit from MMS
of 50 percent of the overpaid royalties. You are also entitled to a refund
or credit of any interest that you paid on the overpaid royalties. (c) For geothermal resources other than hot water, MMS will determine
fees on a case-by-case basis. (a) If you sell byproducts, you must determine the royalty due on the
byproducts that are royalty-bearing under: (1) Applicable lease terms of Class I leases and of Class III leases
that do not elect to be subject to all of the BLM regulations promulgated
for leases issued after August 8, 2005, under 43 CFR 3200.7(a)(2), or (2) Applicable statutory provisions at 30 U.S.C. 1004(a)(2) for Class
II leases and for Class III leases that do elect to be subject to all of
the BLM regulations promulgated for leases issued after August 8, 2005,
under 43 CFR 3200.7(a)(2). (b) You must determine the royalty due on the byproducts by multiplying
the royalty rate in your lease or that BLM prescribes under 43 CFR 3211.19
by a value of the byproducts determined in accordance with the first
applicable of the following subparagraphs: (1) The gross proceeds accruing to you from the arm's-length sale of
the byproducts, less any applicable byproduct transportation allowances
determined under ��206.358 and 206.359. See �206.361 for additional
provisions applicable to determining gross proceeds; (2) Other relevant matters including, but not limited to, published or
publicly available spot-market prices, or information submitted by the
lessee concerning circumstances unique to a particular lease operation or
the saleability of certain byproducts; or (3) Any other reasonable valuation method approved by MMS. (a) When you determine the value of byproducts at a point off the
geothermal lease, unit, or participating area, you are allowed a deduction
in determining value, for royalty purposes, for your reasonable, actual
costs incurred to: (1) Transport the byproducts from a Federal lease, unit, or
participating area to a sales point or point of delivery that is off the
lease, unit, or participating area; or (2) Transport the byproducts from a Federal lease, unit, or
participating area, or from a geothermal use facility to a byproduct
recovery facility when that byproduct recovery facility is off the lease,
unit, or participating area and, if applicable, from the recovery facility
to a sales point or point of delivery off the lease, unit, or
participating area. (b) Costs for transporting geothermal fluids from the lease to the
geothermal use facility, whether on or off the lease, are not includible
in the byproduct transportation allowance. (c)(1) When you transport byproducts from a lease, unit, participating
area, or geothermal use facility to a byproduct recovery facility, you are
not required to allocate transportation costs between the quantity of
marketable byproducts and the rejected waste material. The byproduct
transportation allowance is authorized for the total production that is
transported. You must express byproduct transportation allowances as a
cost per unit of marketable byproducts transported. (2) For byproducts that are extracted on the lease, unit, participating
area, or at the geothermal use facility, the byproduct transportation
allowance is authorized for the total byproduct that is transported to a
point of sale off the lease, unit, or participating area. You must express
byproduct transportation allowances as a cost per unit of byproduct
transported. (3) You may deduct transportation costs only when you sell, deliver, or
otherwise utilize the transported byproduct and report and pay royalties
on the byproduct. (d) Reporting requirements. (1) You must use a discrete field on
Form MMS�2014 to notify MMS of a transportation allowance. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS may require you to submit
arm's-length transportation contracts, production agreements, operating
agreements, and related documents. You must comply with any such
requirements within the time MMS specifies. Recordkeeping requirements are
found at part 212 of this chapter. (e) Byproduct transportation allowances are subject to monitoring,
review, and audit. If, after a review or audit, MMS determines that you
have improperly determined a byproduct transportation allowance, you must
pay any additional royalties due (plus interest computed under �218.302).
You are entitled to a credit for or refund of any overpaid royalties. (f) If you commingled byproducts produced from Federal and non-Federal
leases for transportation, you may not disproportionately allocate
transportation costs to Federal lease production. (a) For transportation costs you incur under an arm's-length contract,
the transportation allowance will be the reasonable, actual costs you
incurred for transporting the byproducts under that contract. (1) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from you to the transporter for the transportation.
If the contract reflects more than the total consideration you paid, MMS
may require you to determine the byproduct transportation allowance under
paragraph (b) of this section. (2) If MMS determines that the consideration you paid under an
arm's-length byproduct transportation contract does not reflect the
reasonable value of the transportation because of misconduct by or between
the contracting parties, or because you otherwise have breached your duty
to the lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the
lessee and the lessor, MMS will require you to determine the byproduct
transportation allowance under paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS
determines that the value of the transportation may be unreasonable, MMS
will notify you and give you an opportunity to provide written information
justifying your transportation costs. (3) Where your payments for transportation under an arm's-length
contract are not established on a dollars-per-unit basis, you must convert
whatever consideration you paid to a dollar value equivalent for the
purposes of this section. (b) If you transport the byproduct yourself or under a non-arm's-length
transportation arrangement, the byproduct transportation allowance is your
reasonable actual costs for transportation during the reporting period,
including: (1) Operating and maintenance expenses under paragraphs (d) and (e) of
this section; (2) Overhead under paragraph (f) of this section; and either (3) Depreciation under paragraphs (g) and (h) of this section and a
return on undepreciated capital investment under paragraphs (g) and (i) of
this section; or (4) A return on capital investment in the transportation system under
paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section. (c)(1) Allowable capital costs under paragraph (b) of this section are
generally those for depreciable fixed assets (including costs of delivery
and installation of capital equipment) that are an integral part of the
transportation system. (2)(i) You may include a return on capital you invested in the purchase
of real estate to locate the byproduct transportation facilities if: (A) The purchase is necessary; and (B) The surface is not part of a Federal lease. (ii) The rate of return will be the same rate determined in paragraph
(k) of this section. (3) You may not deduct the costs of gathering systems and other
production-related facilities. (d) Allowable operating expenses include: (1) Operations supervision and engineering; (2) Operations labor; (3) Fuel; (4) Utilities; (5) Materials; (6) Ad valorem property taxes; (7) Rent; (8) Supplies; and (9) Any other directly allocable and attributable operating expense
that you can document. (e) Allowable maintenance expenses include: (1) Maintenance of the transportation system; (2) Maintenance of equipment; (3) Maintenance labor; and (4) Other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses that
you can document. (f) Overhead directly attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (g) To compute costs associated with capital investment, a lessee may
use either paragraphs (h) and (i) or paragraph (j) of this section. After
a lessee has elected to use either method for a transportation system, the
lessee may not later elect to change to the other alternative without MMS
approval. (h)(1) To compute depreciation, you must use a straight-line
depreciation method based on either the life of the equipment or the life
of the geothermal project which the transportation system services. After
you choose the basis for depreciation, you may not change that basis
without MMS approval. You may not depreciate equipment below a reasonable
salvage value. (2) A change in ownership of a transportation system does not alter the
depreciation schedule established by the original lessee-owner for
purposes of computing transportation costs. (3) With or without a change in ownership, you may depreciate a
transportation system only once. (i) To calculate a return on undepreciated capital investment, multiply
the remaining undepreciated capital balance as of the beginning of the
period for which you are calculating the transportation allowance by the
rate of return provided in paragraph (k) of this section. (j) To compute a return on capital investment in the transportation
system, the allowed cost will be the amount equal to the allowable capital
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of return
determined pursuant to paragraph (k) of this section. There is no
allowance for depreciation. (k) The rate of return must be the industrial rate associated with
Standard & Poor's BBB rating. The BBB rate must be the monthly average
rate as published in Standard & Poor's Bond Guide for the first month
for which the allowance is applicable. You must redetermine the rate at
the beginning of each subsequent calendar year. (l)(1) For new transportation facilities or arrangements, base your
