Tag Archives: Prudhoe Bay

ConocoPhillips Delays Plans to Drill Off Alaska Coast

By The Associated Press

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Garth Hannum/ConocoPhillips Alaska Inc./AP A ConocoPhillips Alaska drill rig in Prudhoe Bay on Alaska’’s North Slope, photographed in 2012.

By DAN JOLING

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — ConocoPhillips Alaska says it will delay its 2014 plans for exploratory drilling in the Arctic Ocean off Alaska’s northwest coast.

In a press release, the company, a unit of ConocoPhillips Co. (COP), announced that it will put its Chukchi (chuk-CHEE’) Sea drilling plans on hold “because of uncertainties of evolving federal regulatory requirements and operational permitting standards.”

It says it wouldn’t be prudent at this time to devote the financial resources needed to preserve the option to drill.

ConocoPhillips Alaska President Trond-Erik Johansen says the company is confident in its ability to safely drill but that more time is needed to ensure that all regulatory stakeholders are aligned.

An environmental group opposed to drilling hailed the decision.

Chris Krenz of Oceana says specific Arctic standards must be put in place before drilling is allowed.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The 7 States With No Income Tax

By Dan Dzombak, The Motley Fool

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There are seven U.S. states with no income tax, yet a life of paying less taxes isn’t as simple as picking up and moving to one of them. You should take into consideration how each state makes money, and also local taxes.

The 7 States With No Income Tax

  1. Alaska
  2. Florida
  3. Nevada
  4. South Dakota
  5. Texas
  6. Washington
  7. Wyoming
     

While these states have no income taxes, they fund themselves through other taxes including property taxes, corporate taxes, and sales taxes. If you are considering moving, you should consider all the taxes in a state and how those will affect your particular situation.

How states make money with no income tax
Let’s go through the states with no income tax one by one using the Tax Foundation’s most recent data, which is for 2010. The Tax Foundation has been collecting data on taxes since 1937 and its data takes into consideration an average of both state and local taxes.

1. Alaska
Alaska is known for its pristine wildlife as well as its oil and gas resources, most notably its North Slope with the famous Prudhoe Bay oil field. Alaska funds itself with royalties from oil and gas production as well as a 9.4% corporate income tax rate. In 2012 oil and gas royalties made up 83% of the state’s revenue and oil and gas corporate income taxes made up just under 8% of revenue. The state has no sales tax but local municipalities have varying sales taxes and property taxes. In 2010, per capita property tax was $1,865, and combined with all other taxes, the per capita state and local tax paid was $3,214 according to the Tax Foundation.

Those 65 and over should note that Alaska exempts senior citizens from the first $150,000 of assessed value for property taxes.

2. Florida
Florida is known for its great weather (minus hurricanes), tourism, and snowbirds. Florida funds itself with a 6% sales tax as well as a 5.5% corporate income tax. The sales tax made up 73% of the state’s revenue in fiscal year 2011-2012, with the corporate income tax making up 8.3%.

In 2010, per capita property tax was $1,507, and combined with all other taxes, the per capita state and local tax paid was $3,728 according to the Tax Foundation.

3. Nevada
Nevada is obviously best known for gambling and tourism. The state funds itself through a 6.85% sales tax. In the 2011-2012 fiscal year, sales and use taxes made up 71% of the state’s revenue. The state has no corporate income tax, which has helped it attract tech companies and start-ups from high-tax California. Many companies take advantage of the lack of a corporate income tax, and Las Vegas in particular is attracting start-ups through the efforts of Zappos’ CEO Tony Hsieh’s DowntownProject. In 2010, per capita property tax was $1,297, and combined with all other taxes, the per capita state and local tax paid was $3,297 according to the Tax Foundation.

4. South Dakota
South …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Buy, Sell, or Hold: BP Prudhoe Bay Royalty Trust

By Selena Maranjian, The Motley Fool

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When considering any stock for your portfolio, don’t be swayed by just the positives. Examine its pros and cons and decide whether it’s possible upside outweighs its risks. Let’s take a look at BP Prudhoe Bay Royalty Trust today and see why you might want to buy, sell, or hold it.

Founded in 1989 and based in Austin, Texas, BP Prudhoe Bay Royalty Trust is a $1.7 billion “grantor trust,” holding royalty interests in Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay oil field. Its stock has fallen 31% over the past year (actually, it lost about that much in a single week!), but over the past 20 years, it has averaged annual gains of nearly 23%.

