2010-2011
THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Minerals resource rent tax bill 2011
Minerals resource rent tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011
Minerals resource rent tax (Imposition–Customs) Bill 2011
Minerals resource rent tax (Imposition–Excise) Bill 2011
Minerals resource rent tax (Imposition–general) Bill 2011
EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM
(Circulated by the authority of the
Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer, the Hon Wayne Swan MP)
Glossary.............................................................................................................. 1
General
outline and financial impact............................................................ 3
Chapter
1 Charging for
Australia’s non‑renewable resources....... 5
Chapter
2 Overview of the
Minerals Resource Rent Tax............... 11
Chapter
3 Core rules............................................................................ 27
Chapter
4 Mining revenue.................................................................. 45
Chapter
5 Mining
expenditure............................................................ 73
Chapter
6 Allowances.......................................................................... 95
Chapter
7 Starting base
allowances............................................... 119
Chapter
8 Small miners..................................................................... 145
Chapter
9 Combining
mining project interests.............................. 151
Chapter
10 Transfers and
splits of mining and pre‑mining project interests 183
Chapter
11 Winding down and
ending of mining and pre‑mining project interests 213
Chapter
12 Pre‑mining project
interests............................................ 235
Chapter
13 Adjustments...................................................................... 241
Chapter
14 Valuations......................................................................... 257
Chapter
15 Accounting for the
MRRT............................................... 279
Chapter
16 Entities............................................................................... 301
Chapter
17 Integrity measures............................................................ 317
Chapter
18 Administration of
the MRRT........................................... 337
Chapter
19 Miscellaneous
consequential amendments............... 387
Index............................................................................................................... 391
Do not remove section break.
The following
abbreviations and acronyms are used throughout this combined explanatory
memorandum.
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AFTS Review
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Australia’s Future Tax System Review
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APA
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Advance Pricing Agreement
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ASX
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Australian Securities Exchange
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ATO
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Australian Taxation Office
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CGT
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capital gains tax
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Commissioner
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Commissioner of Taxation
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CPI
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consumer price index
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GST
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goods and services tax
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GST Act
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A New Tax System (Goods
and Services Tax ) Act 1999
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ITAA 1936
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Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936
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ITAA 1997
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Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997
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LTBR
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long term bond rate
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LTBR + 7 per cent
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long term bond rate plus 7 per cent
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MRRT
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Minerals Resource Rent Tax
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MRRT (CA&TP) Bill
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Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential
Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011
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MRRT Bill
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Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011
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MRRT customs imposition Bill
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Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition‑Customs) Bill
2011
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MRRT excise imposition Bill
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Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition‑Excise) Bill
2011
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MRRT general imposition Bill
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Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition‑General) Bill
2011
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OECD
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Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development
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OECD Guidelines
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OECD Transfer Pricing
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations
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PAYG
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pay as you go
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PRRT
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Petroleum Resource Rent Tax
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TAA 1953
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Taxation
Administration Act 1953
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Minerals
Resource Rent Tax
The Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) is a tax on the
economic rents miners make from the taxable resources (iron ore, coal and some
gases) after they are extracted from the ground but before they undergo any
significant processing or value add. ‘Economic rent’ is the return in excess
of what is needed to attract and retain factors of production in the production
process.
The MRRT is a project-based tax, so a liability is
worked out separately for each project the miner has at the end of each MRRT
year. The miner’s liability for that year is the sum of those project
liabilities.
The tax is imposed on a miner’s mining profit, less
its MRRT allowances, at a rate of 22.5 per cent (that is, at a nominal rate of
30 per cent, less a one-quarter extraction allowance to recognise the miner’s
employment of specialist skills).
A project’s mining profit is its mining revenue less
its mining expenditure. If the expenditure exceeds the revenue, the project
has a mining loss. Mining revenue is, in general, the part of what the miner
sells its taxable resources for that is attributable to the resources in the
condition and location they were in just after extraction (the ‘valuation
point’). Mining revenue also includes recoupments of some amounts that have
previously been allowed as mining expenditure.
Mining expenditure is the cost a miner incurs in
bringing the taxable resources to the valuation point.
Mining allowances reduce each project’s mining
profit. The most significant of the allowances is for mining royalties the
miner pays to the States and Territories. It ensures that the royalties and
the MRRT do not double tax the mining profit.
In the early years of the MRRT, the project’s starting
base provides another important allowance. The starting base is an amount to
recognise the value of investments the miner has made before the MRRT.
Other allowances include losses the project made in
earlier years and losses transferred from the miner’s other projects (or from
the projects of some associated entities).
If a miner’s total mining profit from all its projects
comes to less than $50 million in a year, there is a low-profit offset
that reduces the miner’s liability for MRRT to nil. The offset phases out for
mining profits totalling more than $50 million.
Date of effect: The MRRT applies from 1 July 2012.
Proposal announced: The MRRT was announced in the
Treasurer’s Media Release No. 055 of 2 July 2010.
Financial impact: The MRRT will have these revenue
implications:
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Nil
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$3,700m
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$4,000m
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$3,400m
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Compliance cost impact: This measure is expected to impose significant
compliance costs on taxpayers in the iron ore and coal sectors (approximately
320 taxpayers). In the first year of the MRRT’s operation, taxpayers will need
to value their starting base and modify their accounting procedures. Ongoing
compliance costs will reduce over the medium to long term.
Outline of
chapter
1.1
This chapter explains the rationale for charging
for Australia’s non‑renewable resources.
Australia’s
non‑renewable resources
1.2
Australia is naturally endowed with a large, high
quality non‑renewable resource base.
1.3
Non‑renewable resources are stocks of minerals and
petroleum that are exhaustible and depletable.
1.4
The majority of Australia’s non‑renewable resources
are publicly owned. The rights to these non‑renewable resources are vested in
the Crown.
Non‑renewable
resources and taxation
1.5
It is the characteristic of non‑renewability that
allows exploitation of these resources to generate economic rent or above
normal profit. Economic rent can generally be taxed without distorting the
decisions of investors if the tax is well designed.
1.6
There are two main types of resource taxes:
royalties and resource rent taxes.
Royalties
1.7
In Australia, State and Territory governments
typically tax non‑renewable resources by applying a royalty to production. Royalties
are generally applied on the basis of volume or value and do not take into
account how profitable a mining operation is.
1.8
Royalties therefore may only recover a portion of
mining rents when mining profits are high, but will also tax mining operations
where no economic rent is present, such as when profits are low.
Resource rent
taxes
1.9
Resource rent taxes are profit‑based, cash flow,
taxes. They differ from most royalties in that they take into account the
profitability of a mining operation. A resource rent tax collects a percentage
of the resource project’s economic rent.
1.10
One form of resource rent tax is the Brown tax,
invented by Cary Brown in 1948. A Brown tax is a pure cash flow tax levied (at
a constant percentage) on the difference between revenue and expenditure.
(i)
When there is a positive cash flow, the government
taxes that positive cash flow. When there is a negative cash flow, typically
at the investment phase, the government provides an immediate refund at the tax
value.
(ii) The
tax rate determines the portion of economic rent that the government collects,
and the value of the refund that they provide.
1.11
Under a Brown tax, the government is effectively
sharing in the profits and costs of the mining project in proportion to the tax
rate.
1.12
However, the Brown tax model is difficult to
implement because of the immediate nature of the refund. So governments
typically rely on other models of resource rent taxes that mimic the effect of
the Brown tax.
1.13
The Garnaut — Clunies‑Ross resource rent tax is a
resource rent tax model that attempts to replicate the effects of a Brown tax.
It is named after the Australian economists Ross Garnaut and Anthony Clunies‑Ross.
The Garnaut — Clunies‑Ross resource rent tax is levied on the positive cash
flows, or profits, of a project, but there is no refund when the cash flow is
negative or the taxpayer is making a loss. Instead, losses are carried forward
and ‘uplifted’ by an interest rate, so that they can be used as a deduction
against positive cash flows in later years.
1.14
The uplift rate preserves the value of the
taxpayer’s losses because they do not get an immediate refund for the tax value
of the government’s contribution to the mining project. The uplift rate also
includes a premium to compensate for the risk that the taxpayer may never get
to use its losses.
1.15
The Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) is an
example of a Garnaut — Clunies‑Ross resource rent tax.
Background to
the Minerals Resource Rent Tax
1.16
The Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) has its
origins in the recommendations of the Australia’s Future Tax System (AFTS)
Review.
1.17
The AFTS Review found that the royalty regimes
applied by the States and Territories were among the most distorting taxes in
the Federation. In addition, royalty regimes are not particularly flexible.
1.18
As a consequence of being distorting and relatively
inflexible, royalties tend to be set at rates low enough for the mining
industry to continue to operate in periods of low to average commodity prices.
However, this means that royalties will often fail to provide an adequate
return to the community when commodity prices are high.
1.19
The company tax is a profits‑based tax, which
generally applies to incorporated businesses and will tend to raise more
revenue from mining operations when profits are high. However, the AFTS Review
found that there would be benefits to the economy more broadly through lowering
the company tax rate to assist in attracting internationally mobile capital
investment.
1.20
The AFTS Review concluded that a lower company tax
rate was desirable for Australia but only if a specific profits‑based tax was
extended to mining operations to ensure a sufficient return to the community in
periods of high commodity prices.
1.21
In response to the AFTS review, the Government
decided that, from 1 July 2012, the MRRT would apply to profits from coal and
iron ore operations, while the PRRT would be extended to all offshore and
onshore gas and oil projects, including coal‑seam methane. These commodities
account for the bulk of Australia’s mineral wealth.
1.22
The detailed design of the MRRT is based on the
recommendations of the Policy Transition Group. The Policy Transition Group was
chaired by Don Argus AC and the Hon Martin Ferguson AM MP, Minister for
Resources, Energy and Tourism. The Policy Transition Group consulted
extensively across Australia on the new resource tax arrangements and reported
to the Government in December 2010.
The Minerals
Resource Rent Tax
1.23
The MRRT is a type of resource rent tax based on
the Garnaut — Clunies‑Ross model.
1.24
Under the MRRT, the government taxes positive cash
flows, or mining profits, and allows taxpayers to carry forward and uplift
losses with interest for use in later years.
1.25
As the MRRT taxes profits from minerals that are
commonly subject to State and Territory royalties, it provides a credit for
royalties.
1.26
The tax base for the MRRT is confined to net
profits at the valuation point. The valuation point is the point in the mining
production chain that separates upstream and downstream operations.
1.27
As the MRRT is intended to apply only to upstream
profits, it is a tax on a narrow portion of mining profits unlike, for example,
the income tax, which seeks to tax all sources of income comprehensively.
1.28
The MRRT is a tax on realised profits. As the
proceeds from the sale of a resource are typically realised downstream of the valuation
point, the MRRT requires taxpayers to determine the amount of those proceeds
that are reasonably attributable to the resource and upstream operations for
tax purposes. The tax is not intended to tax the value added in downstream
activities.
1.29
To calculate the MRRT profit at the valuation point,
the sales proceeds are reduced by an amount that recognises the arm’s length
value of the downstream operations using the most appropriate and reliable
method. Allowable upstream capital and operating expenditure is then directly
and immediately deducted, along with royalty credits, carry forward losses,
starting base depreciation, starting base losses and losses transferred from
other projects.
1.30
If losses and royalty credits cannot be used within
an MRRT year, they are transferred where possible, or carried forward to later
years with the relevant uplift rate applied.
1.31
Through providing effective deductions for all
allowable capital and operating expenditure, with an uplift of carry forward
losses, the tax base for the MRRT approximates a Brown tax on the profit
attributable to the resource in the state it was in at the valuation point.
1.32
As the sources of mining rents are difficult to
identify separately in practice, the MRRT aims to strike an appropriate balance
between recovering a sufficient return to the community for the profits
attributable to the underlying resource rent at the valuation point, and
recognising that some mining expertise and capital may also be taxed in a
process which has regard to realised profits and their equivalents. This
balance is achieved through the combined effect of the features of the tax,
including the tax rate, the extraction factor, the valuation point, the
interest allowance (uplift) and the scope of assessable revenues and allowable
deductions.
1.33
An overview of the operation of the MRRT is provided
in Chapter 2.
Outline of
chapter
2.1
This chapter is an overview of the Minerals
Resource Rent Tax (MRRT). It outlines the resources that are subject to MRRT
and explains the basic operation of the MRRT.
Overview of
the MRRT
What
resources are covered?
2.2
Australia is endowed with some of the world’s
largest and most valuable deposits of iron ore and coal. These bulk
commodities make up a large proportion of Australia’s mine production and
mineral exports.
2.3
The MRRT applies to certain profits from iron ore
and coal extracted in Australia. It also applies to profits from gas extracted
as a necessary incident of coal mining and gas produced by the in situ combustion of coal. These non‑renewable
resources are called ‘taxable resources’.
2.4
Where profits are made from the sale of taxable
resources, or would have been made if the resources had been sold instead of
being exported or used, MRRT may be payable.
Basic
operation of the MRRT
2.5
This section explains the operation of the MRRT and
how it applies to three different cases. The first case, the ‘vanilla’ case,
examines how the MRRT operates for a project that was not in existence before
the announcement of the MRRT.
2.6
The second case examines how the MRRT operates for
projects that are transitioning into the MRRT (that is, for projects that were
already invested in when the MRRT was announced). It explains how the MRRT
recognises those existing investments.
2.7
The third case shows how the MRRT operates for
miners with multiple projects. It introduces the concepts of pre‑mining losses
and transferring mining losses and pre‑mining losses between projects owned by
the miner. It also explains the process of ‘uplifting’ unused amounts.
The
‘vanilla’ case
2.8
The key purpose of the MRRT is to tax the economic
rents from non‑renewable resources after they have been extracted from the
ground but before they have undergone any significant processing or value‑add.
Generally, the profit attributed to the resource at this point represents the
value of the resource to the Australian community. Where the taxable resource
is improved through beneficiation processes, such as crushing, washing,
sorting, separating and refining, the value added is attributable to the miner.
Mining
project interests
2.9
The mining project interest provides the basic unit
for taxing the non‑renewable resource. The main kind of mining project interest
is an entitlement to share in the output of a mining venture carried on to
extract taxable resources and produce a resource commodity (which could be the
taxable resource or something produced from the taxable resource). It must
relate to at least one production right. A production right is a right, under an
Australian law, that authorises its holder to extract the resources from a
particular area (called a ‘project area’).
Mining
profit or loss
2.10
Once a mining project interest has been identified,
the mining profit for the interest for the year has to be determined. The mining profit is the mining
project interest’s mining revenue for the year less its mining expenditure. If
the mining expenditure exceeds the mining revenue, the excess is a mining loss.
Mining
revenue
2.11
The main type of mining revenue a mining project interest
can have comes from selling, exporting or using taxable resources (or things
produced from taxable resources) extracted from the project area. The proceeds
are mining revenue to the extent they are reasonably attributable to the
taxable resources at a particular point in the production chain (called the ‘valuation
point’).
2.12
Under the MRRT, the valuation point is typically just before
the taxable resource leaves the run-of-mine stockpile (also called the ROM
stockpile or ROM pad). The run-of-mine stockpile is where the resource is
stored after extraction ready for the next stage of production. The next unit
of production could be transportation but is often some form of processing.
However, not all mining operations use a run-of-mine stockpile. Where a
project has no run-of-mine stockpile, or it is by‑passed for any reason, the
valuation point is generally just before the first beneficiation process
starts.
2.13
Mining operations that occur before the valuation
point are upstream
mining operations; those that occur afterwards are downstream mining operations.
Diagram 2.1:
The valuation point

In this diagram, the
dashed line represents the valuation point at the run-of-mine stockpile.
Upstream and downstream mining operations are illustrated.
2.14
The MRRT is a tax on proceeds from selling a
taxable resource (or on the proceeds which would have been realised if the
resources had been sold instead of exported or sold) but only on that part of
those proceeds that is reasonably attributable to the condition and location of
the resource when it was at the valuation point. That amount must be
attributed using the most appropriate and reliable method having regard to the
miner’s circumstances, the available information and certain statutory
assumptions (to the extent to which they are relevant in applying a particular
method). The statutory assumptions are that the downstream operations are
carried on by a separate entity who has no interest in the resource and who
deals independently with the miner in a competitive market.
2.15
Miners can elect to use a safe harbour method under
which the mining revenue amount is worked out by reducing the amount realised
from selling the resource (or, the arm’s length value of the resource when it
is exported or used) by the cost of its downstream mining operations — being
its operating costs, any depreciation and its cost of capital (being its
weighted average cost of capital).
2.16
An alternative, and simpler, valuation method is
provided for smaller miners and miners who transform resources they mine in an
integrated operation, such as steel manufacturing or electricity generation, to
work out the mining revenue attributable to their resources.
2.17
The alternative valuation method is a version of the
‘netback’ method, which starts with a verifiable price and deducts costs to
‘net back’ to the value at an earlier point. Miners who have not elected to
use the alternative valuation method may use the netback method to value their
taxable resources, but they will have to work out the inputs using the most
appropriate method instead of using those prescribed for the alternative
valuation method.
Mining
expenditure
2.18
The MRRT recognises the majority of upstream costs
incurred by the miner in extracting the non‑renewable resource and getting it
to the valuation point.
2.19
Upstream costs are called mining expenditure if
they are necessarily incurred by the miner in carrying on the upstream mining
operations. Mining expenditure includes costs related to construction of the
mining operation, blasting and digging, infrastructure, and capital assets used
to transport the non‑renewable resource to the valuation point (such as dump
trucks and conveyor belts).
2.20
Under the MRRT, upstream capital expenditure is immediately
deductible. Unlike income tax, capital assets do not have to be depreciated
over their effective lives.
2.21
Some expenditure is specifically excluded from being
taken into account as mining expenditure, including financing payments, the
costs of acquiring a mining interest, royalty payments, and some tax payments.
Allowances
2.22
Miners reduce their mining profit by their MRRT allowances, to
arrive at a net amount, which, for convenience, is referred to in this chapter
as the MRRT profit.
2.23
In the vanilla case, the relevant allowances are
royalty allowances and mining loss allowances.
Royalty
allowances
2.24
Miners will generally pay royalties to State and
Territory Governments. Royalty regimes and rates vary across jurisdictions but
are most commonly a charge on the volume or value of the resource, generally at
the point of export or sale to a third party. These royalties are often a
proxy for the rents available from that resource.
2.25
The miner will be liable to pay some MRRT in
addition to royalties when resource rents are sufficiently high. That is, the
company will pay the royalty and then also pay MRRT. However, the MRRT
recognises this by providing the miner with a deduction, called a royalty allowance.
The royalty allowance is ‘grossed‑up’, using the MRRT rate, so that it reduces
the MRRT liability by the amount of the royalty.
2.26
Where the full royalty credits for the year cannot
be applied as a royalty allowance, the unused portion is uplifted and carried
forward to be applied in a later year. The uplift rate is the long term bond
rate plus 7 per cent (LTBR + 7 per cent).
Mining
loss allowances
2.27
If a mining project interest has a loss for the
year, the loss is uplifted at LTBR + 7 per cent and carried forward
to be used in a later year. When it is applied to reduce a mining profit of
the mining project interest in a later year, it is called a mining loss allowance.
MRRT
liability
2.28
If the MRRT profit is above zero after deducting
the allowances, the mining project interest is subject to tax under the MRRT.
The MRRT liability for the interest is calculated by multiplying the MRRT
profit by the MRRT rate.
2.29
The MRRT rate is 30 per cent. However, the MRRT recognises
that miners employ specialist skills to extract the resource and bring it to
the valuation point. It recognises the value of those specialist skills
through a special feature called the extraction factor. The extraction factor
reduces the MRRT rate by 25 per cent, to produce an effective MRRT rate of 22.5
per cent.
Diagram 2.2:
Calculating MRRT liability

The miner calculates its mining revenue for its mining
project interest and subtracts its mining expenditure to work out its mining
profit. It then reduces its mining profit by its royalty allowance and its
mining loss allowance to produce its MRRT profit. If the miner has an MRRT
profit, its MRRT liability equals that net profit multiplied by the MRRT rate.
Example 2.1:
The basic MRRT calculation
In a particular year, Midcap Mining Co. receives $500
million of mining revenue from its mining project interest. It incurs $120
million in upstream expenses and pays a royalty of $37.5 million to a State.
It has $50 million of losses carried forward from the previous year. The long
term bond rate (LTBR) is 6 per cent.
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Mining revenue
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$500m
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Mining expenditure
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($120m)
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Mining profit
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$380m
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Royalty allowance [royalty
payable/0.225]
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($166.7m)
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Mining loss allowance [earlier
loss × (LTBR + 7%)]
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($56.5m)
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Total allowances
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($223.2m)
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MRRT profit
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$156.8m
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MRRT liability [MRRT
profit × 0.225]
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$35.3m
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In this example, Midcap Mining Co. is liable to pay MRRT
of $35.3 million.
Offset
for low‑profit miners
2.30
If a miner’s mining profit is $50 million or less,
it is entitled to a low‑profit offset that will reduce its total MRRT liability
to nil. If its mining profit is over $50 million, its offset is gradually
phased out. In working out this mining profit, the miner must also count any
mining profit of other entities it is connected to or affiliated with.
2.31
Even though a miner’s mining profit might be under
$50 million, it still deducts its allowances and carries forward any
remainder.
The
second case — treatment of existing investments
2.32
The second case involves miners with an existing
mining project interest at 1 May 2010 (that is, before the
announcement of a resource rent tax). To recognise their existing investment,
those miners receive an allowance, called a starting base allowance, which further
reduces their mining profit.
2.33
The starting base for a mining project interest may
be calculated using the miner’s choice of two methods.
2.34
The market value method uses the market value of
the mining project interest’s upstream assets at 1 May 2010. The book
value method uses the most recent audited accounting value of those assets at
1 May 2010.
2.35
There are some other key differences between the
two methods apart from their different values:
• the
market value method includes the value of the mining right, while the book
value method excludes it;
• the
market value method recognises the starting base for each asset over its
remaining effective life, while the book value method recognises the starting
base, in set proportions, over five years;
• there
is no uplift for the remainder of the starting base under the market value
method but the remainder under the book value method is uplifted by
LTBR + 7 per cent; and
• under
the market value method, starting base losses unable to be applied in the year
are uplifted at the consumer price index (CPI) rate, while they are uplifted at
LTBR + 7 per cent under the book value method.
Diagram 2.3:
Calculating MRRT Liability

The miner calculates its mining revenue for its mining
project interest and subtracts its mining expenditure to work out its mining
profit. It then reduces its mining profit by its royalty allowance, its mining
loss allowance and its starting base allowance to produce its MRRT profit. If
the miner has an MRRT profit, its MRRT liability equals that MRRT profit
multiplied by the MRRT rate.
Example 2.2:
The MRRT calculation with a starting base
In a particular year, Eisenfluss Mining receives $600
million of mining revenue from its mining project interest. It incurs $120
million in upstream expenses, pays a royalty of $37.5 million to a State, and
has a market value starting base of $3 billion, which it writes off over
25 years at $120 million a year. It has $50 million of losses carried
forward from the previous year. The LTBR is 6 per cent.
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Mining revenue
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$600m
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Mining
expenditure
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($120m)
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Mining profit
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$480m
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|
Royalty allowance
[royalty payable/0.225]
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($166.7m)
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|
Mining loss
allowance [earlier loss × (LTBR + 7%)]
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($56.5m)
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Starting base
allowance
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($120m)
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Total allowances
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($343.2m)
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MRRT profit
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$136.8m
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MRRT liability [MRRT
profit × 0.225]
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$30.8m
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In this example, Eisenfluss Mining is liable to pay
MRRT of $30.8 million. Its existing investment in its mining project
interest has reduced its MRRT liability by $27 million.
2.36
If a starting base allowance for a particular year
cannot be used, the unused portion is uplifted and carried forward to be used
in later years. If the starting base was valued at market value, the uplift
rate is the CPI. If the starting base was valued at book value, the uplift
rate is LTBR + 7 per cent.
Example 2.3:
Carrying forward starting base losses
In year 1, Big Mountain Pty Ltd receives $100 million
of mining revenue from its mining project interest. It incurs $50 million of
mining expenditure, and pays a royalty of $7.5 million to a State. It has no
mining losses in year one. Its market value starting base is valued at $500
million, which it is writing off over 25 years. In year 1, $3.3 million
of Big Mountain’s starting base loss for the year is unused because it has
insufficient mining profits left after reducing them by its royalty allowance. This
unused portion is uplifted at the CPI rate. The CPI for year 1 is 2.5 per
cent.
In year 2, Big Mountain receives $250 million of
mining revenue from its interest. It incurs $50 million of mining expenditure
and pays a state royalty of $15 million. Big Mountain has no mining losses
from year 2, as all project expenses were deducted.
|
|
|
|
|
Mining revenue
|
100m
|
250m
|
|
Mining
expenditure
|
(50m)
|
(50m)
|
|
Mining
profit
|
50m
|
200m
|
|
Royalty allowance
|
(33.3m)
|
(66.7m)
|
|
Mining loss
allowance
|
0
|
0
|
|
Starting base
allowance
|
(20m)
|
(23.4m)†
|
|
MRRT
profit
|
0
|
109.9m
|
|
MRRT
liability
|
0
|
24.7m
|
In this example, the unused starting base allowance
from year 1 is uplifted at the CPI rate and included in the year 2 starting
base allowance.
†(($20m for year
2) + (year 1’s unused $3.3m × 1.025)) = ($23.38m)
The
third case — multiple interests or pre‑mining expenditure
2.37
The third case involves miners with pre‑mining
expenditure and miners with more than one mining project interest.
Pre‑mining
expenditure
2.38
The MRRT recognises that exploration expenditure,
and other pre‑mining expenditure, in pursuit of taxable resources is a
necessary part of the mining process and should be recognised as a cost of that
process.
2.39
Pre‑mining expenditure can occur in relation to project
areas for existing mining project interests or in relation to areas covered by
tenements that do not allow commercial extraction of resources (such as
exploration tenements). Interests in those tenements are called pre‑mining project interests.
Regardless of where the expenditure occurs, it is recognised for MRRT
purposes. However, it is recognised in different ways.
2.40
Pre‑mining expenditure incurred in relation to a
mining project interest is deducted along with the interest’s other mining
expenditure. That expenditure could form part of a mining loss for that
interest and could be transferable to another of the miner’s mining project
interests producing the same resource.
2.41
Pre‑mining expenditure incurred in relation to a
pre‑mining project interest goes into working out a pre‑mining loss. Pre‑mining
losses can be transferred to any of the miner’s mining project interests
producing the same taxable resource. If a miner disposes of a pre‑mining
project interest, the purchaser would generally be able to transfer pre‑mining
losses that come with it to any of its
mining project interests producing the same taxable resource.
2.42
If a pre‑mining project interest with pre‑mining
losses matures into a mining project interest, the pre‑mining losses will
become attached to the mining project interest.
2.43
A pre‑mining loss that cannot be used by its mining
project interest, or transferred to another interest, is uplifted at
LTBR + 7 per cent for up to 10 years. After that, any remaining pre‑mining
loss is uplifted at the LTBR.
Transferring
losses
2.44
A miner with two or more mining project interests
that produce the same taxable resource must transfer unused losses from one
project interest to another. It can only do so to the extent that the other
project has sufficient mining profits to absorb the remaining losses once it
has applied its own royalty, mining loss and starting base allowances. Miners
must transfer mining losses in the same order they arose.