initial deduction on estimates of allowable byproduct transportation costs
for the applicable period. Use the most recently available operations data
for the transportation system or, if such data are not available, use
estimates based on data for similar transportation systems. (2) When actual cost information is available, you must amend your
prior Form MMS�2014 reports to reflect actual byproduct transportation
cost deductions for each month for which you reported and paid based on
estimated byproduct transportation costs. You must pay any additional
royalties due (together with interest computed under �218.302). You are
entitled to a credit for or a refund of any overpaid royalties. If you determine royalties or direct use fees for your geothermal
resource under this subpart, you must retain all data relevant to the
determination of the royalty value or the fee you paid. Recordkeeping
requirements are found at part 212 of this chapter. (a) You must be able to show: (1) How you calculated the royalty value or fee you reported, including
all allowable deductions; and (2) How you complied with this subpart. (b) Upon request, you must submit all data to MMS. You must comply with
any such requirement within the time MMS specifies. (a)(1) The royalties or direct use fees that you report are subject to
monitoring, review, and audit. The MMS may review and audit your data, and
MMS will direct you to use a different measure of royalty value, gross
proceeds, or fee, whichever is applicable, if it determines that the
reported value, gross proceeds, or fee is inconsistent with the
requirements of this subpart. (2) If MMS directs you to use a different royalty value, measure of
gross proceeds, or fee, you must either pay any royalties or fees due
(together with interest computed under �218.302) or report a credit for or
request a refund of any overpaid royalties or fees. (b) When the provisions in this subpart refer to gross proceeds either
for the sale of electricity or the sale of a geothermal resource, in
conducting reviews and audits MMS will examine whether your sales contract
reflects the total consideration actually transferred, either directly or
indirectly, from the buyer to you for the geothermal resource or
electricity. If MMS determines that a contract does not reflect the total
consideration, or the gross proceeds accruing to you under a contract do
not reflect reasonable consideration because of misconduct by or between
the contracting parties, or because you otherwise have breached your duty
to the lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the
lessee and the lessor, MMS may require you to increase the gross proceeds
to reflect any additional consideration. Alternatively, for Class I
leases, MMS may require you to use another valuation method in the
regulations applicable to dispositions other than under an arm's-length
contract. The MMS will notify you to give you an opportunity to provide
written information justifying your gross proceeds. (c) For arm's-length sales, you have the burden of demonstrating that
your contract is arm's length. (d) The MMS may require you to certify that the provisions in your
sales contract include all of the consideration the buyer paid you, either
directly or indirectly, for the electricity or geothermal resource. (e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this subpart, under no
circumstances will the value of production for royalty purposes under a
Class I lease where the geothermal resources are sold before use be less
than the gross proceeds accruing to you. (f) Gross proceeds for the sale of electricity or for the sale of the
geothermal resource will be based on the highest price a prudent lessee
can receive through legally enforceable claims under its contract. (1) Absent contract revision or amendment, if you fail to take proper
or timely action to receive prices or benefits to which you are entitled,
you must pay royalty based upon that obtainable price or benefit. (2) Contract revisions or amendments you make must be in writing and
signed by all parties to the contract. (3) If you make timely application for a price increase or benefit
allowed under your contract, but the purchaser refuses and you take
reasonable measures, which are documented, to force purchaser compliance,
you will owe no additional royalties unless or until you receive
additional monies or consideration resulting from the price increase. This
paragraph (f)(3) will not be construed to permit you to avoid your royalty
payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails to pay, in whole
or in part or timely, for a quantity of geothermal resources or
electricity. You must place geothermal resources and byproducts in marketable
condition and market the geothermal resources or byproducts for the mutual
benefit of the lessee and the lessor at no cost to the Federal Government.
If you use gross proceeds under an arm's-length contract in determining
royalty, you must increase those gross proceeds to the extent that the
purchaser, or any other person, provides certain services that the seller
normally would be responsible to perform to place the geothermal resources
or byproducts in marketable condition or to market the geothermal
resources or byproducts. Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary, no
audit, review, reconciliation, monitoring, or other like process that
results in a redetermination by MMS of royalty or fees due under this
subpart is considered final or binding as against the Federal Government
or its beneficiaries until MMS formally closes the audit period in
writing. (a) You may request a value determination from MMS regarding any
geothermal resources produced from a Class I lease or for byproducts
produced from a Class I, Class II, or Class III lease. You may also
request a gross proceeds determination for a Class II or Class III lease.
Your request must: (1) Be in writing; (2) Identify specifically all leases involved, all owners of interests
in those leases, and the operator(s) for those leases; (3) Completely explain all relevant facts. You must inform MMS of any
changes to relevant facts that occur before we respond to your
request; (4) Include copies of all relevant documents; (5) Provide your analysis of the issue(s), including citations to all
relevant precedents (including adverse precedents); and (6) Suggest your proposed gross proceeds calculation or valuation
method. (b) In response to your request: (1) The Assistant Secretary, Land and Minerals Management, may issue a
determination; or (2) The MMS may issue a determination; or (3) The MMS may inform you in writing that MMS will not provide a
determination. Situations in which MMS typically will not provide any
determination include, but are not limited to: (i) Requests for guidance on hypothetical situations; and (ii) Matters that are the subject of pending litigation or
administrative appeals. (c)(1) A determination signed by the Assistant Secretary, Land and
Minerals Management, is binding on both you and MMS until the Assistant
Secretary modifies or rescinds it. (2) After the Assistant Secretary issues a determination, you must make
any adjustments in royalty payments that follow from the determination
and, if you owe additional royalties, pay the royalties owed together with
late payment interest computed under �218.302. (3) A determination signed by the Assistant Secretary is the final
action of the Department and is subject to judicial review under 5 U.S.C.
701�706. (d) A determination issued by MMS is binding on MMS and delegated
States, but not on you, with respect to the specific situation addressed
in the determination unless the MMS (for MMS-issued determinations) or the
Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds it. (1) A determination by MMS is not an appealable decision or order under
30 CFR part 290 subpart B. (2) If you receive an order requiring you to pay royalty on the same
basis as the determination, you may appeal that order under 30 CFR part
290 subpart B. (e) In making a determination, MMS or the Assistant Secretary may use
any of the applicable criteria in this subpart. (f) A change in an applicable statute or regulation on which any
determination is based takes precedence over the determination after the
effective date of the statute or regulation, regardless of whether the MMS
or the Assistant Secretary modifies or rescinds the determination. (g) The MMS or the Assistant Secretary generally will not retroactively
modify or rescind a determination issued under paragraph (d) of this
section, unless: (1) There was a misstatement or omission of material facts; or (2) The facts subsequently developed are materially different from the
facts on which the guidance was based. (h) The MMS may make requests and replies under this section available
to the public, subject to the confidentiality requirements under
�206.365. Certain information you submit to MMS regarding royalties or fees on
geothermal resources or byproducts, including deductions and allowances,
may be exempt from disclosure. To the extent applicable laws and
regulations permit, MMS will keep confidential any data you submit that is
privileged, confidential, or otherwise exempt from disclosure. All
requests for information must be submitted under the Freedom of
Information Act regulations of the Department of the Interior at 43 CFR
part 2. If a State, tribal, or local government lessee uses a geothermal
resource without sale and for public purposes�other than commercial
production or generation of electricity�the State, tribal, or local
government lessee must pay a nominal fee. A nominal fee means a slight or
de minimis fee. The MMS will determine the fee on a case-by-case
basis. Source: 61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996,
unless otherwise noted.
