'Scotland has £1 trillion of energy on tap'
Nice round figure, that.Most of the North Sea's oil and gas reserves lie north and east of Scotland, and those resources have continued to fuel the Scottish people's hopes of independence since their discovery in the 1960s.
Those oil fields have produced 42 billion barrels of oil since 1964, and that amounts to £1.1 trillion (approximately $1.8 trillion) of production up to now.
“Ninety-six percent of the oil income of U.K. comes from Scotland," said energy lawyer Hugh Fraser. "£1.1 trillion has been produced up to now. The U.K. treasury has received £330 billion from the taxation on the oil companies."
Recent figures show that 16.5 billion barrels are available for extraction and, with today’s exchange rate, another £1 trillion of revenues to come, according to Fraser, who is a partner in the Dubai-based law firm Andrew Kurth.
So, would an independent Scotland be able to renegotiate the way oil and gas revenue is raised?
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2000 ... upplement6Oil reserves are legally the property of the crown. In most countries, companies which extract reserves pay the country for what they take away, through royalties and taxation. Yet in Britain, the only charge oil companies pay to the government is corporation tax, which they have to pay anyway. In other words, they take away the oil for free, and go on to sell it at a healthy profit.
When Gordon Brown attempted to change this back in '99, the oilcos held the entire UK to ransom:
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2000 ... upplement6In the wake of the fuel crisis, there is increasing evidence that the oil industry colluded with protesters to cut the country's fuel supply. But why?
The answer lies in a story of machiavellian political manoeuvring. It is the story of how a group of multinationals can bring the government to its knees, and extract ever greater profits from the public finances. It's a story about tax, but not at the pump - it's about tax in the North Sea.
What happened during the last two days of the fuel crisis was a threat, a flexing of oil industry muscle in a strong warning to the government to leave the North Sea alone. The companies came close to showing they could bring down the government. And if Gordon Brown makes the wrong tax moves, they could try to go the whole way.
Does a 'Yes' vote mean that 'The Crown' relinquishes ownership?