2.45
Losses attached to a mining project interest the
miner acquired from someone else cannot be transferred to another project
interest unless both project interests have been in common ownership at all
times since the loss arose.
2.46
Royalty credits usually cannot be transferred from
one mining project interest to another and a project interest’s starting base
can never be transferred to another project interest.
Diagram 2.4:
Calculating MRRT liability

The miner calculates its mining revenue for its mining
project interest and subtracts its mining expenditure to work out its mining
profit. It then reduces its mining profit by its royalty allowance, its pre‑mining
loss allowance, its mining loss allowance, its starting base allowance, and its
allowances for pre‑mining losses and mining losses transferred from other
project interests, to obtain its MRRT profit. If the miner has an MRRT profit,
its MRRT liability equals that profit multiplied by the MRRT rate.
Example 2.4:
Transferring losses
Cobb & Coal Brothers Ltd operates two coal mining
project interests and has a pre‑mining project interest on which it is
exploring for coal.
Mining project interest (MPI) 1 has mining revenue for
the year of $35 million and mining expenditure of $120 million. It also
pays a State royalty of $2.5 million.
MPI 2 has mining revenue of $90 million and mining
expenditure of $30 million. It pays a State royalty of $5.7 million.
The pre‑mining project interest has pre‑mining
expenditure of $7 million and no revenue.
MPI 1 has a mining loss of $85 million. Its royalty
payment converts into a royalty credit of $11.1 million. It has no profit, so
cannot use it as an allowance. Since it also cannot be transferred, it will be
uplifted and carried forward to the next year.
MPI 2 has a mining profit
of $60 million. It has a royalty allowance of $25.3 million, which reduces its
mining profit to $34.7 million. It then transfers in the $7 million pre‑mining
loss from the pre‑mining project interest as a pre-mining loss allowance. It
still has $27.7 million of its mining profit remaining, so it next transfers in
$27.7 million of the mining loss from MPI 1 as a transferred mining loss
allowance. That reduces MPI 2s MRRT profit to nil and MPI 1s mining loss to
$57.3 million. That amount is uplifted and carried forward to the next
year.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mining revenue
|
35m
|
90m
|
0
|
|
Mining expenditure
|
(120m)
|
(30m)
|
(7m)
|
|
Mining
profit/(loss)
|
(85m)
|
60m
|
0
|
|
Pre‑mining
loss
|
0
|
0
|
(7m)
|
|
Royalty allowance
|
0
|
(25.3m)
|
0
|
|
Transferred pre‑mining
loss allowance
|
0
|
(7m)
|
0
|
|
Transferred mining loss
allowance
|
0
|
(27.7m)
|
0
|
|
MRRT
profit/(loss)
|
(57.3m)†
|
0
|
0
|
|
Net
pre‑mining loss
|
0
|
0
|
0*
|
In this example, the pre‑mining
loss from the pre‑mining project interest, and part of the mining loss from MPI
1, are transferred to MPI 2 to reduce its MRRT profit to nil. Both
transfers are possible because the transferring and receiving interests relate
to the same type of taxable resource.
† After
transferring $27.7 million to MPI 2.
* After
transferring $7 million to MPI 2.
Combining
project interests
2.47
A miner with several mining project interests must
combine them into a single mining project interest if they meet the integration
criteria (and satisfy other conditions designed to prevent interests combining
if that would effectively transfer allowances that are not otherwise
transferable).
2.48
There are two possible ways that a miner’s separate
mining project interests can be integrated. First, they will be integrated if:
• each
interest produces the same taxable resource; and
• each
of the interests relates to the same mine or proposed mine.
2.49
Second, a miner’s interests will be integrated if:
• each
interest produces the same taxable resource;
• the
miner conducts their downstream operations together as one operation; and
• the
miner has chosen to treat its
integrated downstream operations in that way for MRRT purposes.
2.50
In deciding whether a miner conducts the downstream
operations of the mining project interests as one operation, an important
consideration will be the extent to which the relevant infrastructure is used
in an integrated way to produce a saleable, exportable or usable resource
commodity.
2.51
Mining project interests that would otherwise be
required to combine cannot combine if either of them has a starting base or an
unused royalty credit (there is an exception for some interests the miner has
owned since before 1 May 2010). They also cannot combine if one of
them has a mining loss that arose when the two interests were not in common
ownership.
Diagram 2.5:
Integrated mining project interest

In this diagram, the miner has four MPIs relating to
the same resource. If they all relate to a single mine or proposed mine, they
would be upstream integrated. If
they are not a single mine or proposed mine, but their downstream activities
are managed as an integrated operation (for example, if they all use common
processing infrastructure), they would be integrated if the miner has made a downstream integration choice.
If the four interests were integrated in either of
those ways, they would combine into one MPI. However, if one of the MPIs has a
starting base, a royalty credit or a mining loss attributable to a time when it
was not in common ownership with each of the other interests, it could not be
part of the combined interest.
Transferring
and splitting mining project interests
2.52
Mining project interests can be transferred (for
example, by sale). A mining project interest is transferred if the whole
entitlement comprising the mining project interest passes to another entity.
2.53
If there is only a part disposal of the entitlement
comprising the mining project interest, the mining project interest will
split. A mining project interest can also split if a combined interest stops
being integrated.
2.54
When a mining project interest is transferred, any
mining revenue and mining expenditure for the mining project interest to the
date of the transfer, and any royalty credits, mining losses, pre‑mining
losses, and starting base amounts of the mining project interest, will be
inherited by the transferee.
2.55
When a mining project interest splits, any mining
revenue and mining expenditure for the mining project interest to the date of
the split, and any royalty credits, mining losses, pre‑mining losses, and
starting base amounts of the mining project interest, will be divided among the
split mining project interests.
2.56
Each of the split interests inherits a proportion
of each of those things equal to its share of the total market values of all
the split interests.
Simplified
MRRT for smaller operations
2.57
The MRRT recognises that some miners may be below
the $50 million profit threshold for some time before they start having an
MRRT liability. These miners would face an unnecessary compliance burden if
they were required to fully comply with MRRT obligations and determine their
starting base, calculate their mining revenue and track their losses and
royalties.
2.58
Those miners may choose to avoid any MRRT liability
for a particular year if either:
• their
earnings before interest and tax, and that of the entities connected to or
affiliated with them, totals less than $50 million for that year; or
• their
earnings before interest and tax (and that of those related entities) totals
less than $250 million and every
mining project interest of those entities has royalties amounting to at least
25 per cent of the interest’s earnings before interest and tax.
2.59
A miner who chooses to use the simplified MRRT
method loses any starting base, starting base losses, mining losses, pre‑mining
losses and royalty credits for all its mining project interests and pre‑mining
project interests. They would begin to generate new losses and royalty credits
after they stop using the simplified MRRT method.
Outline of
chapter
3.1
This chapter explains the framework for calculating
how much Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) a miner must pay for an MRRT year.
It also explains some of the basic building blocks of the MRRT, such as ‘mining
project interest’, ‘project areas’, ‘production right’, ‘Australia’ ‘taxable
resources’ and ‘valuation point’.
3.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
General
liability
3.3
An entity that has a mining project interest is a
‘miner’.
3.4
The key element in working out a miner’s liability
for MRRT for a year is to work out the MRRT liability on the mining profits of
each of its mining project interests for the year.
3.5
Mining revenue, mining expenditure and MRRT
allowances are calculated in respect of each mining project interest that a
miner has.
3.6
If there is no mining profit for a mining project
interest for a year, the miner will not have an MRRT liability for that mining
project interest.
3.7
If there is a mining profit for the mining project
interest for the year, that profit may be reduced to nil by MRRT allowances
that relate to the interest. MRRT allowances are applied in a particular
order. Applying MRRT allowances has the effect of reducing the MRRT liability
the miner has for the mining project interest.
3.8
A miner’s overall MRRT liability for a year may be
reduced to nil by the low profit offset or the rehabilitation tax offset. If
there is an excess rehabilitation tax offset, this may result in a refund for
the miner.
Mining
project interest
3.9
A miner is an entity that has a mining project
interest.
3.10
An entity has a mining project interest if it is
entitled to a share of taxable resources (or things produced from taxable
resources) produced by a mining venture in which the entity is a participant.
3.11
A mining venture is an undertaking a purpose of
which is to extract some or all of the taxable resources from an area covered
by one or more production rights and to produce an output which includes
taxable resources or something produced using taxable resources.
3.12
If a mining venture relates to one or more
production rights, participants in that venture have separate mining project
interests in relation to each production right.
3.13
Alternatively, if there is no mining venture in
relation to the extraction of some of the taxable resources from an area
covered by a production right, an entity has a mining project interest to the extent
to which it is entitled to extract taxable resources from that area.
Project areas
3.14
The project area for a mining project interest that
is an entitlement to share in the output of a mining venture is the area
covered by the production right to which the mining venture relates.
3.15
The project area for a mining project interest that
is an entitlement to extract resources is so much of the area covered by the
production right in respect of which an entity is entitled to extract taxable
resources.
Production
right
3.16
A production right is an authority or right under
Australian law to extract a taxable resource from a particular area in
Australia or, if such a right is not required for that area, it is an interest
in land that allows a person to extract a taxable resource from the area.
Meaning of
Australia
3.17
Australia, when used in a geographical sense,
includes all the external Territories (except the Australian Antarctic
Territory) and the offshore areas as defined in the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006.
Taxable
resources
3.18
Taxable resources are quantities of iron ore, coal,
gas extracted as a necessary incident of coal mining, and anything produced
from the in situ consumption of
iron ore or coal.
Valuation
point
3.19
For coal and iron ore, the valuation point is just
before it leaves the mining project interest’s run‑of‑mine stockpile.
3.20
If there is no run‑of‑mine stockpile, or if it is
bypassed in a particular case, the valuation point is instead immediately
before the resources enter their first beneficiation process at the mine site,
or immediately after leaving the point of extraction if there is no such
process.
3.21
For any gas that is a taxable resource, the
valuation point is when it exits the wellhead.
3.22
If there is a supply of the resources before they
reach their valuation point, the point of supply becomes the valuation point.
Detailed
explanation of new law
A miner’s
liability for MRRT
3.23
The amount of MRRT a miner must pay is the sum of
the miner’s MRRT liabilities for each of its mining project interests for an
MRRT year, reduced by the low profit offset and the rehabilitation tax offset.
[Sections
10‑1, 10‑15 and 225-25]
3.24
An MRRT year is a ‘financial year’ as defined in section
995‑1 of the ITAA 1997, starting on or after 1 July 2012, adjusted to allow for
substituted accounting periods. [Section 10‑25]
3.25
A miner’s MRRT liability for a
mining project interest is worked out by applying the MRRT rate to the mining
project interest’s mining profit reduced by any MRRT allowances applicable to
the mining project interest. MRRT allowances cannot reduce a MRRT liability
below nil. [Section 10‑5]
3.26
The MRRT rate is a tax rate of 30 per cent,
reduced by 25 per cent to recognise the know‑how and capital that
mining companies bring to mineral extraction. The effective MRRT rate is
therefore 22.5 per cent. [Section 300‑1, definition of ‘MRRT rate’,
section 4 of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition — General) Bill 2011
(MRRT general imposition Bill); section 4 of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Customs) Bill 2011 (MRRT customs imposition Bill); and section 4
of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition — Excise) Bill 2011 (MRRT excise
imposition Bill)]
3.27
Each of the MRRT allowances are made up of
allowance components [section 300‑1, definition of ‘allowance component’].
For example, a mining loss allowance comprises mining losses, a pre‑mining loss
allowance comprises pre‑mining losses, a royalty allowance comprises royalty
credits and a starting base allowance comprises starting base losses.
3.28
The MRRT allowances must be applied in a particular
order. Broadly, the principle is that project specific allowances must be
applied before allowance components can be transferred from another project.
This is consistent with the design of the MRRT as a project‑based tax. [Section 10‑10]
Example 3.1:
Order of MRRT allowances
Francis Mining Co has a $500 million mining profit in
respect of a mining project interest in the 2012‑13 MRRT year.
Francis has MRRT allowances totalling $190 million.
The allowances are applied in the following order:
• $20 million royalty allowance;
• $10 million pre‑mining loss allowance;
• $10 million mining loss allowance; and
• $150 million starting base allowance.
The MRRT allowances are subtracted from the mining
profit, reducing the mining profit to $310 million.
Francis’ MRRT liability is $69.75 million, worked out
as
22.5% × $310m.
3.29
A miner must pay its assessed MRRT
for the MRRT year on or before the day on which the assessed MRRT becomes due
and payable [section 10‑20]. Assessed
MRRT for an MRRT year is due and payable on the first day of the sixth month
after the end of the MRRT year and extra assessed MRRT is due and payable 21
days after the Commissioner gives the miner notice of the charge [section
50-5]. A miner may also be liable to pay
shortfall interest charge and general interest charge [sections
50-10 and 50-15]. A miner must pay instalments
towards that assessed MRRT liability on a quarterly basis during the MRRT year [Schedule
1, item 8, to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and
Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill), Division 115 of
Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953].
3.30
A miner will not be liable to pay MRRT for a year
if the miner has elected to use the simplified MRRT method. [Division
200]
Imposing
the MRRT
3.31
The MRRT is imposed by three different imposition
Bills. One imposes MRRT to the extent that it is a duty of customs [section
3, MRRT customs imposition Bill]; one imposes MRRT
to the extent that it is a duty of excise [section 3, MRRT excise imposition Bill];
and one imposes MRRT to the extent that it is neither a duty of customs nor one
of excise [section 3, MRRT general imposition Bill].
This reflects the constitutional requirement that laws imposing duties of
customs shall deal only with duties of customs and that laws imposing duties of
excise shall deal only with duties of excise (see section 55 of the
Constitution). However, there is only one assessment Act.
3.32
The approach of enacting a single assessment Act
with multiple imposition Acts when a tax law could be a duty of customs, a duty
of excise, as well as some other type of tax, complies with the Constitution.
The same approach was followed for the enactment of the goods and services tax
legislation.
3.33
MRRT is not imposed on property belonging to a
State. That ensures that the MRRT complies with section 114 of the
Constitution, which prohibits the Commonwealth from imposing a tax on any kind
of property of a State. In practice, this will only have an effect to the
extent that a State mines its own taxable resources. In that case, the State
will not be subject to MRRT. [Section 5 of the MRRT customs imposition Bill; section 5
of the MRRT excise imposition Bill and section 5 of the MRRT general imposition
Bill]
Mining
project interest
Share of a mining venture to extract taxable
resources
3.34
An entity has a mining project interest to the
extent that the entity is entitled to share in the output produced by a mining
venture in which the entity participates. [Subsection 15-5(1)]
3.35
An undertaking is a mining venture
if it is an undertaking or endeavour whereby the entity, alone or together with
other entities, actively or otherwise, extracts, or plans to extract, taxable
resources from a particular area covered by one or more production rights, with
a view to producing a commodity which the entity and the other participants in
the undertaking can each enjoy. [Subsection 15-5(3)]
3.36
If the mining venture in which the entity
participates covers more than one production right, then the entity will have a
separate mining project interest in relation to each of the production rights
to which the venture relates. [Subsection 15‑5(2)]
3.37
The kinds of commodities that might be the output
of such a mining venture include iron ore and coal (produced in different forms
and to different grades to meet customer specifications), gas, or products made
from iron ore, gas, and coal, such as steel and electricity.
3.38
The existence and extent of a mining venture is a
question of fact. That question should be determined having regard to:
• the
areas from which taxable resources are extracted;
• the
nature of the extraction and production activities carried out;
• the
degree to which these activities are conducted and operated as financially and
technically interdependent business units;
• relevant
contractual arrangements; and
• the
commodities that are produced.
3.39
Most typically, but not necessarily, a mining
venture will be a joint venture to extract and produce resource commodities.
Example 3.2:
A vanilla joint venture
ExplorerCo enters into a joint venture with DiggerCo (the
joint venturers) to produce coal from an area in Australia. The joint
venturers hold a production right in equal shares and are entitled to an equal
share of the resources extracted from the project area.
The joint venture is a mining venture. Each of the
joint venturers is a participant in that mining venture and each of them has a
mining project interest for which they will be liable to MRRT.
3.40
The same participants may be engaged in separate
mining ventures.
3.41
Usually a participant in a mining venture would
risk money, property or skills in the venture in exchange for a right to share
in the commodity produced by the venture. It is possible, however, that a
participant may be gifted, or otherwise transferred, a right to share in the
output of the venture.
3.42
An entity is not required to have a production
right to be a participant in a mining venture.
Example 3.3:
Non-vanilla joint venture
ExplorerCo holds a
production right over a project area, from which it is entitled to extract iron
ore.
ExplorerCo does not have
the required expertise to extract the iron ore, so it enters into a joint
venture with DiggerCo to extract the resources. In return for venturing its
extraction expertise, DiggerCo receives 50 per cent of the resources extracted
from the project area. ExplorerCo takes the other 50 per cent of the iron ore
as its return on its production right.
DiggerCo and ExplorerCo
are participants in a mining venture. They each have mining project interests
and both will be liable for MRRT.
3.43
An entity that merely provides a service or
accommodation to a mining venture would not itself be a participant in the
venture. To be a participant in a mining venture the entity must share the
risks of extracting the resources.
Example 3.4:
Finance arrangement
DiggerCo obtains a
production right over an area rich in iron ore and commences to extract the ore
using funds borrowed from Big Bank.
The terms of the loan are
calculated on the usual terms for a loan of that nature, including a commercial
rate of interest. Big Bank does not share the risks of extracting the
resources and is not itself a participant in DiggerCo’s mining venture.
BigBank does not therefore have a mining project interest.
This would remain the
case if, instead of paying cash, DiggerCo chose to discharge its loan
obligations to Big Bank by delivering to Big Bank ore equal in value to its
loan obligations.
Example 3.5:
Mining services
MinerCo holds a right to
extract coal from a production right area, but it does not have the required
expertise to undertake the extraction activities.
MinerCo enters into a
contractual arrangement with DiggerCo whereby DiggerCo agrees to extract the
resources for MinerCo in return for a commercial fee calculated as a fixed rate
per tonne of coal it extracts for MinerCo.
DiggerCo does not share
the risks of extracting the resource and is not itself a participant in
MinerCo’s mining venture. DiggerCo does not therefore have a mining project
interest.
This would remain the
case if, instead of paying cash, MinerCo discharged its fee to DiggerCo by
delivering to DiggerCo coal equal in value to the fee.
3.44
An entity is not entitled to an output of a mining
venture merely because it is entitled to a royalty for the taxable resources
extracted by the mining venture or to a private mining royalty comprising a
share of the profits of the mining venture. [Subsection 15‑5(6)]
Example 3.6:
Profit sharing
DiggerCo has a mining venture comprising the
extraction and production of coal from an area covered by a production right it
acquired from ExplorerCo. When DiggerCo acquired the production right from
ExplorerCo it undertook to pay ExplorerCo 10 per cent of the net profits it
makes from selling coal extracted from the production right area.
DiggerCo has a mining project interest and will be
liable for MRRT. ExplorerCo does not share in the output of the venture and
does not have a mining project interest.
More
than one mining venture
3.45
There may be more than one mining venture to
extract taxable resources in relation to a single production right.
Example 3.7:
Multiple mining ventures
DiggerCo and CrusherCo have a joint venture to extract
coal from a particular area within a larger area covered by a production right
they jointly hold. They are each entitled to take an equal share of the
resources which they extract. DiggerCo and CrusherCo are participants in a
mining venture and each has a mining project interest.
CrusherCo also has a separate undertaking to mine
another part of the area covered by the production right (DiggerCo takes the
view that mining in that area would be too risky).
CrusherCo would be viewed as having a second mining
venture and would have a second mining project interest comprising its right to
the output of that separate venture.
Residual
mining project interests
3.46
To the extent to which there is no mining venture
to extract certain taxable resources from the area covered by a production
right, an entity that has the right to extract the taxable resources from the
area would have a mining project interest, to the extent of its entitlement. [Subsection 15‑5(4)]
3.47
Mining project interests of this kind are a form of
‘residual’ interest. They do not exist to the extent to which the entitlement
to extract relates to resources in respect of which there is a mining venture.
3.48
Typically, the owners of a production right will
have the residual mining project interests (if any) for particular production
right areas. It is possible, however, that such interests may be transferred
or split to one or more other entities (for example, under a sublease).
Transfers and splits are discussed in Chapter 10.
Example 3.8:
No mining ventures to extract resources
ExplorerCo holds a production right over an area but
it does not have any immediate plans to commence extraction activities in that
area because it has insufficient capital to conduct such an operation. It is
currently searching for potential equity participants.
Explorer Co would have a residual mining project
interest.
3.49
The start of a mining venture relating to the
extraction of taxable resources in respect of which an entity has a residual
mining project interest will be treated as a mining project transfer (if the
venture relates to all of the resources), or otherwise a mining project split.
These situations are discussed in Chapter 10. [Sections 120-25 and 125-35]
Acquiring
a further share in a mining project interest
3.50
If an entity that has a mining project interest
because it participates in and shares in the output of a mining venture acquires
an additional right to share in the output of the venture, it will have a
separate mining project interest that corresponds to that further entitlement.
[Subsection
15‑5(5)]
Example 3.9:
Acquiring a further share
DiggerCo and CrusherCo
are participants in a mining venture with each other. They have rights to
receive and dispose of 60 and 40 per cent respectively of the
resources extracted under a production right that they jointly hold.
Subsequently, DiggerCo
decides not to continue mining in the project area and sells its share of the
venture to CrusherCo.
By acquiring DiggerCo’s
share of the venture CrusherCo acquires a separate mining project interest.
3.51
Similarly, if an entity that has a mining project
interest because it has an entitlement to extract taxable resources from a
particular area (a residual interest) acquires an additional right to
extract taxable resources from that area, it will have a separate mining
project interest that corresponds to that further entitlement. [Subsection
15‑5(5)]
Special
rules for mining project interests
3.52
There are circumstances in which it is possible to
combine, transfer or split mining project interests. Combinations are
discussed in Chapter 9 and transfers and splits are discussed in Chapter 10. [Divisions 115,
120 and 125]
3.53
There are also special rules to deal with the
winding down of mining project interests and the ending of mining project
interests. The winding down and ending of mining project interest are
discussed in Chapter 11. [Divisions 130 and 135]
Mining project
interests to be kept separate
3.54
A mining project interest cannot relate to both
iron ore and coal. Mining project interests that would otherwise relate to
both iron ore and coal constitute separate mining project interests. [Section
15‑10]
Production right
3.55
A production right is any authority, license, permit or
right under an Australian Law granted by the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory
(or, in some instances, a private land owner) that permits an entity to extract
taxable resources from a particular area in Australia [subsection 15‑15(1)].
It does not matter that the right to extract is issued subject to environmental
approval.
3.56
In deciding whether an entity has been granted the
right to extract taxable resources from an area, the term ‘extract’ should not
be construed narrowly. To extract
taxable resources means to extract them by any means and would
include recovering them from the surface of the place where they occur. [Section
300-1]
3.57
The various State and Territory Acts use different
terms to describe a ‘production right’, including ‘mining leases’ and ‘mining
licences’.
3.58
A production right should be distinguished from an
authority, license, permit or other right to prospect or explore for minerals
in a particular area or to examine the feasibility of mining in an area. These
rights are often described as ‘prospecting permits’, ‘exploration licences’,
‘mineral development licences’ or ‘retention leases’. A ‘production right’
does not include rights of this kind. [Subsection 15‑15(2)]
3.59
For the purposes of the MRRT,
interests in these other rights are ‘pre‑mining project interests’. [Section
70‑25]
Project area
3.60
A production right authorises the extraction of
taxable resources from a particular area in Australia.
3.61
The project area for a mining project interest that is an
entitlement to share in the output of a mining venture is the area covered by
the production right to which the mining venture relates. [Paragraph 15‑20(a)]
3.62
If the mining venture relates to
more than one production right there will be a separate mining project interest
in relation to each production right. The project area for each of those interests will
be so much of the area covered by each of the production rights to which the
mining venture relates. [Subsection 15-5(2) and paragraph 15-20(a)]
3.63
The project area for a residual mining project interest that
is an entitlement to extract taxable resources from an area covered by a
production right in respect of which there is no mining venture, is so much of
the area covered by the production right in respect of which an entity is
entitled to extract taxable resources. [Paragraph 15-20(b)]
Definition of
Australia
3.64
A production right that is issued in respect of an
area in Australia will result in a mining project interest.
3.65
Australia, when used in a geographical sense, includes:
• all
the external Territories (except the Australian Antarctic Territory); and
• ‘offshore
areas’ as defined in the Offshore Petroleum
and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006.
[Section 300‑1,
definition of ‘Australia’]
External
territories
3.66
Australia has seven external territories:
• Christmas
Island;
• Cocos
(Keeling) Islands;
• Norfolk
Island;
• Coral
Sea Islands;
• Ashmore
and Cartier Islands;
• Heard
Island and McDonald Islands; and
• the
Australian Antarctic Territory.
3.67
The Australia Antarctic Territory is excluded from
the MRRT definition of Australia as no Australian law allows for production
rights to be issued in respect of this area. This is consistent with
Australia’s international obligations under the Protocol on Environmental
Protection to the Antarctic Treaty (The Madrid Protocol), which prohibits
mining within Antarctica.
Offshore
areas
3.68
The Offshore
Minerals Act 1994 provides for production rights to be granted in
respect of minerals in offshore areas. To ensure mining in such areas is
covered by the MRRT, the MRRT aligns with the definition of ‘offshore areas’
relevant for that Act.
3.69
The Offshore
Minerals Act 1994 relies on the definition of ‘offshore areas’ in
the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas
Storage Act 2006. Such offshore areas generally extend to the outer
limits of the continental shelf. The continental shelf, which takes its
meaning from paragraph 1 of Article 76 of the United Nations Convention on the
Law of the Sea, is either the outer edge of the continental margin or 200
nautical miles where the continental margin does not extend out to that
distance.
3.70
Such offshore areas do not include the Joint
Petroleum Development Area
or the offshore areas of the Australian Antarctic Territory.
Taxable
resources
3.71
The MRRT is a tax on profits a miner makes from
extracting certain non‑renewable resources. Those non‑renewable resources are
called ‘taxable resources’.
3.72
The taxable resources for the MRRT are quantities of:
• iron
ore;
• coal;
• anything
produced by the in situ
consumption of coal or iron ore; and
• coal
seam gas extracted as a necessary incident of coal mining.
[Subsection 20‑5(1)]
3.73
The terms ‘iron ore’ and ‘coal’ take their ordinary
meanings. Iron ore is rock or soil from which metallic iron can be
economically extracted. Coal is a combustible carbonaceous material formed
from deposited layers of decomposed or decomposing vegetation.
3.74
Every form of iron ore and coal is a taxable
resource. The legislation makes no distinction, for example, between hematite
and magnetite or between black coal and brown coal.
3.75
In deciding whether something is a taxable
resource, no regard is to be had to the use to which it will be put or what
will be produced from it. [Subsection 20‑5(2)]
3.76
This ensures that definitions provided by some
dictionaries are not read in an inappropriately narrow way. For example, the Macquarie Dictionary’s definition of iron
ore, which suggests that it usually occurs as hematite deposits, should not be
used to limit iron ore to hematite. Similarly, when it suggests that coal is
something used as a fuel, it should not mean that coal is not coal simply
because the miner or its customers intend to use it for something other than a
fuel (for example, in making detergent).
3.77
Although ‘taxable resource’ is defined as a quantity of iron ore, coal, etc., it is
not necessary for the quantity to be measured (or even measurable). So long as
it is some quantity, it will be a taxable resource. [Subsection
20‑5(3)]
The
MRRT and gases
3.78
Most petroleum gases are not taxable resources
under the MRRT. Instead, most of them are taxed under the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987.
However, there are two cases where such a gas is a taxable resource under the
MRRT. In those cases, the gas is excluded from taxation under the Petroleum
Resource Rent Tax (PRRT).
3.79
The first case is when it is necessary to extract
the gas as an incident of a coal mining operation or in relation to a proposed
mine (say prior to construction of an underground mine). In theory, it would be
possible to tax the gas under the PRRT regime and the coal under the MRRT
regime but that would increase the miner’s compliance costs for no significant
difference in outcome. To prevent those unnecessary compliance costs, the gas
is taxed under the MRRT, which already applies to the main (coal mining) part
of the operation. [Paragraph 20‑5(1)(d)]
3.80
The most common reason why it might be necessary to
extract gas as an incident of a coal mining operation is mine safety: the
presence of coal seam gas makes a mining operation inherently more dangerous.
But there could be other reasons, such as State legislation or environmental
requirements.
3.81
Sometimes coal seam gas is drained from a potential
coal mine as a pre‑mining activity. Where that drainage occurs as a
preliminary step in the actual or proposed construction of a coal mine, then it
will be a MRRT taxable resource. However, where that gas extraction is a self‑sustaining
activity in its own right, it is not an incident of coal mining or proposed
coal mining, but a separate gas extraction operation. Such gas would not be a
taxable resource under the MRRT and would be taxed under the PRRT regime
instead.
3.82
The second case involves turning coal into gas by
consuming the coal in the ground, typically by a controlled burning of the coal
(usually coal that it is not economic to mine conventionally). This is
sometimes referred to as ‘underground coal gasification’.
3.83
That gas is included under the MRRT, instead of the
PRRT, to avoid subjecting coal that is mined and then converted into gas to a
different tax regime from coal that is converted into gas before extraction.
Such a difference could distort commercial behaviour. [Paragraph 20‑5(1)(c)]
3.84
This second case is drafted widely enough to cover
more than gas derived from the in situ conversion of coal; it covers any in
situ consumption of coal or iron ore. While consuming coal to
produce gas is the only currently known operation of this type, the legislation
is intended to cover possible future developments.
Valuation
point
3.85
The valuation point is the point in the mining
process that sets the form and location of the taxable resources used for
working out what part of the proceeds of selling the resources is included in
mining revenue. The valuation point also separates upstream activities
(expenditure on which is deductible in working out the mining profit) from the
downstream activities (expenditure on which is not deductible, although it may
be relevant to working out how much of the sale price of the resources is
mining revenue).
Normal
valuation point for coal and iron ore
3.86
The usual valuation point for coal and iron ore is
immediately before it leaves the
run‑of‑mine stockpile. [Subsection 40‑5(1)]
3.87
This means that expenditure on moving the resources
to the stockpile, and expenditure on managing and maintaining the stockpile, is
upstream of the valuation point and so will be mining expenditure recognised in
working out the mining profit. Expenditure on moving the resources away from
the stockpile will not be mining expenditure (although it may be relevant to
working out how much of the sale price of the resources is mining revenue).
3.88
‘Run‑of‑mine stockpile’ is not defined in the
legislation but is a well understood term in the mining industry. Most mines
have such a stockpile. Synonymous terms include ‘run‑of‑mine pad’, ‘run‑of‑the‑mine
stockpile’, ‘ROM stockpile’ and ‘ROM pad’.
3.89
The run‑of‑mine stockpile is the place where the
coal or iron ore, largely in the form in which it is extracted, is stored.
Although it may have undergone preliminary crushing for the purpose of moving
it to the run‑of‑mine stockpile, it will not have been subject to any
beneficiation processes.
Valuation
point for coal and iron ore with no stockpile
3.90
In some cases, coal or iron ore mines may have no
run‑of‑mine stockpile. The coal or iron ore might go straight into a
beneficiation process or, in the case of coal, be transported directly to a
power station. Even if the mine does have a run‑of‑mine stockpile, an
occasional quantity of coal or iron ore might bypass the stockpile.
3.91
In those cases, the valuation point is immediately
before the coal or iron ore enters the first mine site beneficiation process [paragraph 40‑5(2)(a)].
If there is no beneficiation process at the mine site, the valuation point is
instead when the resource leaves the point of extraction [paragraph 40‑5(2)(b)].
3.92
The legislation does not define ‘beneficiation’ but
it is another term well understood within the mining industry. It relates to
the processes by which the raw coal or iron ore is made more suitable for sale,
export or use, usually by separating it from waste material, regulating its
size, and improving its quality. It includes processes such as crushing,
washing, screening, separating and pelletising. However, it would not include
the preliminary crushing that is done for the purpose of facilitating
transportation of the coal or iron ore.
Valuation
point for gases
3.93
The MRRT taxes profits from gas that is produced by
consuming coal in situ. It also
taxes profits from gas that is extracted as a necessary incident of coal
mining.
3.94
The valuation point for those gases is when they
exit the wellhead. [Subsection 40‑5(3)]
3.95
‘Wellhead’ is not defined in the legislation but is
a well understood term in the gas and petroleum industries. It is the point at
which the gas reaches the surface and enters storage facilities or pipes for
transfer elsewhere. The wellhead typically incorporates equipment for
controlling pressure in, and regulating the flow from, the well. Because the
valuation point is when the gas exits
the wellhead, expenditure on the wellhead is upstream of the valuation point
and is therefore deductible.
Valuation
point for earlier supplies
3.96
In all these cases, it is possible
(although unusual) that the resource will be supplied to someone not involved
in the mining undertaking before
it reaches its normal valuation point. If that happens, the valuation point is
immediately before that supply. [Subsection 40‑5(4)]
Outline of
chapter
4.1
This chapter outlines the concept of mining revenue
in the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT).
4.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
4.3
Mining revenue is a fundamental concept in the tax
as it feeds directly into the calculation of the mining profit for a mining
project interest for an MRRT year.
4.4
The main type of mining revenue comes from
consideration (or deemed consideration) for supplying or exporting taxable
resources, or supplying, exporting or using something produced from taxable
resources. Mining revenue is the part of the consideration attributable to the
resources at their valuation point.
4.5
Other types of mining revenue include recoupments
of mining expenditure and compensation for loss or destruction of taxable
resources.
Detailed
explanation of new law
What is a
miner’s mining revenue?
4.6
Mining revenue for an MRRT year is calculated
separately for each mining project interest of the miner. [Section 30‑5]
4.7
The mining revenue of a mining project interest in
respect of an MRRT year is the total of the amounts included in the mining
revenue for that interest for that year [section 30‑5].
This drafting approach is taken to facilitate the calculation of the mining
profit for a mining project interest [section 25‑5].
4.8
Broadly, a miner’s mining revenue in respect of a
mining project interest includes revenue from:
• the
supply or export of taxable resources extracted from the project area for the
mining project interest, to the extent the amount relates to the resources as
they were at the valuation point;
• the
supply, export or use of something produced using the taxable resources, to the
extent the amount relates to the resources as they were at the valuation point;
• economic
recoupment of mining expenditures for the mining project interest;
• compensation
for loss of taxable resources for the mining project interest; and
• an
amount received under a take or pay contract that cannot be related to the
supply of a particular quantity of taxable resource.
4.9
Other amounts may also be mining revenue, such as
amounts arising out of balancing adjustment events for starting base assets and
from other adjustments where circumstances change. [Divisions
160 and 165]
4.10
An amount to be included in a miner’s mining
revenue does not include any goods and services tax payable on a supply for
which the amount is consideration (in whole or in part), or any increasing
adjustments that relate to the supply. [Section
30‑75]
4.11
The same amount cannot be double counted. If the
same amount is potentially included as mining revenue under more than one
provision, it is included only once and under the most appropriate provision.
[Section 30-60]
4.12
An amount is not mining revenue unless a provision
of the MRRT law includes it in mining revenue. For instance, a hedging gain
that is separate from a supply contract is not mining revenue in the same way
that a hedging loss that is separate from a supply contract is not mining
expenditure (see Chapter 5).
Revenue from
the supply, export or use of taxable resources
4.13
An amount is included in a miner’s mining revenue
if a taxable resource has been extracted from the project area for the miner’s
mining project interest and during the year a mining revenue event happens in
relation to the taxable resource. The taxable resource need not have been
extracted by the particular miner. [Section 30-10]
4.14
The need for a mining revenue event reflects the
fact that the MRRT applies generally to profits
miners have made. Hence, extraction of the resource, or the fact of its
reaching the valuation point, is not sufficient in itself to attract the tax in
a particular MRRT year.
4.15
Three possible mining revenue events
can result in an amount relating to taxable resources being included in a
miner’s revenue for an MRRT year. [Section
30-15]
4.16
The first way is by the miner
making an initial supply of the taxable resource prior to its exportation or
use [paragraph 30‑15(1)(a)].
For example, if a miner sold coal to an export customer on free on board terms,
where risk and title passes ‘over ship’s rail’, such a sale would be a supply
prior to export.
Example 4.1
Francis Resources
supplies 30,000 tonnes of ore to a third party in Australia and 20,000 tonnes
to an overseas purchaser by an agreement executed at or before export. Both
supplies would be examples of supplies prior to export.
4.17
The second way is by the miner exporting resources
when there has been no initial supply at or before that time. [Paragraph
30-15(1)(b)]
Example 4.2
Francis Resources exports
20,000 tonnes of iron ore to its storage facility in China. It later sells the
ore to a third party.
4.18
The third way is by the miner making an initial
supply of, using, or exporting, something produced using the taxable resource if
an event has not been triggered by an initial supply or export of the taxable
resource. [Paragraph 30-15(1)(c)]
Example 4.3
Francis Energy extracts
50,000 tonnes of coal from an MRRT project and feeds the coal directly into a
power plant for the production of electricity, which it supplies into the
wholesale electricity market.
4.19
These mining revenue events are mutually exclusive
and only one can happen in relation to the relevant taxable resources relating
to a mining project interest of a miner. There will be one, and only one,
mining revenue event for each quantity of resources extracted in Australia that
is not otherwise consumed in mining operations. [Section 30-15]
4.20
The approach taken is to focus on, in order,
whether there has been an initial supply of the resource and, if not, an export
of the resource, and, if neither of those, an initial supply, export, or use of
something produced using the taxable resource.
Supply
4.21
‘Supply’ has the meaning given by section 9‑10 of
the A New Tax System (Goods and Services
Tax) Act 1999 and subsection 995‑1(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997, but is to
be interpreted in the context of the MRRT. In the context of the MRRT, a
supply will usually happen where the miner relinquishes title to the resource.
Generally, this will be a sale of the resource to a third party.
Initial
supply
4.22
The usual way that the revenue provisions will be
triggered is by the miner making the initial supply of the taxable resource. [Paragraph 30‑15(1)(a)]
4.23
The initial supply of a taxable resource extracted under the
authority of a production right is generally the initial supply that a miner
makes after it has extracted the taxable resources. [Subsection
30-20(1)]
4.24
An initial supply must be a supply of taxable
resources made by a miner who has a mining project interest that relates to the
taxable resources. Typically, therefore, it would not include a supply made by
the owner of the resource in situ (unless
the owner is also a miner).
4.25
A supply is not an initial supply if it does not
result in a change in the ownership of the taxable resource. For instance, if
a miner blends a quantity of iron ore from one of its mining project interests
with iron ore from another of its mining project interests, the blending will
not constitute a supply; only once the blended ore is sold would there be an
initial supply. [Paragraph
30-20(2)(b)]
4.26
The concept of an initial supply is also subject to
an exception relating to supplies made between participants in the course of an
undertaking that is a mining venture. This mainly affects joint venture
arrangements. [Paragraph 30-20(2)(a)]
4.27
The exception ensures that, if a supply of taxable
resources is made between participants in a mining venture, and the supply is
made in the course of that venture, the supply is not an initial supply. The
initial supply would be the next supply of those resources.
Example 4.4
X Co and Y Co are
participants in a joint venture undertaking where X Co undertakes the extraction
activities and Y Co the blending activities. Each takes a share of the
resulting resource. The joint venture undertaking is a mining venture. The
supply of the resource from X Co to Y Co (giving Y Co possession) is not
treated as an initial supply of the resource as it occurred in the course of
the joint venture undertaking.
Example 4.5
Taking the facts in
Example 4.4, if, after the extraction and blending activities have occurred and
the respective shares of X Co and Y Co determined, X Co sells its share in the
resource to Y Co, this supply is not excepted because it did not occur in the
course of the joint venture undertaking. So, that sale would be the initial
supply of the resource.
Example 4.6
In a separate situation,
Extractor Co extracts the resource and sells it to Blender Co who blends it and
sells it to third parties. The sale to Blender Co is the initial supply.
4.28
A supply is not excepted from being an initial
supply if it is made between participants in separate undertakings.
Example 4.7
Taking the facts in
Example 4.4, a supply by X Co to a participant in another mining venture in
which X Co is also a participant would be an initial supply. That is because
it would not be a supply between participants in the course of a single mining
venture; it would be a supply between participants in two different mining
ventures. It would make no difference if the separate mining ventures both
relate to the same production right.
4.29
When a supply occurs, the time of
the supply is taken to be the earliest of when consideration for it is received
or becomes receivable, when the resource is delivered, and when ownership
passes in the resource. [Section
30-35]
4.30
However, if consideration for the
supply is received or becomes receivable at a time before 1 July 2012, the time
of the supply is taken to be the earliest of when the resource is delivered, and
when ownership passes in the resource. [Schedule
4, item 2 to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and
Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill)]
Export
4.31
If the miner exports the taxable resource from
Australia before there has been an initial supply, the export will trigger a
mining revenue event. [Paragraph 30-15(1)(b)]
4.32
The word ‘export’ is not defined. It takes its
ordinary meaning of sending the resource to another country for sale or
exchange, or merely taking the resource out of Australia with the intention of
landing it in another country.
4.33
In general, a miner ‘exports’ resources if they are
exported while the miner has ownership or title to them.
4.34
The miner ‘exports’ the resource even if there are
arrangements to facilitate the export of the resource which are carried out
for, or on behalf of, the miner by a third party.
4.35
Similarly, the miner ‘exports’ the resource even if
the miner is not actually responsible for the exporting activities. The time
of ‘export’ determines whether it (or a supply that occurs at the same time or
earlier) is the relevant mining revenue event. [Paragraph 30-15(1)(b)]
4.36
Export occurs when the resource finally clears
Australia’s territorial limits (which will usually be its coastal waters). Merely
leaving the final Australian port is not sufficient to constitute export.
4.37
The usual case of export will be where there has
been no sale or other arrangement in relation to the resource when it leaves
Australia. For example, a miner will export resources when it transfers them to
one of its overseas branches.
4.38
More complicated cases can arise where a
transaction has occurred prior to the resource leaving Australia. In those
cases it must be determined whether the relevant mining revenue event is the
initial supply or the export.
4.39
A sale under which ownership passes at the port or
while the ship is in Australian waters is dealt with under the ‘initial supply’
test, not the ‘export’ test. So, for instance, sales of coal or iron ore using
free‑on‑board or cost‑insurance‑freight will usually be dealt with under the
‘initial supply’ test.
4.40
In this regard, it should be noted that, while an
initial supply does not occur until ownership passes in the resource, the time
of that supply may be earlier if consideration is received or receivable or the
resource is delivered. The time
of the supply is the earliest of these things. For example, if a miner is
entitled to invoice a customer once the resource crosses the ship’s rail, that
point will be the time of supply. Alternatively, if the point at which the
consideration is received or receivable has not arrived but the miner has
delivered the resource to an agent of a customer for transport to a destination
outside Australia, that point will be the time of supply. [Section 30-35]
4.41
If title does not pass in the resource until after
it leaves Australian coastal waters, and consideration for a supply has not yet
been received or become receivable, and there has not yet been a delivery of
the resource, the export test will apply.
Example 4.8:
When export is the relevant mining revenue event
Redrock Resource Co. sells iron ore to an export
customer under terms that pass title in the ore at the destination port. Title
to the ore passes on delivery of the ore at the destination but, if
consideration is received or receivable before then, the supply will be taken
to have occurred at that earlier time. If that is before the ore is exported
(that is, before it leaves Australia’s territorial waters), the relevant mining
revenue event will be the supply. If consideration is received or receivable
only when the ore reaches the destination port, the relevant mining revenue
event will be the export.
Use
4.42
The ‘use’ of something produced from the taxable
resource is a revenue event if an event has not already been triggered by an
initial supply or export of the taxable resource or thing. [Paragraph
30-15(1)(c)]
4.43
There is no mining revenue event for the ‘use’ of
the resource itself, as opposed to the ‘use’ of something produced from it.
For example, if coal is burned to produce electricity, it is the use of the
electricity rather than the coal that triggers the mining revenue event.
4.44
If, however, the miner uses the thing produced from
the resource in carrying on mining operations or transformative operations (for
example, if the miner uses electricity in it mining operations that it has
produced from coal it extracts), the use of the electricity is not treated as a
mining revenue event. That is because the consumption of the
electricity is not an expenditure and will not, therefore, give rise to a
deduction. [Subsection 30‑15(2)]
4.45
‘Use’ takes its ordinary meaning in the context of
the MRRT.
Working
out the amounts to be included in a miner’s revenue
4.46
The amount to be included in a miner’s revenue for
a particular mining revenue event that has happened is determined through a
two-step process:
• first,
the ‘revenue amount’ for the mining revenue event is determined (Step 1); and
• second,
so much of the revenue amount as is reasonably attributable to the taxable
resource in the form and place the resource was in when it was at its valuation
point (Step 2). This amount is worked out using the most appropriate and
reliable measure of that amount.
[Subsection 30-25(1)]
4.47
The two-step process ensures that the profits that
are brought to tax under the MRRT law will be profits that relate to the
resources in the form and the place they were in when they were at their
valuation point. The MRRT law does not seek to tax profits from operations
conducted downstream of the valuation point. [Section 1-10]
4.48
Price increases in the taxable resource that occur
after the resource has passed the valuation point and which are reflected in
the consideration realised by the miner for selling the resource or things
produced using the resource (or which would have been realised if the miner had
sold the resource or the thing produced instead of exporting or using it) will
be captured as mining revenue. Conversely, price decreases after the valuation
point that are reflected in the consideration realised by the miner (or would
have been if there had been a supply) will reduce the amount of mining revenue.
4.49
Although the legislation does not prescribe the use
of any particular method for attributing the revenue amounts, the method used
must produce the most appropriate and reliable measure of the amount, having
regard to, amongst other things, the functions performed, assets employed and
risks assumed by the miner across its value chain and the information that is
available. [Subsection 30-25(3)]
4.50
There are also a number of statutory assumptions
which must be made, but only to the extent to which they are relevant in
applying the method that is the most appropriate and reliable method. The
assumptions are that the things done by the miner in carrying on its downstream
mining, transformative and resource marketing operations (as applicable) are
done by a distinct and separate entity that does not own the taxable resource
and which deals wholly independently with the miner in a competitive market for
the things done. [Subsection 30-25(4)]
4.51
There is also a safe-harbour method which, if
chosen by the miner, is taken to give the most appropriate and reliable measure
of the amount to be attributed. [Subsection 30-25(5)]
Arm’s
length principles and methodologies
4.52
The arm’s length principle plays an important role
in determining amounts to be included in a miner’s mining revenue.
4.53
The arm’s length principle requires that the
profits derived by an enterprise should be consistent with the profits that the
enterprise would have derived had its commercial and financial dealings been
consistent with the commercial and financial dealings that independent
enterprises would have had in comparable circumstances.
4.54
The arm’s length principle can apply at three
points:
• to
test whether the revenue amount for a supply is an arm’s length amount [Division
205];
• to
impute a revenue amount where the mining revenue event is the export of a
taxable resource or the export or use of something produced using a taxable
resource [subsection 30‑25(2), items 2 and 3 in the table];
and
• to
work out how much of a revenue amount is attributable to a taxable resource as
at its valuation point [subsection 30‑25(3)].
4.55
The Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and
Development (OECD) has provided guidelines for the application of the arm’s
length principle using arm’s length methodologies. The OECD Guidelines are
titled the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines
for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations (OECD
Guidelines).
4.56
The methods outlined in the OECD Guidelines were
developed to assist tax administrations and multinational enterprises deal with
cross‑border transfer pricing of transactions. Regard may be had to the OECD
Guidelines, adapted as appropriate, for the MRRT law.
4.57
Arm’s length methodologies that may be relevant in
applying the MRRT law, alone or in combination, and as direct or indirect
methods, include the comparable uncontrolled price method, the cost-plus
method, the resale price method, the transactions net margin method and profit‑split
methods. These methods are outlined in more detail in Chapter 17 in the
context of the anti-profit shifting rules.
4.58
In some cases other methods, not described in the
OECD Guidelines, but which are consistent with the arm’s length principle, may
produce a result which is the most appropriate and reliable method.
4.59
Because the working out of the mining revenue
starts with the revenue amount, this is discussed first, and then there is a
discussion about how the revenue amount should be attributed to the taxable resource
as at the valuation point.
Determining
the revenue amount
4.60
There are two broad categories of mining revenue
events for which revenue amounts must be determined: actual supplies, and
imputed supplies for exports of resources and dealings in things produced from
resources. [Subsection 30-15(1)]
Supplies
4.61
Where the mining revenue event is a supply, the
revenue amount will be the actual consideration received or receivable for the
supply. [Subsection 30-25(2), item 1 in the table]
4.62
An amount that is not actually paid
to a miner is taken to be received by the miner if and when it is applied or
otherwise dealt with on behalf of the miner or as the miner directs. [Section
30-70]
4.63
The consideration received or receivable could be
adjusted if the anti-profit shifting rules apply. [Division
205]
4.64
In effect, the revenue amount operates as a ‘cap’
on the amount that can be attributed to the taxable resources, ensuring that
only realised profits of the miner can be brought to tax.
Imputed
supplies
4.65
In the remaining revenue events there is no actual
transaction. An arm’s length consideration is worked out instead.
4.66
Where the mining revenue event is an exportation of
the resource or a thing produced from the resource, the revenue amount is the
amount that would be the arm’s length consideration if the miner had supplied
it at the time and place the taxable resource or thing is loaded for export. [Subsection
30‑25(2), item 2 in the table]
4.67
Where the mining revenue event relates to the use
of a thing produced from the taxable resource, the revenue amount is the amount
that would be the arm’s length consideration if the miner had supplied the
thing at the time and place of the use. [Subsection 30‑25(2), item 3 in the
table]
Meaning
of arm’s length consideration
4.68
The arm’s length consideration for a supply is the amount
that the miner would reasonably expect to receive if, instead of exporting or
using the resource or a thing produced from the resource, it had sold the
resource or thing to another entity with which it was dealing wholly
independently. [Subsection
30‑30(1)]
4.69
The taxpayer must use the most appropriate and
reliable method to determine the arm’s length consideration. Regard must be
had to all the miner’s relevant circumstances, including:
• the
characteristics of the resource at the point of export or use;
• a
functional and factual analysis of the economically significant activities
undertaken by the miner in its mining operations and, if relevant, its
transformative and resource marketing operations;
• market
conditions;
• the
miner’s market strategies;
• the
terms and conditions of arrangements entered into; and
• the
degree of comparability that exists between the controlled and the uncontrolled
dealings or between enterprises undertaking the dealings, including all the
circumstances in which the dealings took place and whether adjustments can and
should be made.
[Paragraph 30‑30(2)(a)]
4.70
Regard, must also be had to the
availability, coverage and reliability of data necessary to apply particular
methods. [Paragraph 30‑30(2)(b)]
4.71
For these purposes, the concept of mining
operations is broadly defined. Mining operations are all those activities or
operations that are ‘preliminary or integral to’ or ‘consequential upon’
extracting or producing taxable resources for sale or export or for producing
taxable resource to be applied in producing some other thing for sale, export
or use [section 35-20]. A detailed explanation of
mining operations is in Chapter 5.
4.72
Transformative operations are those
activities and operations that involve the application of taxable resources in
the production of some other thing that is subject to a mining revenue event
when sold, exported or used. [Subsection 30-25(6)]
4.73
Resource marketing operations are operations or
activities involved in marketing, selling, shipping and delivering taxable
resources (or things produced using taxable resources) that are sold or
exported. [Subsection 30-25(7)]
4.74
The most appropriate and reliable method must
produce an arm’s length result that is reasonable and makes sense on a
commercial basis in all the circumstances of the miner and its dealings in
taxable resources or (things produced from taxable resources).
4.75
If, however, it is not possible to work out the
arm’s length consideration, the revenue amount is the amount that is fair and
reasonable in the opinion of the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner). [Subsection 30‑30(3)]
Determining
how much of the revenue amount is attributable to the taxable resource
4.76
Having ascertained the revenue amount, the task is
then to determine how much of that amount is reasonably attributable to the
taxable resources in the condition and place they were in when they were at the
valuation point.
4.77
If there is an initial supply of the taxable
resources just after the valuation point [subsection 40-5(4)]
the whole of the mining revenue amount will be reasonably attributable to the
resources at the valuation point and the mining revenue amount will, subject to
the application of the anti‑profit shifting provisions, correspond with the
consideration received or receivable for the supply.
4.78
In other cases, the revenue amount must be
attributed to the taxable resources using the method that produces the most
appropriate and reliable measure of the amount. That method must be chosen
having regard to:
• the
circumstances of the miner, including a functional and factual analysis of the
economically significant activities undertaken by the miner in its mining
operations and, if relevant, in its transformative and resource marketing
operations; and
• the
availability of reliable information needed to apply the selected method or
methods.
[Subsection
30-25(3)]
General
approach
4.79
Revenue amounts will be attributable to taxable
resources to the extent to which the resources, and the activities involved in
getting them to the valuation point in the condition they were in at the
valuation point, are the factors that have, in substance, generated the revenue
amounts.
4.80
To work out when this is the case, a
functional and factual analysis of the economically significant functions
performed, assets used, and risks assumed by the miner across its entire value
chain would be required. [Paragraph 30-25(3)(a)]
4.81
This is the same analysis that is required when
working out the revenue amount for taxable resources (and things produced from
taxable resources) that are exported before they are sold or used. [Section
30-30]
4.82
The next step would be to allocate those functions,
assets and risks across the miner’s value chain — that is upstream and
downstream of the valuation point. Only objectively relevant and material
circumstances need to be taken into account.
4.83
Obviously the allocation of functions, assets and
risks between two parts of what is a single value chain poses conceptual and
practical difficulties.
4.84
One approach to the problem would be to construct a
hypothetical separate and independent entity fitting the circumstances of the
downstream operations (being the downstream mining operations, transformative
operations and resource marketing operations).
4.85
On this approach the downstream operations would
be considered in the context of the miner’s overall operations and certain
dealings between the hypothetical entity and the miner may be hypothesised.
For example, it may be hypothesised that the downstream entity provides
services to the miner.
4.86
Once a separate entity has been hypothesised it
becomes simpler to apply standard arm’s length methods. Those methods can be
applied to all of the notional entity’s activities, including its dealings with
other entities and its hypothesised dealings with the miner.
4.87
This is broadly the approach adopted by the OECD
for attributing profits to a ‘permanent establishment’ of a non-resident
enterprise: the profits to be attributed to the permanent establishment are the
profits that the permanent establishment would have earned at arm’s length if
it were a separate and independent enterprise engaged in the same or similar
activities under the same or similar conditions. Treating the permanent
establishment as a separate entity focuses attention on the economically
significant activities performed by the permanent establishment and the way it
interacts with the broader enterprise.
4.88
Having allocated the functions, assets and risks
between the upstream and downstream, the most appropriate and reliable method
should be chosen. The choice should be informed by the functional analysis
and, amongst other things, by reference to:
• the
characteristics of the resource at the point of supply or equivalent;
• the
terms and conditions of arrangements entered into by the miner;
• the
degree of comparability that exists between controlled and uncontrolled
dealings or between entities undertaking the dealings, including all the
circumstances in which the dealings took place and whether adjustments can and
should be made;
• the
nature and extent of any assumptions that must be made; and
• the
availability of reliable information needed to apply the selected method.
[Subsection
30-25(3)]
Statutory
assumptions
4.89
The MRRT law includes certain assumptions which
must be used to the extent to which they are relevant to the application of a
particular method. [Subsection 30-25(4)]
4.90
The statutory assumptions are that:
• a
distinct and separate entity (the notional downstream entity) does all the
things (including using all the assets) that the miner actually does in
carrying on the downstream operations;
• the
downstream entity does not acquire any interest in the taxable resource; and
• the
downstream entity and the miner deal wholly independently with one another
under competitive market conditions.
[Subsection 30-25(4)]
4.91
These assumptions are assumptions about the nature
of the downstream operations and the functions performed, the assets employed
and the risks assumed in those operations. As such, it would be expected that
the assumptions would be relevant to any method that requires (or takes into
account, expressly or implicitly) a valuation of the downstream operations (for
example, where a deductive method is used to netback from the revenue amount).
4.92
Such assumptions would not, however, be relevant
in applying methods that do not rely on things that happen in the downstream
operations. For example, where there is a comparable uncontrolled price for
the taxable resource at the valuation point.
Distinct
and separate independent entity assumption
4.93
As discussed above, the assumption that the things
done by the miner downstream of the valuation point are done by a distinct and
separate entity dealing wholly at arm’s length with the miner establishes a
basis for the use of arm’s length methods to determine an appropriate price or
value for those things. [Paragraphs 30-25(4)(a) and 30-25(4)(c)]
4.94
Specifically, arm’s length methods may assist in
working out what the miner would have paid a separate entity to do those
things.
4.95
The separate entity assumption only applies to the
things done by the miner in carrying on its downstream mining, transformative
and resource marketing operations. It does not apply to things done by
separate entities from whom the miner has procured services.
Example 4.9:
Miner procures another entity to provide downstream operations
X Resources Pty Ltd contracts Y Mining Services Pty
Ltd to crush and screen the iron ore it extracts from its iron ore mine. X
Resources pays Y Mining Services $15 million for these services. While the
crushing and screening activities constitute mining operations for X Resources’
mining project interest, and the service fee represents expenditure incurred by
X Resources in carrying on those operations, the things done by Y Mining
Services are not things that are taken to have been done by X Resources.
The separate entity assumption only applies to the
things done by X Resources in procuring the mining services from Y Mining
Services Pty Ltd.
Resource
assumption
4.96
The MRRT law is a resource rent tax. The
underlying principle is that risks relating to the value of the taxable
resource are borne upstream of the valuation point.
4.97
Consistent with this, an arm’s length method cannot
be used if it relies on an assumption that the notional downstream entity has
acquired an interest in the resource. [Paragraph 30-25(4)(b)]
4.98
A hypothesis that the notional downstream entity
acquired the resource would produce an unreliable measure of the profits
attributable to the taxable resources and could result in resource rents
arising from price changes occurring after the resource passes the valuation
point, but before the revenue event, being attributed downstream.
Competitive
market assumption
4.99
The assumption of a competitive market for the
provision of the downstream operations, transformative operations and resource
marketing operations carried on by the notional downstream entity ensures that
resource rents cannot be attributed downstream as a result of the assumed
exercise of market power by the separate entity.
4.100
In a competitive market the notional downstream
entity would be expected to make a return sufficient to induce an entity to
enter the market to do the things the entity is taken to have done. The return
would be commensurate with the non-diversifiable risks borne in doing those
things and would be no more or less than would be sufficient to justify the
continued commitment of that capital. [Paragraph 30-25(4)(d)]
4.101
A non-diversifiable risk is a systematic or market
risk that cannot be diversified away. For example, the risk that an asset
could become stranded may be non-diversifiable to the extent that the stranding
results from market wide events such as a reduction in demand associated with
changes in movements in interest rates or changes in commodity prices. Such
risks (including any non-diversifiable risks associated with the resource)
should be compensated for in the returns that the notional downstream entity
would make.
4.102
Characteristics of a competitive market that are
relevant in determining the amounts that a miner would pay a separate entity to
provide downstream operations are freedom of entry and the presence of many potential
service providers, none of whom individually can affect price. Freedom of
entry implies that costs can be recovered, if it were otherwise this would
increase the risk for new entrants and so deter entry.
4.103
A comparable uncontrolled price for the provision
of downstream operations is unlikely to be appropriate where the price reflects
the exercise of market power by the provider.
Possible
methods
4.104
As discussed above, there are different methods
that may, depending on the miner’s circumstances, alone or in combination,
provide an appropriate and reliable method for working out the miner’s mining
revenue. The method that is used should be the method that is the most appropriate and reliable method. [Subsection
30-25(3)]
4.105
Although the attribution methodology requires a
reasonable attribution to be made of a revenue amount, this does not mandate a
‘net back’ from the revenue amount although this is likely to be the most
reliable method in many cases.
4.106
Arm’s length methodologies that may be relevant
include the comparable uncontrolled price method, the cost-plus method, the
resale price method, the transactions net margin method and profit-split
methods. There may be others.
4.107
For example, to the extent to which there are
comparable transfers of taxable resources in the form the resources were in
when they were at their valuation point, between unrelated parties in
comparable markets, then a comparable uncontrolled price, as at the time of the
mining revenue event, and adjusted for any material differences, would be an
appropriate and reliable method.
Example 4.10:
Comparable uncontrolled price at the valuation point
An independent enterprise sells iron ore of a similar
type, quality and quantity at the same time and the same stage of the
production chain as those produced by the taxpayer. Assuming no other material
differences, the price received by the independent iron ore producer, as at the
time of the mining revenue event, would be considered a comparable uncontrolled
price.
4.108
In many cases, however, a netback from the mining
revenue event to the valuation point is likely to be the most appropriate and
reliable method.
4.109
In a netback, the revenue amount would be reduced
for the arm’s length value of the downstream operations that reasonably relates
to the resources (or the things produced from taxable resources). The residual
amount would be the mining revenue.
4.110
Applying a netback approach would support
neutrality in the application of the MRRT law to miners who ‘buy in’ their
downstream operations and those who provide them ‘in-house’.
4.111
To the extent to which the miner carries on its
downstream operations in-house, a net back could be undertaken by reference to
the price that a hypothetical service provider would seek to recover for
providing those operations to the miner on an arm’s length basis.
4.112
A miner that adopts this approach should value the
downstream operations using the most appropriate and reliable method. This
could be using a comparable uncontrolled price for equivalent downstream
operations or worked out by reference to the miner’s actual operating and
capital costs (for example, by applying an arm’s length cost-plus or transactional
net margin method).
Example 4.11:
What a miner would pay a distinct and separate entity — comparable
uncontrolled price
Daly Resources Pty Ltd performs all of the crushing,
processing and transporting of the ore it extracts from its iron ore mine
before it is exported. These are the only downstream activities undertaken
before the ore is sold.
Daly Resources observes that there are other iron ore
miners in the same region that procure comparable crushing, processing and
transporting services from independent service providers. The market for the
services is a competitive market.
Having regard to the prices charged by those service
providers, Daly Resources determines that it would need to pay $18 million to
procure the same crushing, processing and transporting activities as it
directly carries out itself. The $18 million is a comparable uncontrolled
price being a price arrived at having regard to the comparable activities
performed by parties dealing independently with one another under materially the
same circumstances.
During the same year Daly Resources obtains $40
million from selling the iron ore. It would be reasonable to include $22
million in Daly Resource’s mining revenue ($40m – $18m).
4.113
Where the miner procures its mining operations from
a third party then, assuming those operations are procured on an arm’s length
basis, the amounts paid for the mining services would form the basis for the
net back. Allowance would also be made for the functions performed by the
hypothetical separate entity in procuring and administering the service
contracts.
Example 4.12:
Miner procures another entity to provide downstream operations
X Resources Pty Ltd contracts Y Mining Services Pty
Ltd to perform all downstream mining operations leading to the export of the
ore it extracts from its iron ore mine. During the MRRT year starting on
1 July 2012, X Resources pays $15 million to Y Mining Services to conduct
the downstream mining activities. X Resources deals with Y Mining
Services on an arm’s length basis.
X Resources also incurs costs in managing its contract
with Y Mining Services. During the same year, X Resources derives
consideration of $35 million from exporting the iron ore. The revenue that is
reasonably attributable to the ore as at the valuation point for the year is
$35 million less the $15 million paid to Y Mining Service and an arm’s length
charge for the procurement functions actually performed by the miner in its
downstream operations.
4.114
If the miner procures services from a third party
on a non-arm’s length basis then, unadjusted, the amounts paid for the mining
services would not form the basis of an appropriate or reliable net back method
(note, also, the potential application of the anti-profit shifting rules in
Division 205).
4.115
A full net back from the revenue amount may not be
the most appropriate and reliable method for a vertically integrated
transformative operation (for example, the production of electricity or
steel). However, a netback from the point at which the mining operations end
and the transformative operations commence may be appropriate and reliable if
there are comparable uncontrolled prices for the sale of the resources in the
form they are in when they are first applied to the transformative operations.
Example 4.13:
Separate entity providing transformative operations — comparable
uncontrolled price
E Energy Pty Ltd owns and operates a coal fired power
station. It supplies the power station with coal from its own coal mine. It
also acquires coal, of similar quality and in similar quantities, on an arm’s
length basis, from other miners who have mines near E Energy’s mine.
Assuming no other material differences, the price that
E Energy pays for the coal from the other miners would be a comparable
uncontrolled price for the coal it has mined itself.
E Energy also finds a way of working out the arm’s
length value of its processing and transporting operations. For example, it
may be able to find a comparable uncontrolled price for those services.
Alternatively, a cost-plus or transactional net margin method may provide an
appropriate and reliable method for pricing those services.
In these circumstances, it would be reasonable for E
Energy to work out its mining revenue by taking the comparable uncontrolled
price for its own coal (adjusted to the date that the coal is stockpiled at the
power station) and reducing it by the arm’s length value of its own downstream
processing and transporting operations (being those operations that are
downstream of the valuation point but which end when the coal arrives at the
power station).
The residue would be an amount that is reasonably
attributable to the coal when it was at the valuation point (to the extent it
does not exceed the revenue amount).
4.116
Another possible method is a profit-split method.
A profit-split method, is a method that takes a combined profit and splits it
on an economically valid basis that approximates the division of profits that
would have been anticipated between independent enterprises. This economically
valid basis may be supported by independent market date (for example,
uncontrolled joint-venture agreements) or by internal data.
4.117
Profit-split methods are only available to be used
if they are the most appropriate and reliable measure of the revenue amount to
be attributed to the taxable resource at its valuation point.
4.118
When the supply chain is not highly integrated, the
importance of the mining rights and the upstream mining operations relative to
the downstream would tend to favour the use of other methods over a profit‑split
method.
4.119
However, the position may be different in the case
of a highly integrated operation, such as a transformative coal to electricity
generation.
4.120
In applying a profit-split method in the context of
the MRRT law, it would be expected that the mining rights, and the capital
contributed in the upstream and downstream, would provide a more appropriate
bases for analysing a split of profits as compared to other bases, such as
operating costs. That is because of the capital intensive nature of the mining
industry and the significant value attributable to mining rights.
4.121
Although capital contributed would be reasonably
observable, the value of mining rights increase and decrease with variations in
commodity prices.
Example 4.14:
Profit split ratio
A profit-split calculation, for attributing revenue
amounts, could be based on the ratio: mining right value plus upstream capital
asset values/mining right value plus upstream and downstream capital asset
values
Safe-harbour
method
4.122
To improve certainty and reduce compliance costs,
the MRRT law provides a safe-harbour method for working out how much of the
revenue amount is attributable to the taxable resource at the valuation point.
If the method is chosen by a miner, it is taken to be the most appropriate and
reliable method. [Subsection 30-25(5)]
4.123
There may be circumstances in which the
safe-harbour method would be the most appropriate and reliable method in any
event (that is, without recourse to the safe-harbour provision).
4.124
The method takes the revenue amount and reduces it
by an amount that, having regard to the required assumptions (including the
arm’s length dealings assumption, the resource assumption and the competitive
market assumption), the miner’s circumstances and the available information, is
sufficient for the notional downstream entity to recover the costs of the
operations it is taken to have carried on such as reasonably relate to the
taxable resource (or things produced from the taxable resource).
4.125
The costs that the notional downstream entity can
recover are:
• its
operating costs;
• any
depreciation of the assets used in those operations; and
• a
cost of capital sufficient to justify the continued commitment of the capital
it employs in those operations.
[Paragraph 30-25(5)(a)]
4.126
This is a method that is commonly used to set prices
for access to infrastructure and related services. It adopts a ‘building
block’ approach. It excludes from mining revenue the amounts the service
provider would need to recover, over the long run, to meet the costs of those
investments (where the costs of an investment includes a return on capital that
is commensurate with the non-diversifiable
risks).
4.127
Applied in the MRRT context, the method works out a
competitive price for the operations taken to have been provided by the
notional downstream entity. To the extent to which those operations reasonably
relate to the production of taxable resources (or things produced from taxable
resources), the revenue amount for those resources (or things) will be reduced
accordingly.
4.128
There may be a number of different ways of working
out the extent to which the downstream operations reasonably relate to taxable
resources (or things produced from taxable resources) in relation to which
there have been mining revenue events. For example, it may be reasonable to work
out an average price, per tonne, for the iron ore produced and transported in a
year. That price could be applied to each quantity of resource that is sold,
exported or used in that year.
4.129
The mining revenue cannot be a negative amount.
4.130
The costs which the notional downstream entity
should be able to recover can be expressed as follows:
downstream operating
costs + depreciation + (downstream capital value × cost of capital)
4.131
The notional downstream entity’s operating costs
would be the non-capital, arm’s length, costs of the downstream operations.
These costs would generally include maintenance costs (although see further
discussion below). [Subparagraph 30-25(5)(a)(i)]
4.132
Depreciation would be the amounts required to
compensate the notional downstream entity for the consumption of the assets
used in its operations due to physical or economic loss. It would be expected
that the amount of depreciation would be worked out having regard to the
economic life of the asset, which may, in turn, depend on the expected life of
the mining operation. The amount of the depreciation will be a recovery of the
capital value of the asset over its expected remaining operating life. [Subparagraph
30-25(5)(a)(ii)]
4.133
The choice of depreciation profile under this approach
(for example, straight line or annuity) should be consistent with a reasonably
stable path of service charges, consistent with what an independent service
provider would set in a competitive market.
4.134
The cost of capital would be the
opportunity cost of the capital used to finance the notional entity’s
downstream operations (that is, the return on capital required to attract the
capital). It would be expected that the cost of capital would be worked out by
applying a weighted average cost of capital to the assets used in the
downstream operations, being a rate that is consistent with prevailing market
conditions, adjusted for the non-diversifiable risks (also known as systematic
risks) involved in those operations, and weighted by the proportions of equity
and debt used to fund those operations. [Subparagraph 30-25(5)(a)(iii)]
4.135
In order to work out depreciation amounts and cost
of capital amounts, a capital value for downstream assets is required. For new
assets, the most appropriate value will be the cost of acquisition or
installation. For existing assets, a market valuation based on an approach
that is consistent with the method used to value starting base assets should be
used (albeit subject to the operation of the competitive market assumption).
4.136
There are a number of different approaches for
working out the capital value of assets. Methods commonly used include
depreciated actual cost, depreciated optimised
replacement cost, optimised replacement cost or full replacement cost.
4.137
The question as to which is the most appropriate
method for valuing assets in a particular case will depend on the circumstances
of the assets, the notional entity, and the industry and on the other
assumptions made.
4.138
The three integers — operating costs, depreciation
and costs of capital — are interdependent. Their combined operation should
ensure that the service provider is not over- or under-compensated, over time.
Assumptions made in working out one integer will generally affect the other.
4.139
For example, the operating costs that could be
recovered should be commensurate with the assumptions made in valuing the
asset. That is, it would not be appropriate to recover the full costs of
maintaining an old asset if the assets have been valued, as new, at full
replacement cost. Nor would it be appropriate to recognise any capital
expenditure on assets valued at full replacement cost other than where the
expenditure expands or improves the functionality of the asset. That is
because the expenditure would already be reflected in the replacement cost of
the asset.
4.140
Replacement cost should not be used where it
exceeds market value. If the cost of replacing an asset is more than the cost
of a cheaper alternative, an owner would not replace it. For example if, say,
a rail transport asset is underutilised and/or the mine it services has limited
remaining economic life, a valuation based on the net present value of the cost
of transporting the resource by road would be appropriate if this option is
cheaper than replacing the existing rail asset.
4.141
In valuing downstream assets, discounted cash flow
methods should generally not be used. That is because those methods require
assumptions to be made about the service charges for the use of the assets. In
effect, the service charge is the thing that the statutory method is trying to
determine.
Example 4.15:
What a miner would pay a distinct and separate entity
Katherine Mining Pty Ltd installs an iron ore crusher
ready for use from 1 July 2011 and commences crushing ore from the run-of-mine
pad. Katherine Mining determines that its operating costs in performing this
activity are $700,000 in 2012‑13.
The cost of the crusher was $2 million and its
effective life is 25 years, so in determining the capital costs the separate
entity would incur, Katherine Mining determines an amount of $80,000 for
depreciation of the crusher for that year. The return on capital invested in
the crusher would be worked out having regard to the risks the separate entity
would incur and the assumption that there is a competitive market for the
provision of the crushing services to Katherine.
Katherine Mining determines that a pre-tax return on
the capital invested in the crusher of 13 per cent would be sufficient for a
separate entity to continue to employ its capital in that undertaking.
Katherine Mining determines the amount that it would
pay a distinct and separate entity to provide ore crushing services in 2012‑13
to comprise the operating costs, depreciation and the return on capital as
determined above: a total of $1,029,600 ($700,000 operating costs plus $80,000
depreciation and $249,600 return on the depreciated cost of the crusher). The
sum of this and the amounts Katherine Mining pays, or would pay, for other
downstream operations, reduces the revenue amount for the sale of the iron ore
that will be included in its mining revenue.
4.142
Any costs associated with a particular operation that
relate to operations that are not taken into account in working out the revenue
amount should be added back. [Paragraph 30-25(5)(b)]
Example 4.16:
Costs not reflected in the revenue amount for a supply
Assume there is a supply of taxable resources at a
port in Australia but the miner incurs the costs of carriage and insurance.
Further assume that the miner invoices the purchaser for these costs separately
from the resources.
The miner would be required to add back any costs that
relate to the things it did in delivering and insuring the resources.
Example 4.17:
Costs not reflected in the revenue amount for resources exported
Assume a miner exports coal to an offshore customer.
Title to the resources passes on delivery and the miner bears the cost of
carriage and insurance.
The revenue amount is the amount for which the miner
would have sold the coal had it sold it at the time the coal was loaded for
export. Assume the miner sells coal of the same quality (and in similar
quantities) to other customers on free on board terms and uses the price of
that coal to work out the revenue amount for the coal it has exported.
The miner would be required to add back any of its
costs that relate to the things it did in delivering and insuring the
resources.
Other mining
revenue
4.143
Other forms of mining revenue include:
•
amounts that recoup or offset mining expenditure
and payments that give rise to royalty credits [sections 30‑40 and 30‑45];
• compensation
for loss of taxable resources [section 30-50]; and
• amounts
that do not relate to a particular taxable resource [section
30-55].
Recoupments
and offsets
4.144
Mining revenue includes amounts that recoup or
offset mining expenditure of the mining project interest. It does not matter
whether the recoupment was received or receivable by the miner who has the
interest or by one of its associates. It also does not matter whether the
expenditure recouped arose in the past or will arise in the future. This
ensures that mining expenditure is only recognised to the extent that the miner
actually bears the economic cost of that expenditure. Treating recoupments of
future expenditure in the same way avoids the need to track each recoupment
against a particular amount of expenditure. [Subsection 30‑40(1)]
Example 4.18:
A subsidy recoups mining expenditure
Lawrie Longwall Mining (Lawrie) receives a government
subsidy for expenditure it incurs in employing apprentices to work on its mining
project interest. The cost of employing the apprentices is mining expenditure,
so the recoupment by way of the subsidy is mining revenue.
Example 4.19:
Sale of emissions units recoups mining expenditure
O’Toole Coal purchased 5,000 emissions units
sufficient to offset Co2 emissions attributable to upstream mining
operations. It paid $125,000 ($25 per unit) for the units and included this
amount in its mining expenditure in its 2017 MRRT year. However, it only
needed to surrender 3,000 units to offset its 2017 carbon emissions. In 2018,
O’Toole Co sold 2,000 units for $46,000 (at $23 per unit). The recoupment of
this mining expenditure is mining revenue.
4.145
A recoupment is not included in mining revenue if
the amount gives rise to an adjustment. As the adjustment rules deal with such
recoupments, this ensures the amount is not double counted. [Paragraph 30‑40(1)(c)]
4.146
Where an amount is received that recoups an
expenditure that is only partly deductible, the proportion of the recoupment
included in mining revenue matches only the proportion of the expenditure that
is deductible. [Subsection 30-40(2)]
Example 4.20:
Recoupment is only partly for upstream expenses
Continuing Example 4.18, if Lawrie’s costs in
employing apprentices were incurred 60 per cent for upstream mining operations
and 40 per cent for downstream mining operations, only 60 per cent of
the costs would be mining expenditure, so only 60 per cent of the subsidy would
be mining revenue.
4.147
An amount received or receivable before the start
of the MRRT that recoups or offsets mining expenditure is included in mining
revenue. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 3]
4.148
Amounts that recoup or offset a liability that
gives rise to a royalty credit will normally reduce royalty credits [section
60‑30]. However, if there are insufficient
royalty credits to reduce, the excess recoupment, grossed-up by the MRRT rate,
is included in mining revenue [section 30-45].
Compensation
for the loss of taxable resources
4.149
A miner who obtains, or whose associates obtain, an
amount of insurance, compensation or indemnity relating to the loss,
destruction or damage of an extracted taxable resource or something produced
from it, must include mining revenue to the extent that, if the compensation
had been consideration for a supply, it would have been included, as mining
revenue. [Section 30-50]
4.150
This reflects the fact that, from
the miner’s perspective, compensation amounts for the loss, destruction or
damage of resources is equivalent to consideration for supplying them.
4.151
Amounts included as mining revenue are limited to
compensation for loss, destruction, or damage of resources after
1 July 2012 and before there has been a mining revenue event for the
resources. Resources that were lost, destroyed or damaged before 1 July 2012
would not have generated mining revenue, so compensation for their loss or
destruction would similarly not be mining revenue [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 4]. Resources lost, destroyed or damaged
after their mining revenue event will already have generated an amount of
mining revenue, so treating the compensation as mining revenue would be double
counting. [Section 30-50]
Amounts
that do not relate to a particular mining revenue event
4.152
Amounts received or receivable by a miner for the
supply, or proposed supply, of taxable resources that do not reasonably relate
to a mining revenue event for a particular quantity or quantities of taxable
resources are treated as mining revenue. [Section 30-55]
4.153
Typically, this will occur where a purchaser makes
a scheduled payment under a take or pay contract but does not take delivery of
any resources.
Example 4.21:
Take or pay contract
X
Energy Co entered into a long‑term supply contract to pay for a fixed annual
quantity of coal from New Resources Pty Ltd, whether or not X Energy takes
delivery of that quantity of coal. For the year beginning 1 July 2012, X
Energy pays the fixed annual amount, but, because of reduced demand for energy
from its coal‑fired power station, X Energy takes delivery of only ¾ of the coal contracted for and it obtains a credit
that can be applied to future coal deliveries.
New Resources treats ¾ of the payment as a revenue amount that must be
attributed to the coal that was supplied and the balance as an amount which
must be included directly in mining revenue.
New Resources would not
have to include any further amount in its mining revenue if it later has to
supply the remaining ¼ of the coal to X Energy (although there
would be a change in the circumstances relating to the payment included
directly in mining revenue such as may warrant an adjustment under Division
160).
Expenditure
causing revenue to be received
4.154
An amount that would otherwise be included in
mining revenue in respect of a mining project interest is reduced to the extent
that the miner necessarily incurred the expenditure in enforcing the miner’s
entitlement to receive the amount, provided that the expenditure:
• does
not relate to any other amount;
• was
not mining expenditure for the mining project interest; and
• was
not excluded expenditure.
[Section 30-65]
4.155
This ensures that the mining
profit for a mining project interest properly reflects the net mining revenue
and mining expenditure for the interest.
4.156
For example, if litigation costs incurred in
seeking compensation for damages to taxable resources are not mining
expenditure, they would reduce the mining revenue for the mining project
interest from which the resources were extracted.
Outline of
chapter
5.1
This chapter explains when a miner’s expenditure on
mining operations will be taken into account in working out the miner’s mining
profit for a mining project interest.
5.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 (MRRT Bill) unless otherwise
indicated.
Summary of
new law
5.3
A miner’s mining expenditure for a mining project
interest includes expenditure necessarily incurred in carrying on mining
operations upstream of the valuation point. However, such expenditure is
specifically excluded if it is:
• a
cost of acquiring an interest in a mining project interest;
• a
royalty (other than some private mining royalties);
• a
cost of finance;
• a
payment under a hire purchase agreement;
• capital
expenditure on non-adjacent land or buildings for administrative or accounting
activities;
• hedging
or currency losses;
• a
rehabilitation bond or trust payment
• a
payment of income tax or goods and services tax; or
• a
unit shortfall charge.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Mining
expenditure
5.4
Mining expenditure is a fundamental concept because
it feeds directly into the calculation of a miner’s mining profit for a mining
project interest in respect of a Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) year and
therefore its total MRRT liability for an MRRT year. [Sections 10‑1 and
25‑5]
5.5
The mining expenditure for a mining project
interest is the sum of all the amounts that are included as mining expenditure
for the interest for an MRRT year. [Subsection 35‑5(1)]
5.6
An amount is only included in mining
expenditure once, under the most appropriate provision. [Section
35‑25]
5.7
Some expenditure is specifically
excluded. [Subsection 35-5(2) and Subdivision 35-B]
General
test for mining expenditure
5.8
A miner’s mining expenditure for a mining project
interest includes expenditure to the extent that it is necessarily incurred by
the miner in carrying on upstream mining operations in respect of that mining
project interest. [Section 35‑10]
5.9
Unlike income tax, it does not
matter whether the expenditure is of a revenue or a capital nature. All
expenditure that satisfies the nexus to upstream mining operations is
deductible as mining expenditure when incurred. This approach is consistent
with the ‘cash flow’ nature of rent taxes. [Subsection 35‑10(2)]
Expenditure
5.10
‘Expenditure’ is a word with several meanings. In
the MRRT context, ‘expenditure’ refers to disbursement of an amount of money
(except where the non-cash benefit rules apply). The term is often coupled
with a timing rule, such as ‘incurred’. In these cases, the expenditure would
occur when the timing rule is satisfied.
5.11
‘Expenditure’ does not include the consumption of
assets, which is another possible meaning of the word. An asset that has been
consumed or lost will already have led to an amount of mining expenditure at
the time it was purchased for use in upstream mining operations.
5.12
For example, if explosives are included in mining
expenditure at the time of purchase, then the value of those explosives is not
included in mining expenditure when they are used because that would double
count the miner’s costs.
5.13
In addition, because miners get an upfront
deduction for capital expenditure, there is no depreciation (except in the case
of starting base assets). Indeed, if miners were to depreciate their assets,
the expenditure would be counted twice — once at the time of purchase, and
again over the life of the asset.
Necessarily
incurred ... in carrying on
5.14
The words ‘necessarily incurred ... in carrying on’
are familiar to business taxpayers as they are integral to the general income
tax test for deductibility (see section 8‑1 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)). These words
are judicially well tested and therefore provide a high degree of certainty
regarding the deductibility of expenses. The words have been consciously
chosen in preference to the approach to deductibility that is a feature of the
Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) regime and which has given rise to disputes
about whether expenses are deductible or not.
5.15
The approach adopted by the courts in interpreting
and applying these words in the income tax context is appropriate for MRRT
purposes. This means that, if expenditure is reasonably capable of being seen
as desirable or appropriate from the point of view of the pursuit of upstream
mining operations, it is mining expenditure.
5.16
While there must be a nexus between an expense and
upstream mining operations in order for the expense to be mining expenditure,
the requirement for expenditure to be necessarily incurred does not impose a
narrow test or a test of logical or inescapable necessity. The Courts have
developed a pragmatic approach to interpreting these words.
Example 5.1:
Approach to deductibility
Wildfire Coal, a UK resident, has Australian mining operations.
After negotiation with a local authority, Wildfire pays for the construction
and ongoing maintenance of a community aquatic centre at a township established
to provide housing and community facilities for the workforce for its mine.
While the aquatic centre is for the use of the whole community, it is primarily
for use by the miner’s employees. The expenditure on the construction and
maintenance of the aquatic centre is an important part of ensuring that it has
the workforce that it requires to carry on its operations. The expenditure is
incurred as a matter of practical operational necessity and so is mining
expenditure to the extent that it is for employees engaged in upstream mining
operations.
5.17
However, this does not mean that all expenditure
necessarily incurred in carrying on a business that includes the production of
a taxable resource is deductible. This is a resource rent tax, not an income
tax — not all revenue is assessable, and not all expenditure is
deductible. Expenditure must be sufficiently connected to upstream mining
operations and not the business more generally. Only expenditure that has the
necessary relationship with upstream mining operations is included in mining
expenditure.
Example 5.2:
Expenses incurred in carrying on a business
Continuing the previous example, Wildfire Coal decides
to list on the ASX and incurs costs associated with listing. While these costs
may have a connection with Wildfire Coal’s business, they do not have the
appropriate connection with upstream mining operations and so are not mining
expenditure.
5.18
Importantly, the words ‘necessarily incurred ... in
carrying on’ have proven flexible over time. They are capable of dealing with
new situations.
Example 5.3:
Expenses incurred in meeting environmental obligations
Craig Mining Co owns and operates an iron ore mine in
the Pilbara. During the 2013-2014 MRRT year, it emits 20,000 tonnes of Co2
in carrying on its upstream mining operations. It is therefore
required to purchase and surrender 20,000 emission units to meet its
obligations under the Clean Energy legislation. The expenditure is necessarily
incurred in carrying on upstream mining operations and so is included in mining
expenditure.
Upstream mining operations
5.19
Upstream mining operations are mining operations to the
extent that they relate directly to finding and extracting a taxable resource
from the mining project area for the mining project interest. Any activity or
operation directed at doing anything to, or with, the taxable resource after it
reaches the valuation point is not an upstream mining operation. [Section 35‑15]
5.20
Extracting the taxable resource incorporates all
those activities necessary to free the taxable resource from its in situ location, and so would include
recovering resources from the surface of the land, excavating an open cut pit,
and digging a traditional underground mine.
5.21
Also included are activities that are preliminary
to extraction, such as exploration, and activities undertaken as a consequence
of extraction, such as getting taxable resources to their valuation point.
This would include any initial crushing to make it possible to move the
resources to the valuation point, building the road that links the miner to the
run-of-mine stockpile, and buying and maintaining the trucks used for the
transport.
5.22
Some particular things that could qualify as
upstream mining operations are:
• negotiations
with native title holders as part of the process of obtaining a production
right over the project area;
• exploring
for taxable resources in the project area;
• crushing
and weighing taxable resources before they reach their valuation point;
• head
office activities, to the extent that they contribute to getting taxable
resources to their valuation point;
• planning
and constructing facilities, and acquiring and maintaining plant and equipment,
for use in processing taxable resources before they reach their valuation
point;
• upgrading
computer software used in processing taxable resources before they reach their
valuation point; and
• rehabilitating
a project area from damage caused by exploring, extracting and moving taxable
resources to their valuation point.
5.23
Some activities may be carried on outside the
mining project area.
Example 5.4:
Activities remote from the mine site
Wildfire Coal has automated some activities for
producing and handling taxable resources before the valuation point. These are
electronically controlled by operators working in a dedicated operations
facility located away from the project area in a capital city. The provision
and operation of the facilities are upstream mining operations.
Example 5.5:
Training upstream staff
Wildfire Coal employs staff at its head office in a
capital city whose duties include the initial induction and training of all new
mine site employees. These activities may be carried out at the mine or in the
capital city. The activities are upstream mining operations to the extent that
they relate to the capacity of personnel to carry on upstream mining
operations.
Example 5.6:
Mine planning in a capital city
Wildfire Coal employs staff at its head office in a
capital city whose duties include life-of-mine planning. These activities are
carried out in the capital city, but in liaison with personnel at the mine
site. The mine planning activities are upstream mining operations as they are
activities integral to undertaking the mining activities.
Example 5.7:
Consultants researching new extraction processes
Wildfire Coal has engaged consultants to examine and
evaluate new extraction processes for use in the planned expansion of
production volumes of its taxable resources in relation to its mining project
interest. The research takes place in various locations around the world as
well as on the site of the mine concerned. The research is an upstream mining
activity as it is preliminary and integral to extracting the taxable
resources. Upstream mining operations may be carried out before
or after the taxable resource reaches the valuation point so long as they
otherwise have the required relationship to the extraction of the resource and
getting it to the valuation point.
If Wildfire has several mining project interests, or
some mines not subject to the MRRT, the costs of research that was relevant to
all of them would have to be apportioned.
5.24
Activities directed at preparing the mine site are
upstream mining operations.
Example 5.8:
Preparatory activities
Wildfire Coal holds a production licence and will be
conducting activities to produce taxable resources from the project area. In
developing the mine, it decides to prepare part of the project area for use as
a run‑of‑mine stockpile. This includes earthworks to level and provide access
to the run‑of‑mine stockpile site and drainage work to ensure that any run‑off
from the run‑of‑mine stockpile does not contaminate local waterways. These
activities are upstream mining operations.
5.25
Activities directed at expanding a mine are
upstream mining operations. For example, exploration may be undertaken within the
area of a production right in order to define and clarify the exact location
and extent of a taxable resource within a mining project area. As this informs
decisions made about the operation of the mine in order to extract the taxable
resource, it is an upstream mining operation.
Example 5.9:
Exploration within a project area
Wildfire Coal produces taxable resources from an
established mine and wants to expand production from the mining project
area. It undertakes drilling to clearly establish the boundaries of the
existing ore body within the project area. The drilling is an upstream mining
operation.
5.26
Some activities that take place after a mine stops
producing taxable resources are upstream mining operations.
Example 5.10:
Mine site rehabilitation and restoration
Wildfire Coal carries out rehabilitation activities on
an area from which taxable resources have been recovered by open cut mining.
These activities are a consequence of extracting the taxable resources and so
are related to extracting those resources. Therefore, the activities are
upstream mining operations.
Example 5.11:
Mine site rehabilitation and restoration
Wildfire Coal operates a tailings pond to contain
water drained from the coal mine it operates and for which it has a mining project
interest. The water is removed from the mine to allow for the extraction of
the coal and to maintain mine safety. After the mine closes, Wildfire Coal
drains and backfills the tailings pond to restore the site. These restoration
activities are upstream mining operations.
Example 5.12:
Mine site rehabilitation and restoration
When restoring its mine site, Wildfire Coal removes
conveyor belt systems used to transport coal from the coal face to the run-of-mine
stockpile. This is an upstream mining operation.
Mining
operations
5.27
The MRRT defines mining operations to include all
activities or operations that are ‘preliminary or integral to, or consequential
upon’ extracting or producing taxable resources, or producing something else
using those taxable resources. [Paragraph 35‑20(1)(a)]
5.28
However, mining operations do not include doing
anything to, or with, taxable resources after they reach the form and location
they are in when a mining revenue event happens to them, or they are first
applied to producing something in relation to which a mining revenue event
happens. [Paragraph 35-20(1)(b)]
5.29
Mining operations therefore include those things
that are directly involved in production, as well as those things that the
miner does before the commencement, and after the cessation, of those
operations. Things done as a matter of practical need to facilitate or enable
that production are also included.
5.30
Some activities and operations are specifically
identified as mining operations for a mining project interest for the purposes
of clarifying the scope of the general definition and removing doubt in some
cases of particular concern. This does not limit what is included under the
general definition. [Subsection 35-20(2)]
5.31
The specific activities are:
• exploration
or prospecting for taxable resources in the project area for the mining project
interest;
• extracting
taxable resources from the project area;
• doing
anything to, or with, taxable resources recovered from the project area before
they reach the form they are in when a mining revenue event happens to them;
• obtaining
access to the project area for mining operations;
• acquiring,
constructing or maintaining anything to be used in the above activities;
• rehabilitating
the project area affected by any of the above activities;
• closing
down any of the above activities; and
• activities
done in furtherance of these activities.
[Subsection 35-20(2)]
5.32
An activity is an activity done in ‘furtherance’ of
the other activities specified if it is, from a practical and business point of
view, directed at facilitating or enabling those activities to be carried on.
However, the idea of an activity done in furtherance of another activity does
not extend to activities that have only a remote or temporal connection with a
listed activity. For instance, obtaining an ASX listing, while an activity
that, in a remote sense, furthers the mining activities, would be too remote a
connection to be part of the upstream mining operations.
5.33
The definition of ‘exploration or prospecting’
comes from section 40‑730 of the ITAA 1997 and therefore includes
activities such as geological mapping, geophysical surveys, systematic
searching for areas containing minerals, and searching by drilling within those
areas. It includes searching for ore within, or near, an ore‑body by drives,
shafts, cross‑cuts, winzes, rises and drilling. It further includes conducting
feasibility studies to evaluate the economic feasibility of mining minerals
once they have been discovered, and obtaining mining or prospecting information
associated with the search for, and evaluation of, areas containing minerals. [Section
300‑1, definition of ‘exploration or prospecting’]
Example 5.13: Exploring and prospecting
Pick and Shovel Co holds a mining project interest in
Western Australia from which it extracts iron ore. Pick and Shovel
conducts a search for additional iron ore near the ore body and within the
project area. The search is part of the mining operations for the mining
project interest.
Incurring
mining expenditure
5.34
The MRRT operates on an accruals basis. Mining
expenditure is therefore deductible in the year that it is incurred. This
aligns with the treatment of deductible expenditure under the ITAA 1997
and under the PRRT.
Example 5.14:
Contractor performing services
Wildfire Coal engages Upstream Coal Services (Upstream)
in June 2013 to perform activities that would be upstream mining operations. Under
the agreement, Wildfire is to pay Upstream after the work is done and invoiced.
Upstream performs its contractual obligations in July 2013 and immediately issues
a tax invoice. Wildfire incurs this expense in the 2013‑2014 MRRT year and can
therefore include the amount charged for Upstream’s services in its mining
expenditure for that year.
Example 5.15:
Joint venture funds
Pick & Shovel Co is the operator of an iron ore
mine on behalf of joint venturers, SingCo, SangCo, and SongCo. At the start of
each month, Pick & Shovel provides an estimate of expenditure for the
following month, and makes a cash call to the joint venturers for their share
of the estimated monthly expenditure. The cash call simply puts
Pick & Shovel in funds. It does not procure the carrying on of
any operations. Any pecuniary liabilities incurred by Pick & Shovel as
joint venture operator, so far as they relate to the other joint venturers’
shares, are mining expenditure for each of SingCo, SangCo, and SongCo because
Pick & Shovel is acting as their agent.
Therefore, the joint venturers only incur mining
expenditure when Pick & Shovel actually incurs a pecuniary liability
that bears the necessary relationship to upstream mining operations.
Apportioning
mining expenditure
5.35
An asset can be used both in upstream and
downstream mining operations and staff can perform functions that are relevant
to both upstream and downstream mining operations. Costs may also relate to
more than one mining project interest, or to taxable resources and non‑taxable
resources. Only the part of the expenditure incurred in the upstream
operations related to taxable resources is mining expenditure and deductible
against mining revenue. Expenditure that also serves other purposes must be
apportioned. Expenditure that is for multiple mining project interests must be
apportioned between them. [Subsection 35-10(1)]
5.36
The words ‘to the extent’, which are also familiar
to taxpayers through their frequent use in income tax law, support the
apportionment of costs. [Subsection 35-10(1)]
Example 5.16:
Activities partly for upstream mining operations
Wildfire Coal uses a loader to maintain the
run-of-mine stockpile and to load ore onto vehicles for transport to the next
stage of processing. The use of the loader will be an upstream mining
operation to the extent that it is used to maintain the stockpile. Its use
will not be an upstream mining operation to the extent that it is used to load
the ore for transport away from the stockpile. Therefore, its cost and the
costs of operating and maintaining it must be apportioned between its upstream
and downstream roles.
Example 5.17:
Expenditure incurred in growing forests to generate carbon emission units
Pinder & Sons owns and operates a coal mine in the
Illawarra region of New South Wales. Both its upstream and downstream mining
operations emit significant amounts of Co2.
Pinder & Co acquires 1,000 hectares of land in
Tasmania at a cost of $1 million to grow forests and generate emission units to
meet its emission liabilities. Based on initial estimates, Pinder & Co
will only need 300 hectares of the forest to offset the emissions generated by
the upstream operations of its coal mine. Therefore, Pinder & Co will
include $300,000 in its mining expenditure.
5.37
Apportionment of mining expenditure must be on a
fair and reasonable basis. What will be fair and reasonable is essentially a
question of fact to be determined in each case and could include using a proxy,
such as revenue, production volumes, direct costs, labour costs, or head
counts.
Example 5.18:
Apportioning between taxable and non‑taxable resources
Wildfire Coal operates a coal mine in north
Queensland. The mine can only be accessed for six months of the year due to
the wet season. The company also operates a copper mine in southern
Queensland. Wildfire purchases a fleet of 10 dump trucks for use in its coal
mine, to transport coal to the valuation point. When the wet season comes,
they move the dump trucks south to work in the copper mine.
The trucks spend 50 per cent of their time in the coal
mine and 50 per cent of their time in the copper mine. The total
cost of the dump trucks was $5,000,000. The miner must apportion this
expenditure between its coal operation and its copper operation. The miner may
only claim $2.5 million as mining expenditure.
Example 5.19:
Apportioning head office costs
Wildfire Coal operates two coal mines and one nickel
mine in Queensland. It does not engage in any other commercial activities.
During the year, Wildfire receives $200 million revenue
from each of its coal mines and $70 million from its nickel mine. The
operating expenditure for each of the coal mines is $80 million, of which $20 million
is upstream of the respective valuation points. The total operating
expenditure for the nickel mine is $160 million.
Wildfire also incurs $37 million of costs at its
Head Office in Brisbane. These costs relate to:
ASX Listing............................................... $1
million
Interest....................................................... $4 million
Private royalties....................................... $5 million
Business development............................ $5 million
Political donations................................... $1 million
Investor Relations................................... $1 million
Human Resources................................... $10 million
Management............................................ $5 million
Office lease............................................... $5 million
The ASX listing fee, investor relations and political
donation costs would not qualify as mining expenditure as they do not have the
necessary connection with the coal operations. To the extent to which the
interest and private royalties relate to the coal operations, they would be
excluded expenditure. The business development costs relate to researching
potential acquisition targets of coal and other mining projects in and out of
Australia. These costs would not be deductible for MRRT purposes on the basis
that they were not incurred in respect of a mining project interest or pre‑mining
project interest and therefore do not have the necessary connection with the
coal operations.
The remaining $20 million of human resources, office
lease and management expenditure has the necessary connection with the mining
operations but needs to be apportioned using a two‑step process: firstly
across the three mining operations, and secondly between upstream and
downstream, each on a fair and reasonable basis.
Step 1
One basis for undertaking the first step of allocating
the human resources, office lease and management expenditure to each of the
three mines may be to use a reasonable estimate of the headcount of employees
at each of the mines. A split based on total costs of each of the three mines could
also be appropriate.
Another may be to allocate the expenditure to each of
the three mines based on the proportion that the operating costs of each of the
coal mines ($80 million each) bears to the total operating costs of the three
mines ($320 million). In this case, that would result in the coal mines each being
allocated 25 per cent of the costs (or $5 million each). The $10 million that
relates to the nickel mine would never be MRRT expenditure, as nickel is not a
taxable resource.
On the facts of this case, an allocation of the human
resources, office lease and management expenditure to the three mines based on
the proportion that the revenue or profits from each of the coal mines bears to
the total mining revenue of the mines may not be reasonable. That is because
Wildfire’s revenue and profit margin from its coal mines is disproportionately
large compared to its profit margin from its nickel mine. Revenues and profits
may not therefore be an accurate proxy for working out the purpose for which
the expenditure was incurred.
Step 2
Once the cost allocation has been made to each of the
mine sites, it still needs to be split between upstream and downstream. This
could be done using the proportion of upstream/downstream costs as a proportion
of total costs at each mine. On this basis, the $5 million allocated to each
coal mine above would then be split $1.25 million to upstream and $3.75 million
to downstream, as 25 per cent of each coal mine’s costs are upstream in this
example. Upstream costs of the two mines would be MRRT expenditure and the
downstream costs may be taken into account in determining the MRRT revenue.
Other
amounts of mining expenditure
5.38
Amounts may be included in mining expenditure when
there is an adjustment to the use of an asset used in upstream mining
operations. For example, if half the cost of an asset was mining expenditure
when acquired, based on an expected 50 per cent use each in the upstream and
downstream operations of a mining project interest, a later decision to use it
fully in the interest’s upstream mining operations would lead to a further
amount of mining expenditure. This is discussed in Chapter 13. [Division 160]
Excluded
expenditure
5.39
Certain expenditure is specifically excluded from
mining expenditure because of the general design of the MRRT while others are
excluded because of the way the MRRT is intended to interact with various
claims to the resource right. These are:
• costs
of acquiring rights and interests in projects;
• royalties;
• financing
costs;
• hire
purchase payments;
• costs
of non‑adjacent land and buildings used in administrative or accounting
activities;
• hedging
losses and foreign exchange losses;
• rehabilitation
bond and trust payments;
• payments
of income tax or GST; and
• unit
shortfall charge.
[Subsection 35‑5(2)
and Subdivision 35-B]
Cost
of acquiring rights and interests in a project
5.40
An amount of expenditure is excluded expenditure to
the extent it relates to:
• acquiring
an interest in a production right covering an area, unless the expenditure is
in relation to the grant of the production right [subsection 35‑35(1)];
• acquiring
a mining project interest [subsection 35-35(2)];
or
• acquiring
an interest in profits, receipts or expenditures of, or relating to, a mining
project interest [subsection 35-35(3)].
5.41
Deductions for expenditure incurred in acquiring
rights or interests in projects are excluded for reasons of tax symmetry.
5.42
If a miner sells its right or interest in a project
it is not required to include the sale proceeds in its mining revenue (if it
were, tax would be imposed on the capitalised value of the future profits).
Accordingly, the acquirer of the right is not entitled to a deduction for any
consideration paid to acquire the right (or any costs associated therewith).
5.43
However, the same issue does not arise with respect
to expenditure incurred in association with the initial grant of a right.
Hence, expenditures such as government fees and legal expenses paid in relation
to the grant of a right are deductible.
When
something is granted
5.44
Something is ‘granted’ when it is bestowed or
conferred. The word ‘grant’ has historically been used to refer to situations
in which governments bestow property rights upon citizens (and other
entities). It has not generally been used to describe the transfer of rights.
It has been used here because the types of situations envisaged involve
governments granting exploration and production rights. Generally, such rights
can only be granted once. After they have been granted, they may be sold, but
not granted again.
5.45
However, more than one right could be granted over
the same area. For example, an exploration right may lapse and a government
may grant a new right. It is appropriate that expenditure associated with such
a subsequent grant be included in mining expenditure; it is not a transfer of
an existing mining right.
Royalties
5.46
Mining royalties, private mining royalties, and
payments that give rise to royalty credits are excluded expenditure. [Subsection
35-40(1)]
5.47
Mining royalties are discussed in detail in Chapter
6, which is about allowances.
Private
mining royalties
5.48
A private mining royalty is a payment in the nature
of a royalty to another person not made under a Commonwealth, State or
Territory law. It could be a payment in kind rather than in cash. Private
mining royalties are usually calculated by reference to a percentage or share
of the gross or net value of the taxable resource, or by reference to a
quantity of taxable resource (or of some product form or component of it) [subsection 35-45(2)].
Examples of private mining royalties include:
• payments
to a party other than under a Commonwealth, State or Territory law for access
to the land (sometimes called ‘private override royalties’); and
• payments
under resource profit sharing arrangements.
5.49
Private mining royalty arrangements differ from
government imposed royalties in that they are, in substance, profit sharing
agreements in respect of the exploitation of a resource, rather than a price
the owner earns for selling the resource.
5.50
Private mining royalties are excluded in order to
avoid the need to assess individual royalty recipients against their share of a
project’s proceeds, which would be necessary if such payments were deductible.
5.51
This approach is consistent with the treatment of
private royalties under the PRRT.
5.52
However, a private mining royalty payment is not
excluded expenditure if:
• it
is given to a contractor for services that form part of upstream mining
operations for a mining project interest and does not represent a share of the
miner’s profits [subsection 35‑40(2)].
Such expenditure is more appropriately described as a fee for services, rather
than as a private mining royalty;
• it
is paid to an entity under an agreement entered into with the entity before 2
May 2010 and at a time when the entity is a State or Territory body (other than
an ‘excluded STB’ within the meaning of section 24AT of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, which
would include a municipal corporation, public educational institution, public
hospital, or superannuation fund) [subsection 35-40(3)].
Where these arrangements were entered into prior to 2 May 2010, the miner would
not have had the opportunity to take into account the MRRT in striking the
relevant agreement; or
• it
is made, by way of consideration for the carrying on of mining operations in
the project area, to native title holders, registered native title claimants,
or a person that holds rights arising under an Australian law dealing with the
rights of Aboriginal persons or Torres Strait Islanders in relation to land or
waters that relate to the project area [subsection 35-40(4)].
Example 5.20:
Royalties paid to State or Territory bodies
Voltage Power Co (a State body) operates a coal‑fired
electricity generation plant. It holds a mineral development licence over an
area of land with significant coal deposits. Prior to 2 May 2010, it enters
into an agreement with Ready, Willing & Able Co, a mining company, to
develop part of the coal deposits, with a view to having some of the coal
supplied to Voltage Power Co’s electricity plant, and the balance sold into
export markets. Voltage Power Co consents to Ready, Willing & Able Co applying
for a mining lease over the relevant part of Voltage Power Co’s licence area,
in consideration of Ready, Willing & Able Co entering a contract to supply
coal at fixed prices to Voltage Power Co, and also paying a royalty on the
export coal sales.
The payments are mining expenditure for Ready, Willing
& Able Co because they are the price of obtaining access to the coal
deposits, and hence necessarily incurred in carrying on upstream mining
operations for the mining project interest. Although the payments of a share
of mining revenues are private mining royalties, and therefore would normally
be excluded expenditure, they are not excluded expenditure here because they
are paid to Voltage Power Co, a State or Territory body, under an agreement
entered into before 2 May 2010.
Example 5.21:
Private mining royalties and native title holders
Wildfire Coal negotiates an Indigenous Land Use
Agreement (the Agreement) with a native title group under the Native Title Act 1993. The Agreement is
registered. In accordance with the Agreement, the native title group agrees to
the granting of mining tenure over a part of their land, and to allow Wildfire
Coal to access and mine that land. Wildfire Coal agrees to provide a benefits
package that includes a lump sum payment, a share of mining revenues,
scholarship and apprenticeship programs, payments relating to heritage
protection and environmental management, and the provision of community
infrastructure.
These payments by Wildfire Coal in accordance with the
Agreement are necessarily incurred in carrying on upstream mining operations
and so are mining expenditure. Although the payments of a share of mining
revenues are private mining royalties, they are not excluded expenditure because
they are paid to a native title holder in consideration for carrying on mining
operations on its land.
5.53
Private mining royalties paid to a State or
Territory body, or to a native title holder or claimant, that are not excluded
expenditures, will be deductible if they satisfy the general expenditure test
and irrespective of whether they are paid to acquire an interest in production
right or a mining project interest. [Subsection 35-40(5)]
Financing
costs
5.54
Financing costs and associated payments are not
deductible under the MRRT. Broadly, the types of costs excluded include the
principal and interest on a loan, borrowing costs, dividends, capital returns,
trust and partnership distributions, and the costs of issuing membership interests
in entities. This is consistent with the treatment under the PRRT. [Section
35-50]
5.55
Financing costs are excluded because the purpose of
the MRRT is to tax profits arising from the non‑renewable resource that is
extracted and those profits should not depend on the way in which a miner
chooses to finance its operations.
5.56
Capital invested in upstream operations is instead
recognised through immediate deductibility and an ‘uplift’ allowance to
maintain the value of losses for activities upstream of the valuation point.
Downstream operations are effectively recognised through the process of
attributing the revenue to the resource at the valuation point.
5.57
Allowing a deduction for financing costs would
therefore amount to a double deduction for the cost of capital unless
financiers were also subject to the MRRT on their returns from their financing
activities. It would also distort investment and production decisions,
creating a bias towards debt financing instead of equity financing.
5.58
Three types of financing costs are excluded.
Financial
arrangement
5.59
Expenditure incurred in relation to an arrangement
that gives rise to a financial arrangement is excluded expenditure.
‘Arrangement’ and ‘financial arrangement’ take their meaning from the ITAA 1997
(see subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997). For these purposes a ‘financial
arrangement’ is defined to mean an arrangement under which an entity has a
legal or equitable right to provide and/or receive a financial benefit that is
cash settlable. [Paragraph 35-50(a)]
Equity
interest
5.60
Expenditure incurred in relation to an ‘equity
interest’ that is a financial arrangement is also excluded expenditure, as is
expenditure incurred in relation to is a scheme that gives rise to an equity
interest issued by the miner. [Paragraphs 35-50(b) and (c)].
5.61
‘Equity interest’ is defined in the ITAA 1997 (see
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA). Broadly, an entity holds an equity
interest if the return on the interest is linked to the economic performance of
the entity in which the interest is held.
Hire
purchase agreements
5.62
Hire purchase agreements are treated as if they are
debt funded property purchases. Therefore, any payment made in relation to a
hire purchase agreement is excluded expenditure. [Subsection 35-55(1)]
5.63
A miner who enters into a hire purchase arrangement
for property with an arm’s length party will be taken to have acquired the
property for the amount shown in the agreement as the cost or value of the
property. [Paragraph 35-55(3)(a)]
5.64
If the parties are not dealing at arm’s length, or
if the agreement does not specify a cost or value for the property, the miner
will be taken to have acquired the property for the amount that could
reasonably be expected to have been paid by the miner for the purchase of the
property had the hirer actually sold the property to the miner at the start of
the agreement, and the parties had dealt with each other at arm’s length. [Paragraph
35-55(3)(b)]
5.65
The cost of the property is taken to have been
incurred, and the asset is deemed acquired, when the property is supplied to
the miner. [Subsection 35-55(2)]
5.66
The result is that the deemed acquisition cost
could be mining expenditure, in the same way as it could be if the miner had
actually bought the property, but the actual payments made under the hire
purchase agreement are excluded expenditure.
5.67
It is important to note that these rules apply to
hire purchase agreements entered into before 1 July 2012 [Schedule
4 to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill), item 5].
If an asset is deemed to have been acquired, and an amount deemed to have been
incurred, prior to 1 July 2012 the interim expenditure rules will apply (see
Chapter 7).
Non‑adjacent
land and buildings used in connection with administrative or accounting
activities.
5.68
Capital expenditure is excluded expenditure
to the extent that it relates to land or buildings that are not adjacent to the
project area for a mining project interest and are used in connection with
administrative or accounting activities. [Section 35-60]
5.69
The reason for this approach is that land or
buildings that are at or adjacent to upstream mining operations are likely to
take their value from the production right itself and their treatment recognises
that investment in such assets is a risk associated with the project. However,
the value of non‑adjacent land and buildings does not reflect this risk and is
likely to appreciate over time. Therefore, capital payments in relation to
these assets are excluded expenditure.
5.70
However, to the extent that a building used for
accounting and administrative functions is also used for upstream mining
operations, the expenditure referable to the upstream mining operations is
deductible. This is consistent with the idea that it does not matter where
upstream mining operations occur, the expenditure associated with those
operations, is deductible.
Capital
expenditure
5.71
While the distinction between revenue and capital
expenditure is generally not relevant for MRRT purposes, it is here. Put
simply, an expense is of a capital nature if it is directed at the business
entity, structure or organisation so that the business can operate; an expense
is of a revenue nature if it is directed at the operation of the business (per
Dixon J in Sun Newspapers Ltd and Associated
Newspapers Ltd v FC of T (1938) 61 CLR 337). The purchase of land
on which a head office is constructed is an example of a capital expense, as
too would be the construction of the head office.
Adjacent
5.72
Adjacent to the project area should be taken to
mean the nearest practicable location that is consistent with this principle.
Whether a place is the nearest practicable location will vary in different
circumstances and may take into account factors such as mine operation, safety,
and remoteness.
Example 5.22:
Adjacent land and buildings
Wildfire Coal operates an underground coal mine in
relation to a production right that it holds. Due to the remoteness of the
coal mine, employees engaged in operations on the mine site live in a regional
centre located 50 kilometres away. All administration for the coal mine is
carried on at the administration building in this regional centre. The company
incurs capital expenditure in respect of that administration building. The
expenditure is not excluded expenditure as the building is ‘adjacent’ to the
project area — the nearest practical location for land or buildings where
administrative or accounting activities can be carried out for the operations
of the coal mine.
Example 5.23:
Non‑adjacent land and buildings
South & Co Mines operates an iron ore mine in the
Pilbara region. It incurs capital expenditure on a building in Perth from
which it conducts the administration associated with the mine. The capital
expenditure for the building is excluded expenditure because the building is
not adjacent to the Pilbara mines.
Example 5.24:
Administrative building used for more than one mine
Pick & Shovel operates a coal mine in Queensland
and an iron ore mine in Western Australia. It has a building adjacent to its
iron ore mine in Western Australia, from which it carries out administrative
functions that support its iron ore mine, as well as its coal mine in
Queensland. To the extent that the capital expenditure incurred on the
building is referrable to its West Australian iron ore mine, Pick & Shovel
can claim a deduction. However, the capital expenditure related to Queensland
coal mining operations is excluded expenditure because the building is not
adjacent to the coal mine.
Example 5.25:
Building used for administrative and technical functions
Remote Controlled Mining operates three iron ore mines
in the Pilbara. It has a building in Perth from which it performs
administrative functions. A number of operating, technical, and geological
services integral to upstream mining operations are also performed from this
building.
To the extent that the capital costs of the building
relate to upstream operating, technical, and geological services, they can be
included in mining expenditure.
Hedging
or foreign exchange expenditure
5.73
Expenditure is excluded to the extent that it
relates to hedging or foreign exchange arrangements. [Section
35-65]
5.74
Hedging and foreign exchange arrangements are pure
financial transactions which, while they impact on the ultimate profitability
of a business, do not affect the value of the resource. While it is doubtful
that such expenditure would ever bear a sufficient relationship to upstream
mining operations in order to satisfy the general expenditure test, this
provision removes all doubt.
Hedging
arrangements
5.75
Excluded expenditure includes expenditure that
relates to a ‘derivative financial arrangement’ (see subsection 995-1(1) of the
ITAA 1997) [paragraph 35-65(a)].
Basically, this is a financial arrangement that changes in value in response to
a variable, and in respect of which there is no requirement for a net
investment.
Foreign
exchange arrangements
5.76
Excluded expenditure also includes expenditure that
relates to a ‘foreign currency hedge’ (see subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA
1997) [paragraph 35-65(b)]. Put simply, this is
a financial arrangement that hedges a risk in relation to movements in currency
exchange rates.
Example 5.26
KF Iron Exports has entered a contract with a major
overseas industrial group to provide a substantial amount of iron ore over an
extended period for a set amount per tonne. As the currency of the country in
which the industrial group operates is volatile, KF Iron enters into a hedging
contract with a third party (unrelated to the sales contract) to cover the
possibility that the value of the currency falls during the term of the
contract. Any expenditure relating to the foreign currency hedge is excluded
expenditure for MRRT purposes.
5.77
To the extent to which a hedging or foreign
exchange arrangement forms part of a sales contract, any expenditure on the
hedge would be included in mining expenditure. That is because the sales
contract, as a non-cash settlable arrangement, would not be a ‘derivative
financial arrangement’ or a ‘foreign currency hedge’.
Rehabilitation
bonds and trust payments
5.78
Amounts provided as security for rehabilitation of
the project area for a mining project interest are excluded expenditure for the
MRRT. [Subsection 35-70(1)]
5.79
To ensure that money put aside for rehabilitation
is secure, rehabilitation bonds and trust payments are generally placed in low‑risk
investments. Therefore, it is not appropriate that the MRRT uplift rate (which
is intended to reflect the higher risk associated with a resource project)
apply to such payments.
5.80
However, if an amount held as security is paid out
by a trustee or bondholder, then that amount will be included in the miner’s
mining expenditure to the extent that it is for rehabilitation of a project
area for the mining project interest the miner has at the time the amount is
incurred by the trustee or bondholder. If more than one miner has a mining
project interest in relation to the project area, the miner may include in its
expenditure the amount that reasonably relates to its mining project. Such
amounts are considered expenditure of the miner at the time the trustee or
bondholder incurs the amount. [Subsection 35‑70(2)]
5.81
The trustee must provide the miner with a notice
containing the information the miner needs to determine the extent to which the
amount is mining expenditure for the miner. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 8, section 121‑12 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953].
Payments
of income tax or GST
5.82
Income tax payments under the ITAA 1997 or the ITAA
1936 are excluded expenditure and cannot be deducted against mining revenue. [Paragraph
35-75(a)]
5.83
Payments of GST, input tax credits and decreasing
adjustments are also excluded expenditure. As with mining revenue, all mining
expenditure is deducted on a GST‑exclusive basis. [Paragraphs
35-75(b) and (c)]
5.84
All payments of penalties or
interest under tax laws are excluded expenditure. [Paragraph 35-75(d)]
Unit
shortfall charge under the Clean
Energy Bill 2011
5.85
The amendments make unit shortfall charges incurred
by an entity in relation to its obligations under the Clean Energy Bill 2011
excluded expenditure. [Schedule 3, item 92 of the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
section 35‑80 of the MRRT Bill)
5.86
A unit shortfall occurs when an entity has not
surrendered enough emission units to meet its emissions liability. Entities
liable for a shortfall charge will pay a premium above the value of the unit.
5.87
The unit shortfall charge is excluded expenditure
for MRRT purposes to ensure that the entity liable to the charge bears its full
cost and does not have an incentive to defer its emissions liability.
5.88
The amendment to the MRRT Bill commences at the
later of the commencement of the Clean Energy Bill 2011 and the commencement of
the MRRT Bill. This ensures that both pieces of legislation are enacted before
the amendment occurs. [Clause 2 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8 of the
table]
Outline of
chapter
6.1
This chapter explains how to calculate the
individual allowances (apart from starting base allowances, which are explained
in Chapter 7) that reduce a mining profit for a Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(MRRT) year. It explains the allowances’ common features and why there are
some differences between them.
6.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 (MRRT Bill) unless otherwise
indicated.
Summary of
new law
6.3
An MRRT liability for a mining project interest is
calculated by reducing the interest’s mining profit by any MRRT allowances and
multiplying the result by the MRRT rate.
6.4
MRRT allowances are taken into account in a
specified order. The seven types of allowances available to miners, and the
order in which they are applied in working out the MRRT liability for a mining
project interest are:
• royalty
allowances;
• transferred
royalty allowances;
• pre‑mining
loss allowances;
• mining
loss allowances;
• starting
base allowances;
• transferred
pre‑mining loss allowances; and
• transferred
mining loss allowances.
6.5
Starting base allowances are explained in Chapter 7.
6.6
Only so much of the available royalty credits, pre‑mining
losses and mining losses (including by way of transfer) as are necessary to
reduce the mining profit to nil can be an MRRT allowance in a particular MRRT
year.
6.7
Allowances reduce the mining profit of a mining
project interest in the specified order until either the mining profit is
reduced to nil or the available royalty credits, pre‑mining losses, mining
losses and starting base losses are exhausted.
6.8
The balance of any royalty credits, mining losses
and pre‑mining losses available after the mining profit is reduced to nil are
then available to be transferred to offset mining profits of certain other
mining project interests. Any balance remaining after these transfers is
carried forward to future MRRT years and is uplifted.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Allowances
generally
6.9
Under the MRRT, the mining profit of a mining
project interest for an MRRT year must
be reduced by any available MRRT allowance. [Sections 60‑10, 65‑10, 70‑10, 75‑10, 80‑10,
95‑10 and 100‑10]
6.10
Allowances are applied in this order:
• royalty
allowances;
• transferred
royalty allowances;
• pre‑mining
loss allowances;
• mining
loss allowances;
• starting
base allowances;
• transferred
pre‑mining loss allowances; and
• transferred
mining loss allowances.
The allowance highest in the order must be fully
applied before the next highest can be applied, and so on. [Section
10‑10]
Allowances
only up to the amount of the mining profit
6.11
If royalty credits, pre‑mining losses, mining
losses or starting base losses are available, the amount of each is applied in
calculating the relevant allowance up to the amount of the mining profit
remaining after applying any higher ranked allowances. [Sections
60‑10, 60‑15, 65‑10, 65‑15, 70‑10, 70‑15, 75‑10, 75‑15, 80‑10, 80‑15, 95‑10, 95‑15,
100‑10 and 100‑15]
Example 6.1:
Ordering of allowances
Alpha Coal Co has a
mining profit for a mining project interest for an MRRT year of $52 million and
available royalty credits of $5 million, a pre‑mining loss of $3 million and a
mining loss of $45 million.
The $5 million royalty
credit is fully applied to calculate a royalty allowance of $5 million, which
reduces the remaining mining profit to $47 million. The pre‑mining loss
is fully applied to calculate a pre‑mining loss allowance of $3 million, which
reduces the remaining mining profit to $44 million. The available mining loss
of $45 million is applied to the extent necessary to reduce the remaining
mining profit to nil. That is, a mining loss allowance of $44 million, leaving
an available mining loss of $1 million.
6.12
Any remaining royalty credits, mining losses and
pre‑mining losses still available after the mining profit is reduced to nil can
then be transferred to other mining project interests to the extent possible to
reduce their mining profits. Different conditions need to be satisfied for
royalty credits, pre‑mining losses and mining losses to be transferrable.
These are explained below.
Order
of applying royalty credits, losses and pre‑mining losses
6.13
If there is more than one royalty credit, more than
one mining loss, or more than one pre‑mining loss available, they are applied
in the order in which they arose. [Subsections 60‑15(2), 65‑15(2), 70‑15(2),
75‑15(2) 95‑15(2) and 100‑15(2)]
6.14
The miner may choose the order in which to transfer
two or more royalty credits, pre‑mining losses or mining losses that arose at
the same time. [Subsections 65‑15(2), 95‑15(2) and 100‑15(2)]
Uplifting
6.15
The conversion of royalty credits, pre‑mining
losses and mining losses to allowances only occurs to the extent that the
particular allowance will be fully applied to reduce mining profit for the
year. The royalty credits, pre‑mining losses and mining losses still unapplied
at the end of the year are uplifted. The amounts of royalty credits and mining
losses are uplifted at the long term bond rate + 7 per cent (LTBR + 7 per cent)
each year [subsections 60‑25(2) and 75‑20(3)].
The amount of a pre‑mining loss is uplifted at the LTBR + 7 per cent for
the first 10 years after the loss arises, but only at the long term bond rate (LBTR)
thereafter [section 70‑50].
When
two interests relate to iron ore or do not relate to iron ore
6.16
Before amounts can be transferred between two
interests to give rise to a transferred royalty allowance, a transferred pre‑mining
loss allowance or a transferred mining loss allowance, one of the preconditions
is that the two interests must either both
relate to iron ore or both not
relate to iron ore. This limits transfers to project interests with the same
broad groupings: those that are related to iron ore and those that are related
to coal.
6.17
An interest will relate to iron ore if it relates
to extracting:
• iron
ore
[paragraph 20‑5(1)(a)]; or
• something
produced from a process that results in iron ore being consumed or destroyed
without extraction [paragraph 20‑5(1)(c)].
6.18
An interest will not relate to iron ore (that is,
it will effectively relate to coal) if it relates to extracting:
• coal
[paragraph
20‑5(1)(b)];
• coal
seam gas as a necessary incident of mining coal [paragraph 20‑5(1)(d)];
or
• something
produced from a process that results in coal being consumed or destroyed
without extraction [paragraph 20‑5(1)(c)].
Example 6.2:
Pre‑mining project interests do not relate to iron ore
Greater Coal Gas Co has two pre‑mining project
interests. One pre‑mining project interest involves an extensive coal deposit
that Greater Coal is considering developing into a coal mine. The other pre‑mining
project interest is awaiting State approval to begin a coal seam gasification
operation.
The first pre‑mining project interest relates to coal.
The second pre‑mining project interest relates to gas produced by consuming the
coal in situ.
Since neither of Greater Coal’s pre‑mining project
interest relates to iron ore, allowances may be transferable between them.
Example 6.3:
Mining project interests relate to different resources
Green Bond Mines has a mining project interest that
extracts coal with an available mining loss and another mining project interest
that extracts iron ore that has a mining profit for the year.
The first mining project interest relates to coal.
The second mining project interest relates to iron ore. As the project
interests relate neither both to iron ore nor both to something other than iron
ore, the mining loss of one mining project interest cannot be transferred to
the mining project interest with the mining profit.
Royalty
allowances
6.19
A miner has a royalty allowance for a mining project
interest if the interest has a mining profit and there are royalty credits that
relate to that interest [section 60‑10]. The
amount of the royalty allowance is the sum of the available royalty credits up
to the amount of the mining profit [subsection 60‑15(1)].
Excess royalty credits are applied in calculating any transferred royalty
allowance for another mining project interest of the miner for the MRRT year if
that other interest is integrated with the first mining project interest at all
times from when the royalty credit arose to the end of the transfer year. Any
remaining royalty credits are uplifted and are available for use in future years.
Royalty
credits
6.20
For a liability to be relevant in determining if a
royalty credit arises for a mining project interest, it has to be incurred on
or after 1 July 2012. It does not matter whether the resources were
extracted on, before, or after that day. [Subsection 60‑20(2); and Schedule 4
to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011, item 6]
Royalties
6.21
A mining royalty gives rise to a royalty credit for
a mining project interest when the miner incurs a liability to pay the royalty
in relation to taxable resources extracted under a production right that
relates to the interest. [Paragraph 60‑20(1)(a)]
6.22
A mining royalty is a liability payable under a
Commonwealth, State or Territory law to make a payment in relation to a taxable
resource, extracted under the authority of a production right, that:
•
is a royalty; or
• would
have been a royalty if the taxable resource had been owned by the Commonwealth,
a State or Territory just before it was recovered.
[Subsection 35‑45(1)]
6.23
The first dot point alludes to the need for a
mining royalty to be a ‘royalty’ within the ordinary meaning of that word.
Within its ordinary meaning, a royalty is a payment usually made in respect of
a particular exercise of a right to take a substance that is calculated in
respect of either the quantity or value taken or the occasions on which it is
exercised (see FCT v Sherritt Gordon Mines
Ltd 77 ATC 4365 at p. 4372; Stanton
v FCT (1955) 92 CLR 630 at p. 642). So, for instance, a royalty
does not include amounts imposed by some State mining legislation by way of
interest for late payment of mining royalties, even if those interest payments
are described as ‘royalties’ for the purposes of that legislation.
6.24
The second dot point deals with possible arguments
that a relevant liability cannot be a royalty if it is not payable to the Crown
and that a payment cannot be a royalty if it is not paid to the owner of the
resources in situ. It ensures that
liabilities incurred under Australian laws can still be a mining royalty even
when payable to private owners of taxable resources in the ground.
6.25
Mining royalties include royalties payable to the
Commonwealth, as well as the more common State and Territory royalties. This
is necessary because the MRRT law extends to Australia’s offshore areas, which
can be the subject of authorities to extract resources under the Offshore Minerals Act 1994. Commonwealth
royalties could apply in respect of such resources (see section 4 of the Offshore Minerals (Royalty) Act 1981).
Payments
by way of recoupment of royalties
6.26
A royalty credit also arises for a mining project
interest when the miner incurs a liability to pay an amount (in relation to a
taxable resource extracted under a production right that relates to the
interest) to another entity by way of recoupment of a liability of the other
entity that:
• gives
rise at any time to a royalty credit for that other entity in relation to the
production right; or
• would
give rise at any time to a royalty credit for that other entity if the other
entity had a mining project interest relating to that production right.
[Paragraph 60‑20(1)(b)]
6.27
This covers the situation where a miner with a
mining project interest but no direct interest in the production right has to
compensate the production right holder for the mining royalty it must pay. It
does not matter whether the production right holder itself has a mining project
interest in relation to that production right.
Example 6.4:
Minerals rights agreement
Alister Co owns a mining lease on which it mines
mineral sands. Under a Minerals Rights Agreement, Alister grants Blaster Co an
exclusive right to enter the land covered by the mining lease to mine and
remove iron ore. Title in the iron ore is transferred at the point of extraction.
Under the agreement, Blaster Co is contractually obliged to comply with the
obligations associated with the Mining Lease to the extent those obligations
relate to the exercise of its iron ore right. One of the obligations is that
Blaster Co pays the State all the royalties applicable to the iron ore it mines
that are legally payable by Alister Co as the mining lease holder.
Blaster Co is the miner under the MRRT law and Alister
Co is not because it does not share in the production from the operation. Blaster
Co is entitled to a royalty credit, even though Alister Co is legally required
to pay the royalties. The royalty credit is available to Blaster Co because
its payment to the State on behalf of Alister Co recoups Alister Co’s liability
that would have given rise to a royalty credit if Alister Co had had a mining
project interest.
6.28
It also covers cases where a miner has to
compensate someone else who in turn has to compensate the production right
holder. This could arise when a miner conducts a mining operation by agreement
with the production right holder but sub‑leases the actual mining activities to
another miner in return for a share of the taxable resources produced. The
possibility of a chain of such obligations is covered. [Paragraph 60‑20(1)(b)]
6.29
Whether the holder of the mining project interest
obtains a royalty credit for royalties paid by another party (for instance, the
production right holder) depends on whether the interest holder pays an amount
to the other party to recoup the actual royalty the other party pays.
‘Recoupment’ is defined by section 20‑25 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) and includes any
kind of recoupment, reimbursement, refund, insurance, indemnity or recovery
however described. [Section 300‑1, definition of ‘recoupment’]
Example 6.5:
Royalty reimbursement arrangement
Porthole Properties Pty Ltd grants Fox Fine Ores an
exclusive license to access and mine coal on its production right. Fox
acquires title in the coal after it is loaded onto the run-of-mine stockpile
and must pay Porthole $5 a tonne for the coal it sells. Porthole is required
by State law to pay royalties for the coal Fox mines but is, under its
agreement with Fox, entitled to reimbursement of those royalties.
Fox is the miner under the MRRT, and Porthole is not
because it does not share in the production from the operation. Therefore,
Porthole is not entitled to any royalty credit for the royalties it pays. Fox
is reimbursing Porthole rather than paying a royalty directly but is still
entitled to a royalty credit for the payments because they ‘recoup’ Porthole’s
royalty payments and Porthole would have got a royalty credit for its payments
if it had been a miner.
6.30
A miner reduces its royalty credits in an MRRT year
it receives, or becomes entitled to receive, a recoupment of a liability that
gave rise to a royalty credit for one of its mining project interests. Royalty
credits are reduced in the order in which they arose. Only any remaining
royalty credits after this reduction can produce royalty allowances and
transferred royalty allowances for that year. [Subsection 60‑30(1)]
6.31
In the same way that royalty credits are the
grossed‑up amount of the royalty liability (this is explained later),
recoupments of royalty liabilities are grossed‑up before they reduce a miner’s
royalty credits. [Paragraph 60‑30(1)(a)]
6.32
If the reduction for the recoupment exceeds the
miner’s royalty credits available to be reduced, the excess becomes mining
revenue of that year. [Subsection 60‑30(2) and section 30‑45]
6.33
The effect of generating royalty credits for royalty
payments relating to a production right and for payments to recoup the payer of
such royalties, and reducing
credits for receiving recoupments of such payments, is that the royalty credit
from the actual payment of the royalty is apportioned between the various
entities that have a mining project interest related to the production right.
That apportionment might not occur within a single MRRT year. For example, if
a royalty paid in one year was recouped in the following year, there would be
royalty credits in the first year and a reduction in royalty credits in the
second year.
Example 6.6:
Royalty recoupment
Smelaya Resources and Malyshka Minerals are jointly
developing a mine owned by Smelaya. They have agreed to share equally the
resources they mine and the costs they incur.
In 2014‑15, Smelaya is liable for royalties of $5
million to the State but, under the terms of the agreement, is entitled to a
$2.5 million reimbursement from Malyshka. Smelaya generates a royalty credit
of $22.22 million ($5 million/0.225) and Malyshka generates a credit of $11.11
million ($2.5 million/0.225) for its liability to reimburse Smelaya. Smelaya
will reduce its credit by $11.11 million for that recoupment.
In 2015‑16, the State refunds Smelaya $2 million of
its royalty payment as an incentive to further develop the mine. This
recoupment reduces Smelaya’s royalty credits for 2015‑16 by $8.89 million
($2 million/0.225). Because it is liable to pass half of that on to
Malyshka, it would also generate a royalty credit of $4.44 million
($1 million/0.225). Receipt of the refund reduces Malyshka’s 2015‑16
royalty credits by $4.44 million.
Initial
amount of a royalty credit
6.34
The amount of a royalty credit in the year it
arises is the grossed‑up amount of the royalty liability incurred. The
grossing‑up is achieved by dividing the royalty amount by the MRRT rate. That
produces a deductible amount that will have the same effect as an offset equal
to the royalty payment. The royalty amount has to be converted into a
deductible amount, rather than applied as an offset, because the ordering of
allowances requires royalty allowances to be recognised before some deductible amounts (such as losses).
[Subsection 60‑25(1)]
Example 6.7:
Royalty payments and royalty credits
South and Co Mines extracts 500,000 tonnes of iron ore
from its mining project. The State charges a 7.5 per cent royalty on the
value of the iron ore at the point of sale. South and Co sells the
iron ore to a third party for $150 per tonne. It pays a State royalty of
$5.625 million.
South and Co Mines’ royalty payment is converted to a
royalty credit for MRRT purposes by dividing it by the MRRT rate of 22.5 per
cent giving a royalty credit of $25 million. Its annual mining profit for the
mining project is $55 million. The royalty credit is applied to produce a
royalty allowance of $25 million. South and Co Mines’ mining profit is reduced
to $30 million by the royalty allowance, which exhausts the royalty credit.
Example 6.8:
Royalty payment to private landowner
Zenat Ltd extracts 20,000 tonnes of coal during an
MRRT year from land owned by Yady Co, which also owns the coal in the ground.
Under State legislation, a royalty of $6 per tonne extracted is payable
directly to Yady on a monthly basis. Zenat has an available royalty credit of
$533,333 [(20,000 × $6)/0.225] that will be applied to calculate its royalty
allowance. The payments to Yady would normally be a private mining royalty but
are instead mining royalties because they are paid under State legislation.
Uplifting
unused royalty credits
6.35
The amount of a royalty credit available in a later
year is the royalty credit available for the previous MRRT year less what was
applied during that previous year to work out a royalty allowance or a transferred
royalty allowance. That result is uplifted by the LTBR + 7 per cent. [Subsection
60‑25(2)]
Using
up a royalty credit
6.36
A royalty credit ceases to be a royalty credit once
it has been fully applied in working out royalty allowances for the mining
project interest or transferred royalty allowances for other mining project
interests. [Subsection 60‑20(3)]
Transferred
royalty allowances
6.37
A miner has a transferred royalty allowance for a mining
project interest for an MRRT year if the interest has a remaining mining profit
(after application of royalty allowances) and there are unused royalty credits
available that can be transferred to it from other interests. [Section
65‑10]
6.38
A royalty credit of one mining project interest can
be transferred and used to offset a mining profit in another mining project
interest, if:
• the
two mining project interests are integrated at all times from when the royalty
credit arose to the end of the year in which the royalty credit is transferred;
and
•
the royalty credit does not relate to a year for
which an election was made to use the alternative valuation method.
[Subsection 65‑20(1)]
6.39
Transferability of royalty credits aims to put
mining project interests that are unable to combine (because they have quarantined
allowances) into a similar position (prospectively) as if they had combined.
6.40
Whether two mining project interests are integrated
is explained in Chapter 9.
6.41
The amount of a royalty credit that can be
transferred to a mining project interest cannot exceed the amount of the
receiving interest’s remaining mining profit. [Subsection 65‑15(1)]
6.42
Royalty credits must be transferred in the order in
which they arose. If several royalty credits arose at the same time (for
example, if there are several mining project interests with credits available
to transfer), the miner can choose which of them to transfer. [Subsection 65‑15(2)]
Pre‑mining
loss allowances
6.43
An entity has a pre‑mining loss allowance for a mining
project interest for an MRRT year if it has an available pre‑mining loss that
relates to that interest and it has a remaining mining profit after deducting
all higher ranked allowances. [Section 70‑10]
6.44
The amount of the pre‑mining loss allowance is the
lesser of the sum of the available pre‑mining losses and the remaining mining
profit. [Subsection 70‑15(1)]
6.45
Any pre‑mining losses remaining after a pre‑mining
loss allowance is calculated are then applied in calculating any transferred
pre‑mining loss allowance for the MRRT year. Any pre‑mining losses remaining
after that are then available for use in future years to reduce future mining
profits for that mining project interest. They are uplifted at the LTBR + 7 per
cent for the first 10 years, and at the LTBR thereafter. [Section 70‑50]
6.46
A pre‑mining loss is an available pre‑mining loss
for a mining project interest if it relates to a pre‑mining project interest
from which the mining project interest originated. A mining project interest
‘originates’ from a pre‑mining project interest when the mining project
interest starts to apply to an area and at the same time the pre‑mining project
interest stops applying to that area. [Section 70‑20]
6.47
A pre-mining loss ceases to be a pre-mining loss
once it has been fully applied in working out pre-mining loss allowances for
the mining project interest or transferred pre-mining loss allowances for other
mining project interests. [Subsection 70‑30(2)]
Pre‑mining
project interest
6.48
A pre‑mining project interest is an interest in an authority
or right for a purpose (other than an incidental purpose) of exploration or
prospecting for taxable resources. If the interest relates to both iron ore
and another taxable resource it is treated as two separate pre‑mining project
interests: one relating to the iron ore and the other relating to the other
taxable resource(s). [Section 70‑25]
6.49
Since ‘exploration or prospecting’ is defined to
include studies to evaluate the economic feasibility of mining discovered
resources, pre‑mining interests will include interests in mineral development
leases, which are usually held for those purposes. An interest in a retention
lease is also considered a pre‑mining project interest, since one of the
significant rights conferred under a retention lease is to explore. [Sections 70-25
and 300‑1, definition of ‘exploration or prospecting’]
Pre‑mining
losses
6.50
An entity has a pre‑mining loss for an MRRT year if it
holds a pre‑mining project interest and its pre‑mining expenditure for the
interest exceeds its pre‑mining revenue for the interest for the MRRT year. [Subsection 70‑30(1)]
6.51
This allows pre‑mining project expenditure (for
example, exploration expenditure) that is a necessary precursor to the
development of a mining project interest to be recognised under the MRRT.
Pre‑mining
expenditure
6.52
An entity’s pre‑mining expenditure for a pre‑mining
project is expenditure, whether of a capital or revenue nature, to the extent
it is necessarily incurred in carrying on the pre‑mining project operations,
and is not excluded expenditure. [Subsections 70‑35(1) to (4)]
6.53
Operations or activities are pre‑mining project operations
to the extent that they would have been upstream mining operations if the
interest were a mining project interest rather than a pre‑mining project
interest [subsection 70‑35(5)]. Upstream
mining operations of a mining project interest are discussed in Chapter 5.
6.54
In some circumstances, an entity that holds a
pre-mining project can also include amounts in its pre-mining expenditure for
the exploration activities carried on by another entity under a ‘farm‑out’ arrangement.
A farm-out typically involves an agreement between:
• an
entity that holds a pre-mining project interest (the farmor) wanting to explore
that project area; and
• another
entity (the farmee) who incurs expenses exploring the project area, in exchange
for an interest in the pre-mining project interest.
6.55
Where the farm‑out arrangement results in the
farmee being granted an interest in the pre-mining project, then the farmor
will include an amount in its pre-mining expenditure at that time to reflect the
value of the interest they have given up in exchange for the exploration.
[Divisions 35
and 195]
Example 6.9:
Successful farm-out arrangement
Farmor Co holds an exploration permit. It is
interested in exploring the pre‑mining project area. Farmee Co agrees to undertake
the exploration work in exchange for a 10 per cent interest in the exploration
permit. Farmee Co agrees to complete the exploration within three years and
does so.
Farmor Co may include in its pre-mining expenditure an
amount for the exploration services completed by Farmee. The non-cash benefit
rules (in Division 195) operate such that the amount of the deduction will be
the market value of the exploration services. The amount ascertained using the
non-cash benefit rules is included in Farmor Co’s pre-mining expenditure when
it is necessarily incurred.
However, Farmee Co’s exploration expenses are excluded
expenditure because they are its cost of acquiring a right (being its interest
in the permit).
6.56
However, in some circumstances the farm-out arrangement
will not be completed and the farmor will not be required to give the farmee an
interest in the pre-mining project interest. In those circumstances, the
farmor will have obtained the benefit of the exploration without any
expenditure. Specific provision is therefore made to ensure that the costs of
the exploration are included in the pre-mining expenditure for the farmor’s
interest. They are included in pre-mining expenditure when it becomes clear
that the farmee is not going to be granted the interest. [Subsection 70‑35(7)]
Example 6.10:
Unsuccessful farm-out arrangement
Farmor Co holds an exploration permit. It is
interested in exploring the pre‑mining project area. Farmee Co agrees to
undertake the exploration work in exchange for a 10 per cent interest in the
exploration permit. Farmee Co agrees to complete the exploration within three
years but fails to do so.
At the end of the three years, the amounts incurred by
Farmee Co in exploring in the project area are included by Farmor Co in the pre‑mining
expenditure for the pre-mining project interest.
No
double counting of pre-mining expenditure
6.57
The same amount cannot be included in the
pre-mining expenditure of an entity under two or more provisions. This
prevents the double counting that could arise if an amount was otherwise
allowable under more than one provision. [Subsection 70-35(8)]
6.58
Similarly, where the same amount is
included in both mining expenditure and pre-mining expenditure it is only to be
allowable under the provision that is most appropriate. To determine which the
most appropriate provision is, it will be necessary to have regard to the facts
and circumstances of the particular case, including the character of the amount
and its relationship to the mining project interest and pre-mining project
interest. [Subsection 70-35(9)]
Pre-mining
revenue
6.59
An amount is pre-mining revenue if it would have been
mining revenue if the pre‑mining interest to which the amount relates had
instead been a mining project interest. For instance, the sale of taxable
resources that have been extracted under a mineral development lease will give
rise to an amount of pre-mining revenue. In some instances, the amounts of
pre-mining revenue will exceed the amounts of pre-mining expenditure for a
pre-mining interest for an MRRT year to produce a pre-mining profit.
Pre-mining profits are discussed in Chapter 12. [Section 70‑40]
Mining loss
allowances
6.60
A mining project interest has a mining loss allowance
for an MRRT year if the interest has a mining profit remaining after all higher
ranked allowances (royalty allowance, transferred royalty allowance and pre‑mining
loss allowance) have been applied and there is an available mining loss for the
interest. [Section 75‑10]
6.61
The amount of a mining loss allowance is the lesser
of the remaining mining profit and the available mining losses for the mining
project interest. When working out the amount of a mining loss allowance,
mining losses are applied in the order in which they arise. So, a mining loss
that arises in the 2012‑13 MRRT year will be applied before a mining loss that
arises in the 2013‑14 MRRT year. [Section 75‑15]
6.62
A mining project interest has a mining loss for an
MRRT year if its mining expenditure exceeds its mining revenue for the year.
The amount of the mining loss for that year is the amount of the excess. [Subsections
75‑20(1) and (2)]
6.63
The amount of a mining loss available in a later
year is the mining loss available for the previous year less the amount of it
that was applied during that preceding year in working out a mining loss
allowance or transferred mining loss allowances. The result is uplifted by the
LTBR + 7 per cent. [Subsection 75‑20(3)]
Example 6.11:
Mining losses
Slow Start Pty Ltd’s mining project interest makes a
mining loss for each of the 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017 MRRT years. It then
makes a mining profit in the 2018 and 2019 MRRT years.
Assume:
• LTBR
for all years is 6 per cent, so the uplift factor is 1.13 (0.06 + 1.07).
•
There are no other relevant allowances or
transferred allowances.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(100)
|
(50)
|
(200)
|
(100)
|
(20)
|
400
|
800
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
‑
|
(100)
|
(113)
|
(127.69)
|
(144.29)
|
(163.05)
|
‑
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
(50)
|
(56.50)
|
(63.85)
|
(72.14)
|
‑
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
(200)
|
(226)
|
(255.38)
|
(154.35)
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
(100)
|
(113)
|
(127.69)
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
(20)
|
(22.60)
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
‑
|
(113)
|
(127.69)
|
(144.29)
|
(163.05)
|
(184.24)
|
‑
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
(56.50)
|
(63.85)
|
(72.14)
|
(81.52)
|
‑
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
(226)
|
(255.38)
|
(288.58)
|
(174.41)
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
(113)
|
(127.69)
|
(144.29)
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
(22.60)
|
(25.54)
|
|
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
‑
|
|
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
455.76
|
The 2018 MRRT year’s
mining profit of $400 million is reduced by a mining loss allowance worked out
taking into account so much of each available mining loss as does not exceed
the mining profit, starting with the oldest. The mining loss for the 2013 MRRT
year, as uplifted to the 2018 MRRT year ($184.24 million), is applied first.
This is followed by the mining loss for the 2014 year,
as uplifted to the 2018 year ($81.52 million). Then the mining loss for the
2015 year, as uplifted to the 2018 year ($288.58 million), is applied but
only to the extent that it reduces the mining profit in the 2018 year to nil. Therefore,
only $134.24m of that loss is used up
($400m − $184.24m − $81.52m)
This remaining $154.34 million of the mining loss for
the 2015 year will be uplifted for the 2019 year (to $174.40 million) to be an
available mining loss to be applied in calculating the mining loss allowance to
be deducted from the $800 million mining profit for the 2019 year.
6.64
The mining loss from a particular MRRT year ceases
to be a mining loss if it has been fully applied in working out either one or
more mining loss allowances or one or more transferred mining loss allowances.
[Subsection 75‑20(4)]
Transferred
pre‑mining loss allowances
6.65
Because most mineral exploration in Australia is
conducted by entities that do not themselves mine their successful discoveries,
the transfer of pre‑mining losses is dealt with differently from the transfer
of mining losses. Pre‑mining losses do not have to satisfy a common ownership
test before they can be transferred. However, they do have to satisfy the
requirements that transfers occur between interests related to the same type of
taxable resource and held by the same entity or by a closely associated
entity. The transfer of pre‑mining losses is also capped where they are
acquired for an amount that is less than their tax value.
When
does a miner have a transferred pre-mining loss allowance?
6.66
A miner has a transferred pre‑mining loss allowance for a
mining project interest if it has any remaining mining profit after deducting
all higher ranked allowances and there are available pre‑mining losses. [Section
95‑10]
6.67
There are two situations in which a mining project
interest can have a transferred pre‑mining loss allowance.
6.68
The first is where the miner (or a close associate)
has a mining project interest and holds a pre‑mining project interest in
relation to the same type of taxable resource. The pre‑mining losses
associated with the pre‑mining project interest can be applied to work out a
transferred pre‑mining loss allowance for the mining project interest. [Subsections 95‑20(1)
and (2)]
6.69
The second is where a miner has a mining project
interest that originated from a pre‑mining project interest that had a
pre-mining project loss. ‘Origination’ was discussed in more detail above. In
these circumstances, the originating mining project interest inherits the pre‑mining
loss, which can be applied to work out a transferred pre‑mining loss allowance
another mining project interest of the miner, or a close associate. [Subsections
95‑20(1) and (3)]
Meaning
of closely associated
6.70
An entity is closely associated with another entity at a
particular time if they are both members of the same consolidatable group for
income tax purposes, or would be if the entities were Australian residents.
Broadly speaking, the concept of a ‘consolidatable group’ in the income tax law
is relevant to deciding whether a group of wholly-owned entities could be
treated as a single entity for income tax purposes. However, the income tax
concept does not permit foreign residents to be the head or members of a
consolidatable group. However, reflecting the MRRT policy of requiring the
transfer of pre‑mining losses between all
members of a group, the Australian residence requirement of the definition of
‘consolidatable group’ is ignored for these purposes. [Subsection
95‑20(5) and section 300‑1, definition of ‘consolidatable group’]
Amount
of a transferred pre‑mining loss allowance
6.71
The amount of a transferred pre‑mining loss
allowance is the amount of the available pre‑mining losses (or the amount of the
mining project interest’s remaining mining profit if that is less). [Subsection 95‑15(1)]
6.72
In calculating the amount of the allowance, pre‑mining
losses are applied in the order in which they arose. If there are several pre‑mining
losses that arose in the same year (because they arose from different pre‑mining
project interests), the miner can choose which of them to transfer first. [Subsection
95‑15(2)]
Capping
the amount of a transferred pre‑mining loss allowance
6.73
On the sale of a pre‑mining project interest or a
mining project interest, any pre‑mining losses that exist in relation to that
interest will be transferred with it. These transfers are explained in Chapter
10.
6.74
The purchaser can then apply the pre‑mining losses
to reduce mining profits of its (or its close associates) mining project
interests.
6.75
However, to prevent trading in pre‑mining losses
that have a greater economic value than the underlying project interest (the loss
interest), the extent to which those pre‑mining losses can be transferred to
another mining project interest (the receiving interest) may be capped when an
interest is acquired. [Sections 95-25 and 95-30]
6.76
The cap applies if either the receiving interest or
the loss interest was not held by the miner or a close associate at all times
from the start of the loss year until the end of the year in which the loss is
being transferred. This common ownership test is not focused on whether there
has been a change in the direct ownership of the interests, nor is it asking if
the interests have remained in the one entity or group. Rather, the test
focuses on the relationship between the holders of the two project interests
and asks whether, at each moment within the test period, both were held by the
same entity or by entities within the same common group (even if the entities
holding them, or the group they were part of, changed from time to time within
the period). [Paragraph 95‑25(2)(b) and subsection 95‑25(3)]
6.77
The cap only applies to pre-mining losses that
arose before the cap arises and which are to be transferred in that year or a
later year. In other words, the cap does not limit the transfer of pre-mining
losses that arise for a year after the cap arises. [Paragraphs
95-25(2)(c) and (d)]
6.78
The cap arises in relation to a loss interest or a
receiving interest when an entity starts to have the interest. However, as an
exception to this, the cap does not arise when the interest starts to exist
(such as on the initial grant of a production or an exploration right). The
cap also does not apply if the entity starts to have the interest simply
because it is the head company of a group that consolidates, or is the entity
leaving a consolidated group. [Paragraph 95-30(1)(a)]
6.79
The cap also arises when the entity that has the
receiving interest or the loss interest joins a consolidatable group (or would
if the Australian residence requirements of that definition were ignored).
This means that the cap will arise when an entity that holds the loss interest
becomes closely associated with a miner that has the receiving interest. [Paragraph 95-30(1)(b)]
6.80
The amount of the cap is worked out by grossing‑up the
amount paid for the receiving interest or the loss interest. Where the entity
that has the interest joins a consolidatable group, the cap is worked out by
grossing up so much of the amount paid for that entity as is attributable to
the interest. [Subsection 95-30(2)]
Example 6.12:
Cap on transferable pre‑mining losses
Log Jam Co. buys:
• a
mining project interest for $1 million; and
• a
pre‑mining project interest for $2 million, which has $10 million of pre‑mining
losses from an earlier year.
Assume that the mining project interest has sufficient
mining profit to utilise any of the pre‑mining losses available. At the end of
the MRRT year, Log Jam is required to transfer its pre‑mining losses to the
mining project interest, subject to the following caps:
• for
the mining project interest — the cap is $4.44 million ($1m/0.225); and
• for
the pre‑mining project interest — the cap is $8.88 million ($1m/0.225).
Log Jam must transfer only $4.44 million of its pre‑mining
losses to the mining project interest.
Transferred mining loss allowances
6.81
A miner has a transferred mining loss allowance for a
mining project interest for an MRRT year if the interest has a mining profit
(after the application of all other allowances) and there is a mining loss that
is available to be transferred. [Section 100‑10]
6.82
The amount of a transferred mining
loss allowance cannot exceed the remaining mining profit the mining project
interest has. [Subsection 100‑15(1)]
6.83
Mining losses that can be transferred must be
applied in the order in which they arose. However, if several losses arose at
the same time (for example, if there are several mining project interests with
losses available for transfer), the miner can decide the order in which they
are applied. [Subsection 100‑15(2)]
6.84
A mining loss of a mining project interest must be
transferred to another mining project interest if:
• the
two mining project interests satisfy the common ownership test [paragraph
100‑20(1)(a)];
• the
mining loss is not attributable to an MRRT year in respect of which an election
was made to use the alternative valuation method for its mining project
interest [paragraph 100‑20(1)(b)];
and
• the
two mining project interests both relate to iron ore or both relate to taxable
resources that are not iron ore (that is, a coal mining project interest cannot
transfer its mining loss to reduce a mining profit from an iron ore mining
project interest and vice versa) [paragraph 100‑20(1)(c)].
Example 6.13:
Order of application of mining losses
Hidden Treasure Mines Ltd has mining project interest
A, which it has owned since before the MRRT and which has mining losses for
each of the 2013 to 2016 MRRT years. In the 2014 MRRT year, it acquires mining
project interest B. Mining project interest B has a remaining mining profit
(after higher ranking allowances are applied) in the 2016 MRRT year. Due to
the common ownership test, mining project interest A’s mining losses of 2013
and 2014 cannot be applied to mining project interest B. They will be carried
forward (and uplifted) to be used against mining project interest A’s own
future mining profits.
In the 2016 MRRT year, the mining losses of project
interest A for the 2015 and 2016 MRRT years must be applied against mining
project interest B’s 2016 mining profit (after all other allowances have been
applied). The loss for 2015 must be applied first and that for 2016 applied if
there is any profit remaining.
Common ownership test
6.85
The common ownership test is satisfied if, at all
times from the start of the year for which the mining loss arose to the end of
the year in which the mining loss is to be applied, the two mining project
interests were held by the same miner or by miners who are closely associated
with each other. [Section 100‑25]
6.86
The common ownership test is not focused on whether
there has been a change in the direct ownership of the mining project
interests, nor is it asking if the interests have remained in the one entity or
group. Rather, the test focuses on the relationship between the holders of the
two mining project interests and asks whether, at each moment within the test
period, both were held by the same entity or by entities within the same common
group (even if the entities holding them, or the group they were part of,
changed from time to time within the period).
6.87
This test is similar to the common ownership test
that can limit the transfer of some pre-mining losses (discussed above).
However, while a pre-mining loss that fails the common ownership test may only
be limited in the extent to which it is transferred, a mining loss that fails
to meet the common ownership test cannot be transferred at all.
Example 6.14:
Same miner has both interests
Echo Coal Co is the head
of a consolidated group (which consolidated for MRRT purposes in 2012). Mining
project interest P1 has a mining loss for the 2013 year and mining project
interest P2 has a mining profit for that year. Because it is a consolidated
MRRT group, both interests are treated as being held by the group’s head
entity, Echo Coal Co, from the start of the loss year until the end of the
transfer year. P1’s mining loss is available to reduce P2’s mining profit for
the year. Similarly, P1’s mining loss is available to be applied in calculating
a transferred mining loss that will reduce mining profits of P3, P4 or P5.

Example 6.15:
Transfer of the group containing loss and profit project interests
Following on from the previous example, Foxtrot Coal
Co purchases Bravo Coal Co (which owns P1 and P2). Bravo Coal Co is now part
of Foxtrot’s consolidatable group. P1 and P2 have moved from Echo’s
consolidated group to Foxtrot’s consolidatable group. While P1 and P2 have
existed in two different groups during the test period, the two interests have
always been in the same group as each other. There has been no interruption to
their relationship; they have continually been closely associated with each
other. P1 is required to transfer any available mining loss to P2 as it has a
mining profit, up to the amount of that profit. However, P1’s mining loss
cannot be transferred from P1 to P6 or P7 since P1 was not in common ownership
with P6 and P7 at all times from the start of the year in which the mining loss
arose to the end of the year in which the mining loss is to be applied.

Example 6.16:
Loss project interest transferred within same consolidatable group
Following on from the previous example, Foxtrot Co
undertakes a restructure and moves ownership of P2 from Bravo Coal Co to Hotel
Coal Co. As Foxtrot’s group is not consolidated, each subsidiary within the
group is a miner and responsible for its own MRRT liability.
While P1 and P2 are now held by different miners, each
miner is within the same consolidatable group. Therefore both mining project
interests have at all times been held by miners closely associated with each
other. P1’s available mining loss would still be required to be transferred to
P2 up to the amount of P2’s remaining mining profit but those mining losses
could still not be transferred to P6 or P7 for the same reason as in the
previous example.

Example 6.17:
Loss and profit project interests sold simultaneously
Following on from the
previous example, India Coal Co, a single entity miner, simultaneously
purchases P1 and P2 from Bravo Coal Co and Hotel Coal Co. P1 and P2 are now
held by the same miner (a single entity). As P1 and P2 were purchased by India
Coal Co at the same time, both mining project interests continue to have always
been closely associated with each other. Therefore, any available mining loss
in P1 still needs to be transferred to P2 up to the amount of P2’s remaining
mining profit.

Outline of
chapter
7.1
This chapter explains Part 3‑5 (Divisions 80, 85
and 90) of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 (MRRT Bill), which deals
with starting base allowances. Starting base allowances reduce a mining
project interest’s Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) liability for an MRRT
year.
7.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the MRRT Bill unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
7.3
Starting base allowances recognise investments in
assets (starting base assets) relating to the upstream activities of a mining
project interest that existed before the announcement of the resource tax
reforms on 2 May 2010. They also recognise certain expenditure on
such assets made by a miner between 2 May 2010 and 1 July 2012.
7.4
A mining project interest has a starting base
allowance if it has profit remaining after using all other higher ranked
allowances, and it has one or more starting base losses. Unlike other losses,
starting base losses are never transferable to other mining project interests.
7.5
A starting base loss reflects the annual
depreciation (decline in value) of the starting base assets. If there is
insufficient profit to use a starting base loss, it is carried forward and
uplifted.
7.6
A miner can choose to work out the starting base
losses for its mining project interest based on either:
• the
market value of starting base assets (including rights to the resources) at 1
May 2010; or
• the
most recent accounting book value of starting base assets (not including rights
to the resources) available at that time.
7.7
Under the market value approach, a starting base
asset is depreciated over the shorter of: the asset’s remaining effective life;
the life of the mine; and the period until 30 June 2037. The
undepreciated value of a starting base asset is not uplifted, though the real
value of any unused losses is preserved by uplifting them by the consumer price
index (CPI).
7.8
Under the book value approach, a starting base
asset is depreciated over five years. The undepreciated value of a starting
base asset is uplifted each year by the long term bond rate plus 7 per cent
(LTBR + 7 per cent). Any unused losses are also uplifted by the
LTBR + 7 per cent.
Detailed
explanation of new law
A miner has
an allowance when it can use a starting base loss
7.9
A mining project interest has a starting base
allowance if it has sufficient profit to use some or all of its starting base
losses, after using all other higher ranked allowances [sections
80‑10 and 80‑15]. Royalty, transferred royalty,
pre‑mining loss, and mining loss allowances are all higher ranked allowances [section 10‑10].
7.10
A mining project interest has a starting base loss
for a year when the miner holds a starting base asset and there is a decline in
value of that asset. The loss is reduced to the extent it is applied as a
starting base allowance, and ceases to exist when it has been fully applied. [Section 80‑20]
Starting base
assets produce starting base losses
What
is a starting base asset?
7.11
Starting base assets include most tangible and
intangible assets that are relevant to the upstream operations of a mining
project interest. [Section 80‑25]
7.12
A starting base asset is one that is used, installed ready
for use, or being constructed for use in carrying on the upstream mining
operations in relation to a mining project interest at the ‘start time’ [subsections 80‑25(1)
and (2)]. The concept of ‘upstream mining
project operations’ is explained in Chapter 5. The ‘start time’ is
explained below.
7.13
The definition of a starting base asset is based on
the income tax definition of a ‘CGT asset’ (see section 108‑5 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA
1997)), which means any kind of property or a legal or equitable right.
7.14
The ‘asset’ concept is a broad one, encompassing
all types of legal property and rights. Where a miner holds an interest in an
asset, the interest in the underlying asset is itself capable of being a starting
base asset. [Section 250-15]
7.15
Land that is used in upstream mining operations can
be a starting base asset. Improvements to land or fixtures on land are treated
as separate assets, not as part of the land, regardless of whether they can be
removed from the land or are permanently attached. This ensures that a miner
can hold these things as starting base assets, regardless of whether it holds
the land on which the improvement or fixture exists. [Subsection 80‑25(5)]
Some
starting base assets are combined under the market value approach
7.16
Notwithstanding that improvements to land are
treated as separate to the land, under the market value approach, any
improvement to land (but not a fixture) in the project area of a mining project
interest is taken to be part of the same starting base asset as the rights and
interests constituting the mining project interest. This inclusion reflects
the practical difficulty in ascribing a separate market value to improvements
to land, which of their nature cannot be dealt with separately from the
underlying mining rights. [Paragraph 80‑30(1)(d)]
7.17
In further recognition of these valuation
difficulties, under the market value approach, an improvement to land that
existed on 1 May 2010 is recognised in the starting base even if it
is consumed or destroyed before the start time [paragraph 80-25(4)(b)].
In contrast, other starting base assets must be used, installed ready for use,
or being constructed for use in the upstream mining operations at the start
time [subsection 80-25(1)].
7.18
For an interest using the market value approach,
mining information (as defined in subsection 40‑730(8) of the ITAA 1997) is
treated as an item of property or a legal or equitable right. This is
necessary since information is not otherwise considered a legal asset as it is
not capable of assignment (for example, see Hepples
v FCT (1990) 90 ATC 4497 and Taxation Determination TD 2000/33). [Paragraph 80‑25(4)(a)
and section 300‑1, definition of ‘mining, quarrying and prospecting
information’]
7.19
Like improvements to land, any mining information
relating to a mining project interest is taken to be part of the same starting
base asset as the rights and interests that comprise the mining project
interest. Again, this reflects the interdependent nature of these assets and
the difficulties that would arise if they were to be valued separately. For
the same reason, any goodwill that would otherwise be considered a separate
starting base asset is instead taken to be part of this single starting base
asset. [Subsection 80‑30(1)]
7.20
This composite starting base asset is taken to be a
depreciating asset (unless none of the constituent assets are depreciating
assets), which has an effective life equal to the longest effective life of any
of those rights and interests. As a consequence, it will be written off over
the shorter of that life and the period until the end of 30 June 2037. [Subsections 90‑15(1),
(2) and (3)]
Some
starting base assets are excluded under the book value approach
7.21
For a mining project interest using the book value
approach, the rights and interests that make up the mining project interest
itself are not included in the definition of a starting base asset. This
reflects the policy to exclude the value of the taxable resources if a miner chooses
the book value approach. For the same reason, the value of mining information
is also excluded. It is unlikely that goodwill would be an asset that can be
meaningfully identified in relation to the upstream operations of a mining
project interest (as goodwill is normally associated with a business enterprise
as a whole). However, to the extent that it would otherwise be considered a
starting base asset, goodwill is also excluded under the book value approach. [Paragraph
80‑25(3)(a)]
Mine
development expenditure as a starting base asset
7.22
Some expenditure that is incurred between
2 May 2010 and 1 July 2012 is included in the starting base
even though it does not relate to another starting base asset. This
expenditure, called mine development expenditure, is itself taken to be a
starting base asset. It is expenditure incurred in carrying on upstream mining
operations that relates to developing a mine. It includes the costs of
removing overburden, excavating a pit and sinking a mineshaft, which are generally
treated as a revenue expense and so would not otherwise be included in the
starting base. Mine development expenditure is discussed further under
‘interim expenditure’ below. [Section 80-35]
There
are no starting base assets unless a starting base return is lodged
7.23
An asset is not considered to be a
starting base asset where a miner fails to make a valid choice about whether to
use the market value or the book value approach or fails to lodge a starting
base return. The starting base choice is described below and the starting base
return is discussed in Chapter 18. [Paragraph 80‑25(3)(b)]
Assets
used, installed ready for use, or being constructed for use
7.24
The concept of an asset being ‘used, or installed
ready for use’ also appears in the depreciation provisions of the income tax
law (see section 40‑60 of the ITAA 1997).