(a) This subpart prescribes the procedures to establish the value, for
royalty purposes, of all coal from Indian Tribal and allotted leases
(except leases on the Osage Indian Reservation, Osage County,
Oklahoma). (b) If the specific provisions of any statute, treaty, or settlement
agreement between the Indian lessor and a lessee resulting from
administrative or judicial litigation, or any coal lease subject to the
requirements of this subpart, are inconsistent with any regulation in this
subpart, then the statute, treaty, lease provision, or settlement shall
govern to the extent of that inconsistency. (c) All royalty payments are subject to later audit and adjustment. (d) The regulations in this subpart are intended to ensure that the
trust responsibilities of the United States with respect to the
administration of Indian coal leases are discharged in accordance with the
requirements of the governing mineral leasing laws, treaties, and lease
terms. Ad valorem lease means a lease where the royalty due to the
lessor is based upon a percentage of the amount or value of the coal. Allowance means an approved, or an MMS-initially accepted
deduction in determining value for royalty purposes. Coal washing
allowance means an allowance for the reasonable, actual costs incurred by
the lessee for coal washing, or an approved or MMS-initially accepted
deduction for the costs of washing coal, determined pursuant to this
subpart. Transportation allowance means an allowance for the reasonable,
actual costs incurred by the lessee for moving coal to a point of sale or
point of delivery remote from both the lease and mine or wash plant, or an
approved MMS-initially accepted deduction for costs of such
transportation, determined pursuant to this subpart. Area means a geographic region in which coal has similar quality
and economic characteristics. Area boundaries are not officially
designated and the areas are not necessarily named. Arm's-length contract means a contract or agreement that has
been arrived at in the marketplace between independent, nonaffiliated
persons with opposing economic interests regarding that contract. For
purposes of this subpart, two persons are affiliated if one person
controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with another
person. For purposes of this subpart, based on the instruments of
ownership of the voting securities of an entity, or based on other forms
of ownership: ownership in excess of 50 percent constitutes control;
ownership of 10 through 50 percent creates a presumption of control; and
ownership of less than 10 percent creates a presumption of noncontrol
which MMS may rebut if it demonstrates actual or legal control, including
the existence of interlocking directorates. Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this subpart, contracts between relatives, either by blood
or by marriage, are not arm's-length contracts. MMS may require the lessee
to certify ownership control. To be considered arm's-length for any
production month, a contract must meet the requirements of this definition
for that production month, as well as when the contract was executed. Audit means a review, conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting and auditing standards, of royalty payment compliance
activities of lessees or other interest holders who pay royalties, rents,
or bonuses on Indian leases. BIA means the Bureau of Indian Affairs of the Department of the
Interior. BLM means the Bureau of Land Management of the Department of the
Interior. Coal means coal of all ranks from lignite through
anthracite. Coal washing means any treatment to remove impurities from coal.
Coal washing may include, but is not limited to, operations such as
flotation, air, water, or heavy media separation; drying; and related
handling (or combination thereof). Contract means any oral or written agreement, including
amendments or revisions thereto, between two or more persons and
enforceable by law that with due consideration creates an obligation. Gross proceeds (for royalty payment purposes) means the total
monies and other consideration accruing to a coal lessee for the
production and disposition of the coal produced. Gross proceeds includes,
but is not limited to, payments to the lessee for certain services such as
crushing, sizing, screening, storing, mixing, loading, treatment with
substances including chemicals or oils, and other preparation of the coal
to the extent that the lessee is obligated to perform them at no cost to
the Indian lessor. Gross proceeds, as applied to coal, also includes but
is not limited to reimbursements for royalties, taxes or fees, and other
reimbursements. Tax reimbursements are part of the gross proceeds accruing
to a lessee even though the Indian royalty interest may be exempt from
taxation. Monies and other consideration, including the forms of
consideration identified in this paragraph, to which a lessee is
contractually or legally entitled but which it does not seek to collect
through reasonable efforts are also part of gross proceeds. Indian allottee means any Indian for whom land or an interest in
land is held in trust by the United States or who holds title subject to
Federal restriction against alienation. Indian Tribe means any Indian Tribe, band, nation, pueblo,
community, rancheria, colony, or other group of Indians for which any land
or interest in land is held in trust by the United States or which is
subject to Federal restriction against alienation. Lease means any contract, profit-share arrangement, joint
venture, or other agreement issued or approved by the United States for an
Indian coal resource under a mineral leasing law that authorizes
exploration for, development or extraction of, or removal of coal�or the
land covered by that authorization, whichever is required by the
context. Lessee means any person to whom the Indian Tribe or an Indian
allottee issues a lease, and any person who has been assigned an
obligation to make royalty or other payments required by the lease. This
includes any person who has an interest in a lease as well as an operator
or payor who has no interest in the lease but who has assumed the royalty
payment responsibility. Like-quality coal means coal that has similar chemical and
physical characteristics. Marketable condition means coal that is sufficiently free from
impurities and otherwise in a condition that it will be accepted by a
purchaser under a sales contract typical for that area. Mine means an underground or surface excavation or series of
excavations and the surface or underground support facilities that
contribute directly or indirectly to mining, production, preparation, and
handling of lease products. MMS means the Minerals Management Service of the Department of
the Interior. Net-back method means a method for calculating market value of
coal at the lease or mine. Under this method, costs of transportation,
washing, handling, etc., are deducted from the ultimate proceeds received
for the coal at the first point at which reasonable values for the coal
may be determined by a sale pursuant to an arm's-length contract or by
comparison to other sales of coal, to ascertain value at the mine. Net output means the quantity of washed coal that a washing
plant produces. Person means by individual, firm, corporation, association,
partnership, consortium, or joint venture. Sales type code means the contract type or general disposition
(e.g., arm's-length or non-arm's-length) of production from the lease. The
sales type code applies to the sales contract, or other disposition, and
not to the arm's-length or non-arm's-length nature of a transportation or
washing allowance. Spot market price means the price received under any sales
transaction when planned or actual deliveries span a short period of time,
usually not exceeding one year. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 43289, Aug. 10, 1999;
73 FR 15891, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) All coal (except coal unavoidably lost as determined by BLM
pursuant to 43 CFR group 3400) from an Indian lease subject to this part
is subject to royalty. This includes coal used, sold, or otherwise
disposed of by the lessee on or off the lease. (b) If a lessee receives compensation for unavoidably lost coal through
insurance coverage or other arrangements, royalties at the rate specified
in the lease are to be paid on the amount of compensation received for the
coal. No royalty is due on insurance compensation received by the lessee
for other losses. (c) If waste piles or slurry ponds are reworked to recover coal, the
lessee shall pay royalty at the rate specified in the lease at the time
the recovered coal is used, sold, or otherwise finally disposed of. The
royalty rate shall be that rate applicable to the production method used
to initially mine coal in the waste pile or slurry pond; i.e. ,
underground mining method or surface mining method. Coal in waste pits or
slurry ponds initially mined from Indian leases shall be allocated to such
leases regardless of whether it is stored on Indian lands. The lessee
shall maintain accurate records to determine to which individual Indian
lease coal in the waste pit or slurry pond should be allocated. However,
nothing in this section requires payment of a royalty on coal for which a
royalty has already been paid. For all leases subject to this subpart, the quantity of coal on which
royalty is due shall be measured in short tons (of 2,000 pounds each) by
methods prescribed by the BLM. Coal quantity information will be reported
on appropriate forms required under 30 CFR part 210�Forms and Reports. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 66 FR 45769, Aug. 30, 2001;
73 FR 15892, Mar. 26, 2008] (a) For all leases subject to this subpart, royalty shall be computed
on the basis of the quantity and quality of Indian coal in marketable
condition measured at the point of royalty measurement as determined
jointly by BLM and MMS. (b) Coal produced and added to stockpiles or inventory does not require
payment of royalty until such coal is later used, sold, or otherwise
finally disposed of. MMS may ask BLM or BIA to increase the lease bond to
protect the lessor's interest when BLM determines that stockpiles or
inventory become excessive so as to increase the risk of degradation of
the resource. (c) The lessee shall pay royalty at a rate specified in the lease at
the time the coal is used, sold, or otherwise finally disposed of, unless
otherwise provided for at �206.455(d) of this subpart. (a) This section is applicable to coal leases on Indian Tribal and
allotted Indian lands (except leases on the Osage Indian Reservation,
Osage County, Oklahoma) which provide for the determination of royalty on
a cents-per-ton (or other quantity) basis. (b) The royalty for coal from leases subject to this section shall be
based on the dollar rate per ton prescribed in the lease. That dollar rate
shall be applicable to the actual quantity of coal used, sold, or
otherwise finally disposed of, including coal which is avoidably lost as
determined by BLM pursuant to 43 CFR part 3400. (c) For leases subject to this section, there shall be no allowances
for transportation, removal of impurities, coal washing, or any other
processing or preparation of the coal. (d) When a coal lease is readjusted pursuant to 43 CFR part 3400 and
the royalty valuation method changes from a cents-per-ton basis to an ad
valorem basis, coal which is produced prior to the effective date of
readjustment and sold or used within 30 days of the effective date of
readjustment shall be valued pursuant to this section. All coal that is
not used, sold, or otherwise finally disposed of within 30 days after the
effective date of readjustment shall be valued pursuant to the provisions
of �206.456 of this subpart, and royalties shall be paid at the royalty
rate specified in the readjusted lease. (a) This section is applicable to coal leases on Indian Tribal and
allotted Indian lands (except leases on the Osage Indian Reservation,
Osage County, Oklahoma) which provide for the determination of royalty as
a percentage of the amount of value of coal (ad valorem). The value for
royalty purposes of coal from such leases shall be the value of coal
determined pursuant to this section, less applicable coal washing
allowances and transportation allowances determined pursuant to ��206.457
through 206.461 of this subpart, or any allowance authorized by �206.464
of this subpart. The royalty due shall be equal to the value for royalty
purposes multiplied by the royalty rate in the lease. (b)(1) The value of coal that is sold pursuant to an arm's-length
contract shall be the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee, except as
provided in paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3), and (b)(5) of this section. The
lessee shall have the burden of demonstrating that its contract is
arm's-length. The value which the lessee reports, for royalty purposes, is
subject to monitoring, review, and audit. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects the total consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the buyer to the seller for the coal produced.
If the contract does not reflect the total consideration, then MMS may
require that the coal sold pursuant to that contract be valued in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this section. Value may not be based on
less than the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee for the coal
production, including the additional consideration. (3) If MMS determines that the gross proceeds accruing to the lessee
pursuant to an arm's-length contract do not reflect the reasonable value
of the production because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the
lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and
the lessor, then MMS shall require that the coal production be valued
pursuant to paragraphs (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii), (c)(2)(iv), or (c)(2)(v)
of this section, and in accordance with the notification requirements of
paragraph (d)(3) of this section. When MMS determines that the value may
be unreasonable, MMS will notify the lessee and give the lessee an
opportunity to provide written information justifying the lessee's
reported coal value. (4) MMS may require a lessee to certify that its arm's-length contract
provisions include all of the consideration to be paid by the buyer,
either directly or indirectly, for the coal production. (5) The value of production for royalty purposes shall not include
payments received by the lessee pursuant to a contract which the lessee
demonstrates, to MMS' satisfaction, were not part of the total
consideration paid for the purchase of coal production. (c)(1) The value of coal from leases subject to this section and which
is not sold pursuant to an arm's-length contract shall be determined in
accordance with this section. (2) If the value of the coal cannot be determined pursuant to paragraph
(b) of this section, then the value shall be determined through
application of other valuation criteria. The criteria shall be considered
in the following order, and the value shall be based upon the first
applicable criterion: (i) The gross proceeds accruing to the lessee pursuant to a sale under
its non-arm's-length contract (or other disposition of produced coal by
other than an arm's-length contract), provided that those gross proceeds
are within the range of the gross proceeds derived from, or paid under,
comparable arm's-length contracts between buyers and sellers neither of
whom is affiliated with the lessee for sales, purchases, or other
dispositions of like-quality coal produced in the area. In evaluating the
comparability of arm's-length contracts for the purposes of these
regulations, the following factors shall be considered: price, time of
execution, duration, market or markets served, terms, quality of coal,
quantity, and such other factors as may be appropriate to reflect the
value of the coal; (ii) Prices reported for that coal to a public utility commission; (iii) Prices reported for that coal to the Energy Information
Administration of the Department of Energy; (iv) Other relevant matters including, but not limited to, published or
publicly available spot market prices, or information submitted by the
lessee concerning circumstances unique to a particular lease operation or
the salability of certain types of coal; (v) If a reasonable value cannot be determined using paragraphs
(c)(2)(i), (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii), or (c)(2)(iv) of this section, then a
net-back method or any other reasonable method shall be used to determine
value. (3) When the value of coal is determined pursuant to paragraph (c)(2)
of this section, that value determination shall be consistent with the
provisions contained in paragraph (b)(5) of this section. (d)(1) Where the value is determined pursuant to paragraph (c) of this
section, that value does not require MMS' prior approval. However, the
lessee shall retain all data relevant to the determination of royalty
value. Such data shall be subject to review and audit, and MMS will direct
a lessee to use a different value if it determines that the reported value
is inconsistent with the requirements of these regulations. (2) An Indian lessee will make available upon request to the authorized
MMS or Indian representatives, or to the Inspector General of the
Department of the Interior or other persons authorized to receive such
information, arm's-length sales and sales quantity data for like-quality
coal sold, purchased, or otherwise obtained by the lessee from the
area. (3) A lessee shall notify MMS if it has determined value pursuant to
paragraphs (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii), (c)(2)(iv), or (c)(2)(v) of this
section. The notification shall be by letter to the Associate Director for
Minerals Revenue Management or his/her designee. The letter shall identify
the valuation method to be used and contain a brief description of the
procedure to be followed. The notification required by this section is a
one-time notification due no later than the month the lessee first reports
royalties on the Form MMS�4430 using a valuation method authorized by
paragraphs (c)(2)(ii), (c)(2)(iii), (c)(2)(iv), or (c)(2)(v) of this
section, and each time there is a change in a method under paragraphs
(c)(2)(iv) or (c)(2)(v) of this section. (e) If MMS determines that a lessee has not properly determined value,
the lessee shall be liable for the difference, if any, between royalty
payments made based upon the value it has used and the royalty payments
that are due based upon the value established by MMS. The lessee shall
also be liable for interest computed pursuant to 30 CFR 218.202. If the
lessee is entitled to a credit, MMS will provide instructions for the
taking of that credit. (f) The lessee may request a value determination from MMS. In that
event, the lessee shall propose to MMS a value determination method, and
may use that method in determining value for royalty purposes until MMS
issues its decision. The lessee shall submit all available data relevant
to its proposal. MMS shall expeditiously determine the value based upon
the lessee's proposal and any additional information MMS deems necessary.