Buy
The first thing to like about this stock is its dividend, which is yielding a massive 11.9%. When you consider that a five-year government bond doesn’t even yield 1% and a 30-year Treasury was recently yielding 3.15%, 11.9% looks darn good.

It’s important to know that BP Prudhoe Bay is a royalty trust, which is a lot like a real estate investment trust (REIT), as both are required to pay out almost all of their earnings in dividends. Royalty trusts have their performance completely tied to income generated by particular operations in a particular oil or gas field. Thus, when the well runs dry there, so does the trust. Royalty trusts generally expire after a set period. BP Prudhoe Bay‘s reserves are currently expected to last some 12 years, and the dividends are expected to peter out around 2027. So investors are not in any immediate danger.

The company will benefit from increases in the price of oil and boosted production levels. Its focus on oil over gas is another plus these days, with the price of natural gas historically low and many expecting oil’s price to rise.

Sell
One reason that the stock plunged about 30% last year was that some in the media suggested that it was overvalued, with its market capitalization exceeding the expected sum of its future dividends. That is indeed worrisome, but my colleague Sean Williams has explained that we can’t really know what the future dividends will total, and that assuming that the price of oil rises between now and 2027, they may well go up.

While some like that BP Prudhoe Bay‘s fortunes are tied to a single oil field as it offers a lot of focus, others are less keen to have all their eggs in that one basket. If for some reason production fell sharply in Prudhoe Bay, this stock could take a big hit.

Another reason to consider not holding this stock is if you’re not comfortable with it. If you don’t have a good grasp on the oil industry and on how royalty trusts (especially this one) work, then this might not be a good fit for you. Also, if you own this stock, it would be smart to keep up with its performance and prospects regularly, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Do You Live in a Top-5 Oil-Producing State?

By Aimee Duffy, The Motley Fool

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Yesterday, the Energy Information Administration, or EIA, published a brief post about North Dakota‘s continued growth in oil production. The state routinely makes headlines for its black gold, low unemployment, and lack of available real estate. All of the talk about North Dakota makes now a good time to step back and look at how the oil story is progressing in the rest of the United States‘ top oil-producing states: Oklahoma, Alaska, California, and Texas. Together they produce more than 60% of all of America’s oil.

First, some stats
The U.S. produced roughly 7.03 million barrels of oil per day by the end of last December. It is important to note that the EIA‘s definition of crude oil may not match exactly with another nation’s definition of crude oil.

Of that 7.03 million bpd, Texas produced 2.22 million bpd to take the title of top oil-producing state. Here is how the other states shake out:

Source: EIA 

It is important to remember that despite all of the hoopla over U.S. production, Alaska and California have both watched their oil production decline over the last five years.

5. Oklahoma
The Sooner State was averaging 262,000 barrels per day by the end of last year. Oil producers there focus on the Mississippi Lime formation, and are now beginning to target the thicker layers of the Woodford Shale. The Woodford was traditionally a gas play, but companies like Continental Resources are targeting certain sections hoping to find oil instead. Continental increased its acreage in the play 113% last year.

Oklahoma was voted the No. 1 place in the world for oil and gas investment by the Fraser Institute last year.

4. California
From an outsider’s perspective, California has arguably the most interesting oil history of any of the states on this list. Battles over black gold and pollution, an on-again, off-again offshore policy, and historic oil spills help explain why the state’s production continues to decline in the face of what some are calling unprecedented reserves. California is home to the Monterey Shale, which many — including the federal government — believe holds up to 15.4 billion barrels of crude oil. The geology is tricky in California, and as oil companies try to figure out the play’s true potential some, like Chevron, have already written it off.

3. Alaska
Production in our northernmost state has been falling for quite some time, dropping 7.3% two years ago, and 6.7% last year. Alaska is home to Prudhoe Bay, the nation’s largest oil field. Prudhoe is old and tired, and though BP has worked wonders getting it to produce far longer than most anticipated, it is not the field it once was. In an attempt to entice oil producers to reinvest and spur production increases again, Alaskan governor Sean Parnell is attempting to introduce legislation to cut taxes on oil producers by some $1.7 billion. ConocoPhillips and ExxonMobil also have …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance