Tullow agrees to $250 million tax bill in Uganda
Anglo-Irish company Tullow Oil said Monday it had settled a
long-running tax dispute in Uganda by agreeing to the payment of a $250
million (219.6 million euro) bill.
In July 2014, a Ugandan court ordered Tullow to
pay $407 million in taxes related to the sale of local assets two years
earlier, but the company then sought arbitration to reduce the cost.
"Tullow has agreed to pay $250 million in full and
final settlement of its CGT (Capital Gains Tax) liability," a company
statement read.
"This sum comprises $142 million that Tullow paid
in 2012, and $108 million to be paid in three equal instalments of $36
million. The first of these was paid upon settlement and the remainder
will
be paid in 2016 and 2017."
be paid in 2016 and 2017."
Uganda discovered exploitable deposits of oil along its volatile western border with Democratic Republic of Congo in 2006, and officials now estimate reserves at up to 3.5 billion barrels.
"The settlement of this long-running dispute is
good news for Tullow and Uganda," company chief executive Aidan Heavey
said in a statement.
"In recent months, the Government of Uganda has proposed welcome and necessary changes to its tax regime for oil and gas investment which it is hoped will enable substantive progress to be made towards the sanction of the Lake Albert oil development."
The payments are related to a capital gains tax on
the $2.9 billion sale of three of Tullow's exploration blocks in Uganda
to France's Total and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation
(CNOOC).
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