That determination shall remain effective for the period stated therein.
After MMS issues its determination, the lessee shall make the adjustments
in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section. (g) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section, under no
circumstances shall the value for royalty purposes be less than the gross
proceeds accruing to the lessee for the disposition of produced coal less
applicable provisions of paragraph (b)(5) of this section and less
applicable allowances determined pursuant to ��206.457 through 206.461 and
�206.464 of this subpart. (h) The lessee is required to place coal in marketable condition at no
cost to the Indian lessor. Where the value established pursuant to this
section is determined by a lessee's gross proceeds, that value shall be
increased to the extent that the gross proceeds has been reduced because
the purchaser, or any other person, is providing certain services, the
cost of which ordinarily is the responsibility of the lessee to place the
coal in marketable condition. (i) Value shall be based on the highest price a prudent lessee can
receive through legally enforceable claims under its contract. Absent
contract revision or amendment, if the lessee fails to take proper or
timely action to receive prices or benefits to which it is entitled, it
must pay royalty at a value based upon that obtainable price or benefit.
Contract revisions or amendments shall be in writing and signed by all
parties to an arm's-length contract, and may be retroactively applied to
value for royalty purposes for a period not to exceed two years, unless
MMS approves a longer period. If the lessee makes timely application for a
price increase allowed under its contract but the purchaser refuses, and
the lessee takes reasonable measures, which are documented, to force
purchaser compliance, the lessee will owe no additional royalties unless
or until monies or consideration resulting from the price increase are
received. This paragraph shall not be construed to permit a lessee to
avoid its royalty payment obligation in situations where a purchaser fails
to pay, in whole or in part or timely, for a quantity of coal. (j) Notwithstanding any provision in these regulations to the contrary,
no review, reconciliation, monitoring, or other like process that results
in a redetermination by MMS of value under this section shall be
considered final or binding as against the Indian Tribes or allottees
until the audit period is formally closed. (k) Certain information submitted to MMS to support valuation
proposals, including transportation, coal washing, or other allowances
pursuant to ��206.457 through 206.461 and �206.464 of this subpart, is
exempted from disclosure by the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 522.
Any data specified by the Act to be privileged, confidential, or otherwise
exempt shall be maintained in a confidential manner in accordance with
applicable law and regulations. All requests for information about
determinations made under this part are to be submitted in accordance with
the Freedom of Information Act regulation of the Department of the
Interior, 43 CFR part 2. Nothing in this section is intended to limit or
diminish in any manner whatsoever the right of an Indian lessor to obtain
any and all information as such lessor may be lawfully entitled from MMS
or such lessor's lessee directly under the terms of the lease or
applicable law. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 66 FR 45769, Aug. 30,
2001] (a) For ad valorem leases subject to �206.456 of this subpart, MMS
shall, as authorized by this section, allow a deduction in determining
value for royalty purposes for the reasonable, actual costs incurred to
wash coal, unless the value determined pursuant to �206.456 of this
subpart was based upon like-quality unwashed coal. Under no circumstances
will the authorized washing allowance and the transportation allowance
reduce the value for royalty purposes to zero. (b) If MMS determines that a lessee has improperly determined a washing
allowance authorized by this section, then the lessee shall be liable for
any additional royalties, plus interest determined in accordance with 30
CFR 218.202, or shall be entitled to a credit, without interest. (c) Lessees shall not disproportionately allocate washing costs to
Indian leases. (d) No cost normally associated with mining operations and which are
necessary for placing coal in marketable condition shall be allowed as a
cost of washing. (e) Coal washing costs shall only be recognized as allowances when the
washed coal is sold and royalties are reported and paid. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 43289, Aug. 10,
1999] (a) Arm's-length contracts. (1) For washing costs incurred by a
lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract, the washing allowance shall
be the reasonable actual costs incurred by the lessee for washing the coal
under that contract, subject to monitoring, review, audit, and possible
future adjustment. MMS' prior approval is not required before a lessee may
deduct costs incurred under an arm's-length contract. However, before any
deduction may be taken, the lessee must submit a completed page one of
Form MMS�4292, Coal Washing Allowance Report, in accordance with paragraph
(c)(1) of this section. A washing allowance may be claimed retroactively
for a period of not more than 3 months prior to the first day of the month
that Form MMS�4292 is filed with MMS, unless MMS approves a longer period
upon a showing of good cause by the lessee. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the lessee to the washer for the washing. If
the contract reflects more than the total consideration paid, then MMS may
require that the washing allowance be determined in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section. (3) If MMS determines that the consideration paid pursuant to an
arm's-length washing contract does not reflect the reasonable value of the
washing because of misconduct by or between the contracting parties, or
because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the lessor to market
the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and the lessor, then
MMS shall require that the washing allowance be determined in accordance
with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS determines that the value of
the washing may be unreasonable, MMS will notify the lessee and give the
lessee an opportunity to provide written information justifying the
lessee's washing costs. (4) Where the lessee's payments for washing under an arm's-length
contract are not based on a dollar-per-unit basis, the lessee shall
convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent.
Washing allowances shall be expressed as a cost per ton of coal
washed. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length contract or has no contract, including those situations
where the lessee performs washing for itself, the washing allowance will
be based upon the lessee's reasonable actual costs. All washing allowances
deducted under a non-arm's-length or no contract situation are subject to
monitoring, review, audit, and possible future adjustment. Prior MMS
approval of washing allowances is not required for non-arm's-length or no
contract situations. However, before any estimated or actual deduction may
be taken, the lessee must submit a completed Form MMS�4292 in accordance
with paragraph (c)(2) of this section. A washing allowance may be claimed
retroactively for a period of not more than 3 months prior to the first
day of the month that Form MMS�4292 is filed with MMS, unless MMS approves
a longer period upon a showing of good cause by the lessee. MMS will
monitor the allowance deduction to ensure that deductions are reasonable
and allowable. When necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a lessee to
modify its actual washing allowance. (2) The washing allowance for non-arm's-length or no contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for washing
during the reported period, including operating and maintenance expenses,
overhead, and either depreciation and a return on undepreciated capital
investment in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, or
a cost equal to the depreciable investment in the wash plant multiplied by
the rate of return in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this
section. Allowable capital costs are generally those for depreciable fixed
assets (including costs of delivery and installation of capital equipment)
which are an integral part of the wash plant. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes; rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the wash
plant; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and other directly
allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the lessee can
document. (iii) Overhead attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the wash plant is an allowable expense. State and Federal
income taxes and severance taxes, including royalties, are not allowable
expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) or (b)(2)(iv)(B)
of this section. After a lessee has elected to use either method for a
wash plant, the lessee may not later elect to change to the other
alternative without approval of MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the wash plant services, whichever is
appropriate, or a unit of production method. After an election is made,
the lessee may not change methods without MMS approval. A change in
ownership of a wash plant shall not alter the depreciation schedule
established by the original operator/lessee for purposes of the allowance
calculation. With or without a change in ownership, a wash plant shall be
depreciated only once. Equipment shall not be depreciated below a
reasonable salvage value. (B) MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the allowable capital
investment in the wash plant multiplied by the rate of return determined
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section. No allowance shall be
provided for depreciation. This alternative shall apply only to plants
first placed in service or acquired after March 1, 1989. (v) The rate of return shall be the industrial rate associated with
Standard and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return shall be the monthly
average rate as published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first
month of the reporting period for which the allowance is applicable and
shall be effective during the reporting period. The rate shall be
redetermined at the beginning of each subsequent washing allowance
reporting period (which is determined pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of this
section). (3) The washing allowance for coal shall be determined based on the
lessee's reasonable and actual cost of washing the coal. The lessee may
not take an allowance for the costs of washing lease production that is
not royalty bearing. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) With the exception of those washing allowances specified in
paragraphs (c)(1)(v) and (c)(1)(vi) of this section, the lessee shall
submit page one of the initial Form MMS�4292 prior to, or at the same
time, as the washing allowance determined pursuant to an arm's-length
contract is reported on Form MMS�4430, Solid Minerals Production and
Royalty Report. A Form MMS�4292 received by the end of the month that the
Form MMS�4430 is due shall be considered to be received timely. (ii) The initial Form MMS�4292 shall be effective for a reporting
period beginning the month that the lessee is first authorized to deduct a
washing allowance and shall continue until the end of the calendar year,
or until the applicable contract or rate terminates or is modified or
amended, whichever is earlier. (iii) After the initial reporting period and for succeeding reporting
periods, lessees must submit page one of Form MMS�4292 within 3 months
after the end of the calendar year, or after the applicable contract or
rate terminates or is modified or amended, whichever is earlier, unless
MMS approves a longer period (during which period the lessee shall
continue to use the allowance from the previous reporting period). (iv) MMS may require that a lessee submit arm's-length washing
contracts and related documents. Documents shall be submitted within a
reasonable time, as determined by MMS. (v) Washing allowances which are based on arm's-length contracts and
which are in effect at the time these regulations become effective will be
allowed to continue until such allowances terminate. For the purposes of
this section, only those allowances that have been approved by MMS in
writing shall qualify as being in effect at the time these regulations
become effective. (vi) MMS may establish, in appropriate circumstances, reporting
requirements that are different from the requirements of this section. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (i) With the exception of
those washing allowances specified in paragraphs (c)(2)(v) and (c)(2)(vii)
of this section, the lessee shall submit an initial Form MMS�4292 prior
to, or at the same time as, the washing allowance determined pursuant to a
non-arm's-length contract or no contract situation is reported on Form
MMS�4430, Solid Minerals Production and Royalty Report. A Form MMS�4292
received by the end of the month that the Form MMS�4430 is due shall be
considered to be timely received. The initial reporting may be based on
estimated costs. (ii) The initial Form MMS�4292 shall be effective for a reporting
period beginning the month that the lessee first is authorized to deduct a
washing allowance and shall continue until the end of the calendar year,
or until the washing under the non-arm's-length contract or the no
contract situation terminates, whichever is earlier. (iii) For calendar-year reporting periods succeeding the initial
reporting period, the lessee shall submit a completed Form MMS�4292
containing the actual costs for the previous reporting period. If coal
washing is continuing, the lessee shall include on Form MMS�4292 its
estimated costs for the next calendar year. The estimated coal washing
allowance shall be based on the actual costs for the previous period plus
or minus any adjustments which are based on the lessee's knowledge of
decreases or increases which will affect the allowance. Form MMS�4292 must
be received by MMS within 3 months after the end of the previous reporting
period, unless MMS approves a longer period (during which period the
lessee shall continue to use the allowance from the previous reporting
period). (iv) For new wash plants, the lessee's initial Form MMS�4292 shall
include estimates of the allowable coal washing costs for the applicable
period. Cost estimates shall be based upon the most recently available
operations data for the plant, or if such data are not available, the
lessee shall use estimates based upon industry data for similar coal wash
plants. (v) Washing allowances based on non-arm's-length or no contract
situations which are in effect at the time these regulations become
effective will be allowed to continue until such allowances terminate. For
the purposes of this section, only those allowances that have been
approved by MMS in writing shall qualify as being in effect at the time
these regulations become effective. (vi) Upon request by MMS, the lessee shall submit all data used by the
lessee to prepare its Forms MMS�4292. The data shall be provided within a
reasonable period of time, as determined by MMS. (vii) MMS may establish, in appropriate circumstances, reporting
requirements which are different from the requirements of this
section. (3) MMS may establish coal washing allowance reporting dates for
individual leases different from those specified in this subpart in order
to provide more effective administration. Lessees will be notified of any
change in their reporting period. (4) Washing allowances must be reported as a separate line on the Form
MMS�4430, unless MMS approves a different reporting procedure. (d) Interest assessments for incorrect or late reports and failure
to report. (1) If a lessee deducts a washing allowance on its Form
MMS�4430 without complying with the requirements of this section, the
lessee shall be liable for interest on the amount of such deduction until
the requirements of this section are complied with. The lessee also shall
repay the amount of any allowance which is disallowed by this section. (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a washing allowance which results
in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the amount of
that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.202. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual coal washing allowance is
less than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�4430 for each month
during the allowance form reporting period, the lessee shall be required
to pay additional royalties due plus interest computed pursuant to 30 CFR
218.202, retroactive to the first month the lessee is authorized to deduct
a washing allowance. If the actual washing allowance is greater than the
amount the lessee has estimated and taken during the reporting period, the
lessee shall be entitled to a credit, without interest. (2) The lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�4430 to reflect actual
costs, together with any payment, in accordance with instructions provided
by MMS. (f) Other washing cost determinations. The provisions of this
section shall apply to determine washing costs when establishing value
