An oil exploration vibrator at a site in Todonyang, Turkana County,
doing seismic survey on June 18, 2013. Tullow Oil has said it had
reached a Sh24.5 billion agreement to settle a tax dispute with the
Uganda government over a 2012 transaction. JARED NYATAYA |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
Tullow Oil has said it had reached a Sh24.5 billion agreement to
settle a tax dispute with the Uganda government over a 2012
transaction.
The row, which was entering its fourth year, was threatening to derail oil production talks.
“Following
constructive discussions with the Government of Uganda and the Uganda
Revenue Authority, Tullow has agreed to pay $250 million in full and
final settlement of its Capital Gains Tax liability,” Tullow’s statement
reads.
In 2012, the London-listed company- also big
in oil exploration in Kenya- sold at least 66 per cent of its assets to
Total and CNOOC at $2.9 billion. As a result of the transaction, URA
made an assessment noting that Tullow had made some gains from the sale
and then slapped a $473 million tax bill on the oil company.
Tullow
disputed this, dragging the government to various courts including the
Tax Appeals Tribunal, the Uganda High Court and as far an International
Tribunal. The two parties have, however, decided to settle this dispute
with both making some concessions.
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS WITHDRAWN
“Following this settlement, both these legal proceedings have been withdrawn,” the statement from Tullow reads.
The
settlement is a $223 million cut from what the government had wanted
from Tullow. Additionally, Tullow had been looking at a payment of $265
million, according to its 2014 annual report; however it will only be
paying $250 million.
Already, Tullow paid $142 million
into an escrow account as the case was being heard. The oil company said
it will be settling the remaining $108 million in three equal
instalments of $36 million until 2017.
Mr Aiden Heavey,
the chief executive officer Tullow Plc, said in the same statement that
“the settlement of this long-running dispute is good news for Tullow
and Uganda.”
The latter had been racking up legal costs
from Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle LLP, a legal firm hired
by the government for the oil cases.
Documents seen by
The Daily Monitor show that by the end of March 2014, the law firm had
invoiced government $7.3 million as expenditure on all the cases.
For
Tullow, the firm had invoiced at least $643,000. The government did pay
the $7.3 million but also collected $1 million as tax from the law
firm. Other expenses incurred by the government are from URA’s legal
team and lawyers from the Attorney General’s chambers.
URA
referred the matter to the Attorney General Freddie Ruhindi for
comment. Mr Ruhindi told The Daily Monitor yesterday that the Cabinet
some last year, gave the green-light for the talks having realised that
Uganda did not have a strong case against Tullow as it was the case with
Heritage.
“We did not have an exemption clause for
incomes tax with Tullow so we did not stand a good chance in an
international jurisdiction. So in that way it was prudent that we
negotiate to reach that conclusion which is nonetheless good for both
Uganda and Tullow,” Mr Ruhindi noted.
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