using a net-back valuation procedure or any other procedure that requires
deduction of washing costs. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 66 FR 45769, Aug. 30,
2001] (a) When coal is subjected to washing, the washed coal must be
allocated to the leases from which it was extracted. (b) When the net output of coal from a washing plant is derived from
coal obtained from only one lease, the quantity of washed coal allocable
to the lease will be based on the net output of the washing plant. (c) When the net output of coal from a washing plant is derived from
coal obtained from more than one lease, unless determined otherwise by
BLM, the quantity of net output of washed coal allocable to each lease
will be based on the ratio of measured quantities of coal delivered to the
washing plant and washed from each lease compared to the total measured
quantities of coal delivered to the washing plant and washed. (a) For ad valorem leases subject to �206.456 of this subpart, where
the value for royalty purposes has been determined at a point remote from
the lease or mine, MMS shall, as authorized by this section, allow a
deduction in determining value for royalty purposes for the reasonable,
actual costs incurred to: (1) Transport the coal from an Indian lease to a sales point which is
remote from both the lease and mine; or (2) Transport the coal from an Indian lease to a wash plant when that
plant is remote from both the lease and mine and, if applicable, from the
wash plant to a remote sales point. In-mine transportation costs shall not
be included in the transportation allowance. (b) Under no circumstances will the authorized washing allowance and
the transportation allowance reduce the value for royalty purposes to
zero. (c)(1) When coal transported from a mine to a wash plant is eligible
for a transportation allowance in accordance with this section, the lessee
is not required to allocate transportation costs between the quantity of
clean coal output and the rejected waste material. The transportation
allowance shall be authorized for the total production which is
transported. Transportation allowances shall be expressed as a cost per
ton of cleaned coal transported. (2) For coal that is not washed at a wash plant, the transportation
allowance shall be authorized for the total production which is
transported. Transportation allowances shall be expressed as a cost per
ton of coal transported. (3) Transportation costs shall only be recognized as allowances when
the transported coal is sold and royalties are reported and paid. (d) If, after a review and/or audit, MMS determines that a lessee has
improperly determined a transportation allowance authorized by this
section, then the lessee shall pay any additional royalties, plus
interest, determined in accordance with 30 CFR 218.202, or shall be
entitled to a credit, without interest. (e) Lessees shall not disproportionately allocate transportation costs
to Indian leases. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 43289, Aug. 10,
1999] (a) Arm's-length contracts. (1) For transportation costs
incurred by a lessee pursuant to an arm's-length contract, the
transportation allowance shall be the reasonable, actual costs incurred by
the lessee for transporting the coal under that contract, subject to
monitoring, review, audit, and possible future adjustment. MMS' prior
approval is not required before a lessee may deduct costs incurred under
an arm's-length contract. However, before any deduction may be taken, the
lessee must submit a completed page one of Form MMS�4293, Coal
Transportation Allowance Report, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of
this section. A transportation allowance may be claimed retroactively for
a period of not more than 3 months prior to the first day of the month
that Form MMS�4293 is filed with MMS, unless MMS approves a longer period
upon a showing of good cause by the lessee. (2) In conducting reviews and audits, MMS will examine whether the
contract reflects more than the consideration actually transferred either
directly or indirectly from the lessee to the transporter for the
transportation. If the contract reflects more than the total consideration
paid, then MMS may require that the transportation allowance be determined
in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. (3) If MMS determines that the consideration paid pursuant to an
arm's-length transportation contract does not reflect the reasonable value
of the transportation because of misconduct by or between the contracting
parties, or because the lessee otherwise has breached its duty to the
lessor to market the production for the mutual benefit of the lessee and
the lessor, then MMS shall require that the transportation allowance be
determined in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section. When MMS
determines that the value of the transportation may be unreasonable, MMS
will notify the lessee and give the lessee an opportunity to provide
written information justifying the lessee's transportation costs. (4) Where the lessee's payments for transportation under an
arm's-length contract are not based on a dollar-per-unit basis, the lessee
shall convert whatever consideration is paid to a dollar value equivalent
for the purposes of this section. (b) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (1) If a lessee has a
non-arm's-length contract or has no contract, including those situations
where the lessee performs transportation services for itself, the
transportation allowance will be based upon the lessee's reasonable actual
costs. All transportation allowances deducted under a non-arm's-length or
no contract situation are subject to monitoring, review, audit, and
possible future adjustment. Prior MMS approval of transportation
allowances is not required for non-arm's-length or no contract situations.
However, before any estimated or actual deduction may be taken, the lessee
must submit a completed Form MMS�4293 in accordance with paragraph (c)(2)
of this section. A transportation allowance may be claimed retroactively
for a period of not more than 3 months prior to the first day of the month
that Form MMS�4293 is filed with MMS, unless MMS approves a longer period
upon a showing of good cause by the lessee. MMS will monitor the allowance
deductions to ensure that deductions are reasonable and allowable. When
necessary or appropriate, MMS may direct a lessee to modify its estimated
or actual transportation allowance deduction. (2) The transportation allowance for non-arm's-length or no contract
situations shall be based upon the lessee's actual costs for
transportation during the reporting period, including operating and
maintenance expenses, overhead, and either depreciation and a return on
undepreciated capital investment in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, or a cost equal to the depreciable
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of return
in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. Allowable
capital costs are generally those for depreciable fixed assets (including
costs of delivery and installation of capital equipment) which are an
integral part of the transportation system. (i) Allowable operating expenses include: Operations supervision and
engineering; operations labor; fuel; utilities; materials; ad valorem
property taxes; rent; supplies; and any other directly allocable and
attributable operating expense which the lessee can document. (ii) Allowable maintenance expenses include: Maintenance of the
transportation system; maintenance of equipment; maintenance labor; and
other directly allocable and attributable maintenance expenses which the
lessee can document. (iii) Overhead attributable and allocable to the operation and
maintenance of the transportation system is an allowable expense. State
and Federal income taxes and severance taxes and other fees, including
royalties, are not allowable expenses. (iv) A lessee may use either paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) or paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section. After a lessee has elected to use either
method for a transportation system, the lessee may not later elect to
change to the other alternative without approval of MMS. (A) To compute depreciation, the lessee may elect to use either a
straight-line depreciation method based on the life of equipment or on the
life of the reserves which the transportation system services, whichever
is appropriate, or a unit of production method. After an election is made,
the lessee may not change methods without MMS approval. A change in
ownership of a transportation system shall not alter the depreciation
schedule established by the original transporter/lessee for purposes of
the allowance calculation. With or without a change in ownership, a
transportation system shall be depreciated only once. Equipment shall not
be depreciated below a reasonable salvage value. (B) MMS shall allow as a cost an amount equal to the allowable capital
investment in the transportation system multiplied by the rate of return
determined pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(B)(v) of this section. No
allowance shall be provided for depreciation. This alternative shall apply
only to transportation facilities first placed in service or acquired
after March 1, 1989. (v) The rate of return shall be the industrial rate associated with
Standard and Poor's BBB rating. The rate of return shall be the monthly
average as published in Standard and Poor's Bond Guide for the first month
of the reporting period of which the allowance is applicable and shall be
effective during the reporting period. The rate shall be redetermined at
the beginning of each subsequent transportation allowance reporting period
(which is determined pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of this section). (3) A lessee may apply to MMS for exception from the requirement that
it compute actual costs in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of
this section. MMS will grant the exception only if the lessee has a rate
for the transportation approved by a Federal agency for Indian leases. MMS
shall deny the exception request if it determines that the rate is
excessive as compared to arm's-length transportation charges by systems,
owned by the lessee or others, providing similar transportation services
in that area. If there are no arm's-length transportation charges, MMS
shall deny the exception request if: (i) No Federal regulatory agency cost analysis exists and the Federal
regulatory agency has declined to investigate pursuant to MMS timely
objections upon filing; and (ii) The rate significantly exceeds the lessee's actual costs for
transportation as determined under this section. (c) Reporting requirements �(1) Arm's-length contracts.
(i) With the exception of those transportation allowances specified in
paragraphs (c)(1)(v) and (c)(1)(vi) of this section, the lessee shall
submit page one of the initial Form MMS�4293 prior to, or at the same time
as, the transportation allowance determined pursuant to an arm's-length
contract is reported on Form MMS�4430, Solid Minerals Production and
Royalty Report. (ii) The initial Form MMS�4293 shall be effective for a reporting
period beginning the month that the lessee is first authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance and shall continue until the end of the calendar
year, or until the applicable contract or rate terminates or is modified
or amended, whichever is earlier. (iii) After the initial reporting period and for succeeding reporting
periods, lessees must submit page one of Form MMS�4293 within 3 months
after the end of the calendar year, or after the applicable contract or
rate terminates or is modified or amended, whichever is earlier, unless
MMS approves a longer period (during which period the lessee shall
continue to use the allowance from the previous reporting period). Lessees
may request special reporting procedures in unique allowance reporting
situations, such as those related to spot sales. (iv) MMS may require that a lessee submit arm's-length transportation
contracts, production agreements, operating agreements, and related
documents. Documents shall be submitted within a reasonable time, as
determined by MMS. (v) Transportation allowances that are based on arm's-length contracts
and which are in effect at the time these regulations become effective
will be allowed to continue until such allowances terminate. For the
purposes of this section, only those allowances that have been approved by
MMS in writing shall qualify as being in effect at the time these
regulations become effective. (vi) MMS may establish, in appropriate circumstances, reporting
requirements that are different from the requirements of this section. (2) Non-arm's-length or no contract. (i) With the exception of
those transportation allowances specified in paragraphs (c)(2)(v) and
(c)(2)(vii) of this section, the lessee shall submit an initial Form
MMS�4293 prior to, or at the same time as, the transportation allowance
determined pursuant to a non-arm's-length contract or no contract
situation is reported on Form MMS�4430, Solid Minerals Production and
Royalty Report. The initial report may be based on estimated costs. (ii) The initial Form MMS�4293 shall be effective for a reporting
period beginning the month that the lessee first is authorized to deduct a
transportation allowance and shall continue until the end of the calendar
year, or until the transportation under the non-arm's-length contract or
the no contract situation terminates, whichever is earlier. (iii) For calendar-year reporting periods succeeding the initial
reporting period, the lessee shall submit a completed Form MMS�4293
containing the actual costs for the previous reporting period. If the
transportation is continuing, the lessee shall include on Form MMS�4293
its estimated costs for the next calendar year. The estimated
transportation allowance shall be based on the actual costs for the
previous reporting period plus or minus any adjustments that are based on
the lessee's knowledge of decreases or increases that will affect the
allowance. Form MMS�4293 must be received by MMS within 3 months after the
end of the previous reporting period, unless MMS approves a longer period
(during which period the lessee shall continue to use the allowance from
the previous reporting period). (iv) For new transportation facilities or arrangements, the lessee's
initial Form MMS�4293 shall include estimates of the allowable
transportation costs for the applicable period. Cost estimates shall be
based upon the most recently available operations data for the
transportation system, or, if such data are not available, the lessee
shall use estimates based upon industry data for similar transportation
systems. (v) Non-arm's-length contract or no contract-based transportation
allowances that are in effect at the time these regulations become
effective will be allowed to continue until such allowances terminate. For
purposes of this section, only those allowances that have been approved by
MMS in writing shall qualify as being in effect at the time these
regulations become effective. (vi) Upon request by MMS, the lessee shall submit all data used to
prepare its Form MMS�4293. The data shall be provided within a reasonable
period of time, as determined by MMS. (vii) MMS may establish, in appropriate circumstances, reporting
requirements that are different from the requirements of this section. (viii) If the lessee is authorized to use its Federal-agency-approved
rate as its transportation cost in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of
this section, it shall follow the reporting requirements of paragraph
(c)(1) of this section. (3) MMS may establish reporting dates for individual lessees different
than those specified in this paragraph in order to provide more effective
administration. Lessees will be notified as to any change in their
reporting period. (4) Transportation allowances must be reported as a separate line item
on Form MMS�4430, unless MMS approves a different reporting procedure. (d) Interest assessments for incorrect or late reports and failure
to report. (1) If a lessee deducts a transportation allowance on its
Form MMS�4430 without complying with the requirements of this section, the
lessee shall be liable for interest on the amount of such deduction until
the requirements of this section are complied with. The lessee also shall
repay the amount of any allowance which is disallowed by this section. (2) If a lessee erroneously reports a transportation allowance which
results in an underpayment of royalties, interest shall be paid on the
amount of that underpayment. (3) Interest required to be paid by this section shall be determined in
accordance with 30 CFR 218.202. (e) Adjustments. (1) If the actual transportation allowance is
less than the amount the lessee has taken on Form MMS�4430 for each month
during the allowance form reporting period, the lessee shall be required
to pay additional royalties due plus interest, computed pursuant to 30 CFR
218.202, retroactive to the first month the lessee is authorized to deduct
a transportation allowance. If the actual transportation allowance is
greater than the amount the lessee has estimated and taken during the
reporting period, the lessee shall be entitled to a credit, without
interest. (2) The lessee must submit a corrected Form MMS�4430 to reflect actual
costs, together with any payment, in accordance with instructions provided
by MMS. (f) Other transportation cost determinations. The provisions of
this section shall apply to determine transportation costs when
establishing value using a net-back valuation procedure or any other
procedure that requires deduction of transportation costs. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 43289, Aug. 10, 1999;
66 FR 45769, Aug. 30, 2001] If an ad valorem Federal coal lease is developed by in-situ or surface
gasification or liquefaction technology, the lessee shall propose the
value of coal for royalty purposes to MMS. MMS will review the lessee's
proposal and issue a value determination. The lessee may use its proposed
value until MMS issues a value determination. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 43289, Aug. 10,
1999] If, prior to use, sale, or other disposition, the lessee enhances the
value of coal after the coal has been placed in marketable condition in
accordance with �206.456(h) of this subpart, the lessee shall notify MMS
that such processing is occurring or will occur. The value of that
production shall be determined as follows: (a) A value established for the feedstock coal in marketable condition
by application of the provisions of �206.456(c)(2) (i) through (iv) of
this subpart; or, (b) In the event that a value cannot be established in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, then the value of production will be
determined in accordance with �206.456(c)(2)(v) of this subpart and the
value shall be the lessee's gross proceeds accruing from the disposition
of the enhanced product, reduced by MMS-approved processing costs and
procedures including a rate of return on investment equal to two times the
Standard and Poor's BBB bond rate applicable under �206.458(b)(2)(v) of
this subpart. [61 FR 5481, Feb. 12, 1996, as amended 64 FR 43289, Aug. 10, 1999]
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