7.25
The word ‘used’ takes its ordinary meaning, which
in any particular case will depend on the context in which the word is employed
and the purpose for which the asset is held (Newcastle
City Council v Royal Newcastle Hospital (1956) 96 CLR 493).
7.26
The degree of physical or active use that is
required to constitute ‘use’ will depend to a certain extent on the nature of
the asset and the purpose for which it is held. For a tangible depreciating
asset, physical or active employment of the asset would generally be expected
in order for an asset to be considered to be being ‘used’. For an intangible
asset, employment of the asset may not be physical and the asset may be
considered to be being ‘used’ in the context of passive use. However, use
would generally be expected to involve an exploitation of the inherent
character of the asset.
7.27
The phrase ‘installed ready for use’ is defined in
subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997 and requires not only that the asset
be installed ready for use but also that it be ‘held in reserve’. In that
context, a thing is ‘held in reserve’ if it is held for future use in an
existing operation and the concept of holding in reserve is not ‘so wide as to
embrace income producing operations which may be undertaken at some future
time’ (Case X46 90 ATC 378
(at 381)). [Section 300‑1, definition of ‘installed ready for
use’]
7.28
In the context of the MRRT starting base, the
phrase ‘being constructed for use’ is intended to cover assets that are in the
process of being created by the miner for later use in the upstream operations
of the mining project interest. A similar concept exists in section 41-25 of
the ITAA 1997 in respect of the investment allowance, and there is case law on
the former investment allowance provisions which provides guidance on the
concept. See, for example, FC of T v. Tully
Co-operative Sugar Milling Association Limited 83 ATC 4495; Monier Colourtile Pty Ltd v. FCT (1984) 84
ATC 4846, and Utah Development Co. v. FCT
(1983) 83 ATC 4545.
Start
time for starting base assets
7.29
A starting base asset is one that is used,
installed ready for use, or being constructed for use in carrying on the
upstream mining operations in relation to the mining project interest at the
later of:
•
1 July 2012; and
• the
time production (other than incidental production) commences for the mining
project interest.
[Subsection 80‑25(2)]
7.30
This time is referred to as the ‘start time’ of the
starting base asset. It defines the time from which the asset’s decline in
value is worked out to produce starting base losses. Before this time, the
assets will not be recognised as starting base assets and so will not be
capable of producing starting base allowances. In this way, the start time
defines the way in which recognition of the starting base is deferred until
there is production of taxable resources from a mining project interest.
7.31
Many mining project interests that exist on 1 July
2012 will already be producing taxable resources and so, for them, the start
time will be that date.
Production
other than incidental production
7.32
However, some mining project interests will be in a
development phase on 1 July 2012 and will not be producing until a later time.
For these interests, the start time is deferred until that production gets
underway.
7.33
The start time does not occur when there has merely
been incidental production of taxable resources from the project area of a
mining project interest. That is, it is not sufficient that a mining revenue
event has occurred in relation to a taxable resource extracted from a project
area.
7.34
Whether the extraction of taxable resources amounts
to ‘production’ or merely ‘incidental production’ is a question of fact that
should be determined having regard to the purpose for which, and the manner and
volume in which, those resources are being extracted. For instance, the
extraction of taxable resources that occurs before the development of a mine
may constitute ‘incidental production’. However, ‘production’ is not intended
to be necessarily limited to the way in which, and the extent to which, taxable
resources are planned to be extracted when the mine is fully developed and
operational.
Example 7.1:
Not incidental production
Blue Tongue Co. has a mining project interest, which
relates to an underground coal mine it is developing on land covered by its
production right.
On 1 July 2012, Blue Tongue Co. is extracting coal as
part of its work to build the shaft and underground development workings of the
mine. It is able to sell these resources for $50 million. It is liable to pay
MRRT in relation to the sale of these resources.
The amount of coal being extracted, and the value at
which it is sold is significant enough to represent non-incidental production,
notwithstanding that part of the purpose for which the coal is extracted is to
further develop the mine.
Blue Tongue Co. will be able to recognise and write
off its starting base assets from 1 July 2012 even though it has not yet
started to produce taxable resources in the volumes it intends when the mine is
fully operational.
Example 7.2:
Incidental production
Tiger Co. holds a production right on which it is
considering developing an open cut mine. In assessing the viability of that
potential development, Tiger Co. decides to mine enough coal to make a trial
shipment to a potential customer in Japan, to test the quality of the coal in a
Japanese blast furnace. Tiger Co. mines 20,000 tonnes of coal from the mine
and sells it as one cargo for $4 million. It is liable to pay MRRT in relation
to the sale of these resources.
This production is considered to be incidental
production, as it was a single cargo, prior to a commitment to build the coal
mine on the area covered by the production right. While it was able to sell
these taxable resources, Tiger Co. is not producing resources in sufficient
quantities to meet regular orders from customers. As this extraction is merely
incidental to a wider purpose of testing the feasibility of a mine it is not
production that meets the test for determining the start time of starting base
assets.
Start
time of a combined mining project interest under the market value approach
7.35
In some cases, a miner can choose to combine mining
project interests that are integrated in their downstream mining operations. This
is discussed in detail in Chapter 9. The interests that are combined are
referred to as ‘constituent interests’. Under the market value approach, the
start time of an asset that is, or includes, one of these constituent interests
is deferred until the time that production commences in relation to that constituent
interest. [Paragraph 80‑25(2)(b) and subsection 80-30(2)]
7.36
In other words, for a single starting base asset
that relates to a constituent interest that, apart from a downstream
integration choice, would be a separate mining project interest, the start time
is the time production (other than incidental production) commences in the
project area of the constituent interest.
7.37
However, where a miner has a mining
project interest that includes constituent interests that are combined because
they are upstream integrated, and
the market value approach is chosen, the start time for the asset that is, or
includes, one of these constituent interests is when production commences from
any of those constituent interests. So, if a mine covers multiple production
rights that meet the upstream integration test, the start time for the single
starting base asset comprising those rights is when the production occurs from
any of those rights. [Paragraph 80‑25(2)(b)]
Example 7.3:
Downstream integration of constituent interests that include upstream
integrated interests
Nelson Minerals Co. has two separate iron ore mines,
Grimley and Stolarek. Grimley mine is made up of two production rights. The
production rights making up Grimley mine satisfy the upstream integration test.
The two mines are also sufficiently integrated to meet the downstream
integration test. Nelson Minerals Co. has chosen to combine the mines into a
single mining project interest.
At 1 July 2012, Grimley mine is producing taxable
resources from an area covered by one of its production rights, but not the
other. The start time for the starting base asset that includes the two
production rights that relate to Grimley mine is 1 July 2012.
At that time, no taxable resources are extracted from
the area covered by the production right that relates to Stolarek mine. The
start time for the starting base asset that includes that production right
occurs when taxable resources start to be produced from that production right.
When
does a miner hold a starting base asset?
7.38
The MRRT meaning of ‘hold’ broadly adopts the
income tax definition for depreciation purposes (see section 40‑40 of the ITAA
1997), which generally refers to the economic owner of the asset. However, in
order to ensure that the entity that will bear an MRRT liability also has the
benefit of a starting base, the entity that has a mining project interest is
taken to hold the starting base asset that is the rights and interests
constituting the mining project interest. [Sections 250‑5 and 250‑10]
Amount of a
starting base loss
7.39
The starting base loss is based on a portion of the
value (the decline in value) of the starting base assets. The principles and
mechanisms used in the depreciation provisions of the income tax law (Division
40 of the ITAA 1997) have, to the extent possible, been adopted to work
out the decline in value of a starting base asset.
Amount
of a starting base loss in the year in which it arises
7.40
For the year in which the starting base loss
arises, it is worked out as follows:
• Step
1: Work out the decline in value of each starting base asset the miner held in
the year.
• Step
2: Reduce that result to the extent that the asset is used, installed ready
for use, or being constructed for use, for a purpose other than upstream mining
operations of the mining project interest.
• Step
3: Reduce the result further to the extent the asset relates to a use that
would not be deductible under the MRRT.
• Step
4: Add up the resulting amounts for each of the starting base assets.
Step
1 — Decline in value of each starting base asset
7.41
The starting base loss includes an amount equal to
the ‘decline in value’ for a year of a starting base asset that a miner held
for any time during the year. This is explained further below. [Subsection
80‑40(1)]
Step
2 — Ignore the decline in value to the extent it does not relate to upstream
mining operations
7.42
The starting base loss does not include any part of
the asset’s decline in value that is attributable to the miner using the asset,
having it installed ready for use, or constructing it for use, for a purpose
other than upstream mining operations in relation to the mining project
interest. [Subsections 80‑40(2) and (3)]
7.43
Any decline in value that is not attributable to
upstream mining operations will not contribute to a loss. However, this does
not affect the decline in value itself, which will continue irrespective of the
use of the asset. This means that any decline that is attributable to a period
when the asset was not used for upstream mining operations is not available to
form part of a starting base loss in a later year.
Example 7.4:
Ignore decline in value for downstream use
Fran Co. has one starting base asset with a base value
for the MRRT year of $10 million. The decline in value of the asset for the
year is $1 million.
Fran Co. uses the asset 20 per cent in the upstream
mining operations of its mining project interest. Therefore, the starting base
loss is $200,000 (which is the full decline, reduced by $800,000 to reflect the
use of the asset other than in upstream mining operations).
Fran Co. has chosen the market value approach for the
mining project interest, so the base value of the asset for the next MRRT year
is $9 million.
7.44
The narrow base of the MRRT means there is a need
to apportion the decline in value. This will be relevant when starting base
assets are partly used to mine taxable resources and partly used to mine non‑taxable
resources, or even when assets used solely to mine taxable resources are partly
used for downstream mining operations (that is, activities after the valuation
point). As under the general mining expenditure provision (discussed in
Chapter 5), this apportionment should be made on a fair and reasonable basis.
Step
3 — Ignore the decline in value to the extent it relates to amounts that would
be explicitly not deductible
7.45
The starting base loss does not include any part of
the asset’s decline in value that would be excluded expenditure if it were an
amount that was incurred on or after 1 July 2012 [subsections
80‑40(2) and (4)]. So, to the extent that the
circumstances which lead to an amount being specifically non‑deductible apply
in relation to a starting base asset in a year, the decline in value of that asset
is so reduced. For an explanation of ‘excluded expenditure’, see Chapter 5.
Example 7.5:
Ignoring the decline that relates to excluded expenditure
Cham Co. has a starting base asset which is a building
located away from the project area. In the 2013‑14 year, the building is used
partly for accounting activities. If Cham Co. had incurred a capital amount
during the year in relation to the building it would be excluded expenditure to
that extent. As a consequence, to that extent the decline in value of the starting
base asset (the building) for the year is not taken into account in working out
the starting base loss.
7.46
Expenditure incurred to acquire an interest in a
production right is one type of excluded expenditure [section
35‑35]. However, if the market value approach is
chosen, the decline in value of a starting base asset that is a production
right (or an interest in a production right) is not reduced simply because it
relates to the production right [subsection 80‑40(5)].
Example 7.6:
Decline that relates to a starting base asset that is a production right
Fox Co. chooses to use the market value approach. It
has a starting base asset which is an interest in a production right. If Fox
Co. incurred an amount during the year to acquire this interest, it would be
excluded expenditure. However, the decline in value for the year for the
starting base asset (the interest) is not affected in these circumstances.
Step
4 — Add up the remaining amounts for each starting base asset
7.47
The starting base loss is the total of the amounts
worked out under steps 1 to 3 for each starting base asset [subsections
80‑40(1) and (2)]. In other words, a miner adds
together the decline in value of each of the starting base assets of a
particular mining project interest to work out the interest’s starting base
loss for the year (less any reductions under steps 2 and 3). As explained
above, this starting base loss produces an allowance to the extent that the
interest has sufficient mining profits to offset these losses.
Amount
of a starting base loss after the year in which it arises
7.48
In a later year, the starting base loss includes
any unused starting base loss for the mining project interest for the previous
year, increased by an uplift factor. [Section 80‑45]
7.49
An unused starting base loss is any part of a
starting base loss that did not become a starting base allowance in the
previous year. In other words, it is the amount (if any) by which the starting
base loss for the previous year exceeded the mining profit for the previous
year, after all higher ranked allowances had been applied.
7.50
To the extent that a starting base loss is not used
in a year, it is uplifted and carried forward to the next year. The uplift
factor that applies is:
• under
the book value option —
LTBR + 7 per cent [paragraph (a) of the definition of ‘uplift
factor’ in subsection 80‑45(1)]; and
• under
the market value option — the
CPI for the previous year ending 31 March. The CPI is expressed in the
same way as in subsection 960‑275(1) of the ITAA 1997 [paragraph (b)
of the definition of ‘uplift factor’ in subsection 80‑45(1)].
Example 7.7:
Starting base loss for a year after the loss arose
Link Co. has a starting base loss of $1 million for
the 2015‑16 MRRT year. It has no mining profits remaining after it applies its
higher ranked allowances, so it carries forward the entire loss to the next
year.
Link Co. has chosen the book value approach for the
mining project interest, so it uplifts the loss by the LTBR + 7 per cent.
Assume the long term bond rate (LTBR) for the 2015‑16 MRRT year is 6 per cent.
Therefore, in the 2016‑17 MRRT year, the amount of the
2015‑16 starting base loss is $1.13 million ($1m × (0.06 + 1.07)).
Starting
base losses of a mining project interest originating from pre‑mining project
interests with different valuation approaches
7.51
A starting base loss can arise in relation to a pre‑mining
project interest from which a mining project interest originates. Also, a
mining project interest can originate from two or more pre-mining project
interests. Where this occurs and a miner has chosen to use the book value
approach in relation to one or more of the pre-mining interests and the market
value approach in relation to one or more of the other pre‑mining interests,
then there are two starting base losses that arise in an MRRT year for the
mining project interest. One is a starting base loss in relation to any
pre-mining interest that uses the book value approach, and the other is a
starting base loss in relation to any pre-mining interest that uses the market
value approach. Of the two starting base losses that arise in the same year,
the starting base losses that relate to book value approach will be applied
first, then the starting base losses that relate to market value approach.
This is also what happens when two mining project interests that use different
valuation methods combine, which is discussed in more detail in Chapter 9. [Section 80‑50]
Choosing
between the market value and book value approaches
7.52
A miner can choose to value and write off all the
starting base assets in relation to a mining project interest using either the
market value or the book value approach. [Paragraph 85‑5(1)(a), subsection 85‑5(2)
and section 85‑15]
7.53
The choice can also be made in relation to a
pre-mining project interest. Although a starting base will not apply in
relation to a pre‑mining interest, the choice can be exercised in relation to
that interest so that a mining project interest originating from the pre-mining
project interest can apply that choice. [Paragraph 85‑5(1)(b)]
Choice
applies to all assets used in a project
7.54
The choice as to which approach to adopt needs to
be made by a miner in relation to all the starting base assets in a particular
mining project interest. As the choice may need to be made before the start
time, it applies to those assets that are not yet, but may become, starting
base assets of the mining project interest or of a mining project interest that
will originate from the pre-mining project interest. [Subsection
85‑5(1)]
7.55
Where a miner has more than one mining project
interest, it can adopt different approaches in relation to the different
interests. As starting base losses are not transferable between different
mining project interests, there is no requirement that the different mining
projects of a miner (or a closely associated miner) have adopted the same
approach.
Making
the choice
7.56
The starting base choice is made by lodging a
starting base return in the approved form that specifies the choice to use the
market value or book value approach and provides information about the base
value of starting base assets. The starting base return is discussed in
greater detail in Chapter 18. [Section 85-5 and Schedule 1 to the Minerals
Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011
(MRRT (CA&TP) Bill), item 8, section 117‑20 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953)]
7.57
Generally, an entity is able to make its starting
base choice and lodge its starting base return up to the earlier of the day its
MRRT return for the first MRRT year is due (or would have been due if it was
required to lodge a return for that year), or within a further time allowed by
the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner). However, where the project
interest is transferred after 1 July 2012 and before a choice is made, the
transferee must make the choice and lodge the starting base return by the same
time the transferor would have been required to if it had continued to have the
interest.
7.58
The choice is irrevocable [Schedule
1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8, section 119‑10 of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]. It applies to the starting base
assets of the mining project interest for the first MRRT year and all later
years [subsections 85-5(1) and (5)].
7.59
However, the irrevocable choice
could be problematic if there is uncertainty as to what constitutes a mining
project interest at the time the choice needs to be made. In these
circumstances, there would be compliance and administrative difficulties if an
entity was required to specify the particular mining project interests to which
a choice applies. For example, at that time there may be doubt as to whether
mining project interests were integrated and so able to combine (see Chapter 9
for an explanation of integration and combination). In order to ameliorate
these potential difficulties, an entity can choose to use a valuation approach
in relation to the mining project interest(s) or pre-mining project interests
that relate to a particular area, rather than nominating the project interests
directly. [Subsection 85‑5(4)]
Example 7.8:
Choice covering an area
Bay Co. has two mining operations, Alpha and Beta,
which it initially considers to be two mining project interests. The start
time for each is 1 July 2012.
Bay Co. elects to use the book value approach in
relation to any mining project interest(s) it has at 1 July 2012 that
relate to the area covered by Alpha.
Bay Co. elects to use the market value approach in
relation to any mining project interest(s) it has at 1 July 2012 that
relate to the area covered by Beta.
After making the choice, Bay Co. identifies that it
actually held three mining project interests on 1 July 2012, as it
had been mistaken about the ability to combine two mining project interests
(Gamma and Delta) into the one mining project interest Beta.
Bay Co.’s choice to use the market value approach
validly applies to Gamma and Delta as these mining project interests relate to
an area covered by the choice, notwithstanding the irrevocable nature of the
choice which it originally thought applied to Beta.
Example 7.9:
Choice covering more than one mining project interest
Port Co. has two mining operations, Epsilon and Zeta,
which it initially considers to be separate mining project interests. The
start time for each is 1 July 2012.
Port Co. elects to use the book value approach in
relation to Epsilon, and to use the market value approach in relation to the
other mining project interests it has at 1 July 2012. At a later
time, Port Co. identifies that it actually held one mining project interest on
1 July 2012, as it had been mistaken about the ability to separately
identify Epsilon and Zeta, which should have been identified as a single mining
project interest, Omega.
Port Co.’s choice to use the market value approach in
relation to the other mining project interests it has at 1 July 2012
validly applies to Omega, notwithstanding the irrevocable nature of the choices
which it originally thought applied to Omega.
Restrictions
on when a miner can choose the book value approach
7.60
Any miner can choose the market value approach to
work out the value of its starting base assets. However, a miner can only
choose the book value approach if an audited financial report was prepared in
relation to the mining project interest during the 18 months before 2 May 2010.
[Paragraph
85‑10(1)(a)]
7.61
This financial report must also relate to a
financial period that ended in
the 18 months prior to 2 May 2010. This precludes the use of a
financial report that relates to a financial period that ended before that
time, even if the report was prepared
in the 18 months prior to 2 May 2010. [Paragraph 85‑10(1)(b)]
7.62
The miner (or the consolidated entity of which it
is a part) must have prepared the financial report in accordance with the
accounting standards. The financial report must also have been audited in
accordance with the auditing standards. [Paragraphs 85‑10(1)(a) and (c) and
subsection 85‑10(2)]
7.63
A ‘financial report’ means an annual financial
report or a half‑year financial report prepared under Chapter 2M of the Corporations Act 2001. Either
of these is acceptable, though the initial book value would be the value of the
asset recorded in the most recent audited financial report available before
2 May 2010. [Paragraph 90‑25(3)(a)]
7.64
‘Accounting standard’ and ‘auditing standard’ are
both defined as having the same meaning as in the Corporations Act 2001 [section 300‑1, definitions of
‘accounting standard’ and ‘auditing standard’].
‘Consolidated entity’ is also defined in the Corporations Act 2001
to mean a ‘company, registered managed investment scheme or
disclosing entity together with all the entities it is required by the
accounting standards to include in consolidated financial statements’.
What
happens if a miner does not make a valid choice?
7.65
As mentioned above, if an entity fails to make a
valid choice about whether to use the market value or the book value approach and
lodge a starting base return, it will not have any starting base assets [paragraph
80‑25(3)(b)]. However, the Commissioner may allow
further time for an entity to do this [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 8, subsection 117‑20(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
How to work
out the decline in value of starting base assets
7.66
As discussed above, the starting base loss will be
based on the decline in value of the starting base assets. The decline in
value of a starting base asset is worked out using the following formula:

[Section 90‑5]
7.67
The ‘base value’ of an asset represents the value
of the asset that can be further declined. It is a year‑start amount on which
the decline in value for the year can be worked out. The base value of a
starting base asset will depend on whether the miner has elected to use the
book value approach or the market value approach. This is explained further
below.
7.68
‘Starting base days’ are the days in the year
(other than those that occur before the start time or after a starting base
adjustment event) in which the miner held the starting base asset and either
used it, had it installed ready for use, or was constructing it, for any
purpose [subsection 80‑40(6)]. This part of
the formula apportions the decline in value where an asset is held for less
than the full MRRT year (such as where it is disposed of during the year).
Consistent with other parts of the tax law, this apportionment is done over 365
days, regardless of whether the year is a leap year. As explained above, where
a miner uses its starting base asset for purposes other than upstream mining
operations, this will not affect the decline in value but it will affect the
amount of the starting base loss.
7.69
The ‘write off rate’ of a starting base asset will
depend on whether the miner has elected to use the book value approach or the
market value approach.
Write
off rate under the book value approach
7.70
The following table lists the annual write off
rates under the book value approach. [Section 90‑10]
Table 7.1:
Annual write off rates under the book value approach
|
|
|
|
the MRRT year in which
the start time for the asset occurs
|
36%
|
|
the first MRRT year
commencing after the start time for the asset occurs
|
37.5%
|
|
the second MRRT year
commencing after the start time for the asset occurs
|
37.5%
|
|
the third MRRT year
commencing after the start time for the asset occurs
|
60%
|
|
the fourth MRRT year
commencing after the start time for the asset occurs
|
100%
|
7.71
These rates are based on those announced on
2 May 2010. However, the rates have been adjusted to reflect the
declining balance approach used in the formula above.
7.72
The 2 May 2010 announcement stated that
depreciation was to occur over five years with the following profile: 36 per
cent; 24 per cent; 15 per cent; 15 per cent; and 10 per cent. However,
this profile assumed a fixed balance being depreciated in each year. Under the
declining balance approach, the equivalent write off rates are: 36 per cent;
37.5 per cent; 37.5 per cent; 60 per cent; and 100 per cent.
7.73
The results under each approach are identical.
However, the declining balance approach has been chosen as a more efficient
legislative expression, given the need to make adjustments to increase the base
value of an asset for any interim expenditure and the
LTBR + 7 per cent uplift.
Write
off rate under the market value approach
7.74
Under the market value approach, the write off rate
of a starting base asset for an MRRT year is worked out by reference to its
remaining effective life, according to the following equation:

[Subsection 90‑15(1)]
7.75
The ‘remaining effective life’ of an asset that is
a depreciating asset (under Division 40 of the ITAA 1997) is any period of its
effective life that is yet to elapse as at the start of the MRRT year. [Subparagraph (a)(i)
of the definition of ‘remaining effective life’ in subsection 90‑15(1)]
7.76
For this purpose, the effective life of a starting
base asset is the period worked out under Division 40, as at the asset’s start
time. This may require a miner to reassess the effective life of its assets at
the start time, rather than relying on its original estimates for income tax
purposes. This may be significant when the original estimates have not taken
into account changes in the way the assets are used.
7.77
The term ‘effective life’ describes the length of
time over which any entity could reasonably expect to use the particular
asset. The estimated effective life of an asset is expressed in years. Part
years are expressed as a fraction, and are not rounded to the nearest whole
year (see sections 40-100 and 40‑105 of the ITAA 1997).
7.78
Under Division 40 of the ITAA 1997, a taxpayer
usually has the option to use an effective life determined by the Commissioner
or to work out the effective life of the asset itself according to how long the
asset can be used to produce income (see section 40‑95 of that Act). An
exception is the effective life of a mining, quarrying or prospecting right,
which is the period over which the taxpayer reasonably expects the reserves can
be extracted from the mine.
7.79
The remaining effective life of the combined
starting base asset (explained above) is taken to be the longest remaining
effective life of any of the constituent assets are that are depreciating
assets. If none of the constituent assets are depreciating assets, then the
combined asset will not be taken to be a depreciating asset. [Subsection
90‑15(3)]
Example 7.10:
Effective life of the starting base asset that includes the mining project
interest and mining information
Tool Co. has a single starting base asset that
consists of its interest in production right Kappa, and another interest in
production right Sigma. The remaining effective life of the single starting
base asset is worked out according to the longest effective life of these
rights, as worked out under Division 40 of the ITAA 1997 at the start time.
On 1 July 2012 (the start time), Tool Co. works out
the effective life of Kappa to be 15 years, and Sigma to be 10 years (according
to Tool’s estimates on 1 July 2012 about the reserves of the different mines to
which each right relates).
The remaining effective life of the starting base
asset is based on the period of the effective life of Kappa that is yet to
elapse. Therefore, at the end of 30 June 2013, the remaining effective life of
the starting base asset is 14 years.
7.80
The remaining effective life of a starting base
asset may be capped to the shorter of the following:
• the
longest remaining effective life of any right or interest that makes up the
mining project interest; and
• the
period until 1 July 2037 (which is 25 years after the MRRT commences).
[Subsection 90‑15(2)
and subparagraphs (a)(ii) and (iii) of the definition of ‘remaining effective
life’ in subsection 90‑15(1)]
7.81
In other words, an asset with a remaining effective
life that exceeds any of these caps is taken to have a remaining effective life
equal to the shorter of the caps.
7.82
Starting base assets that are not depreciating
assets (and so do not have an effective life for income tax purposes, such as
land and many intangibles) will also be taken to have a remaining effective
life equal to the shortest of those caps. [Subsection 90‑15(2) and paragraph (b) of
the definition of ‘remaining effective life’ in subsection 90‑15(1)]
Base
value under the book value approach
Base
value for the year in which the start time occurs
7.83
Under the book value approach, for the MRRT year in
which the start time occurs, the base value of a starting base asset that was
held in relation to the mining project interest (or the pre-mining project
interest from which the mining project interest originates) at all times in the
interim period is:
• the
initial book value of the asset [subparagraph 90‑25(1)(a)(i)];
plus
• any
valuation amounts (uplifted interim expenditure) [subparagraph 90‑25(1)(a)(ii)].
7.84
If the starting base asset was not held at all
times in the interim period (because it was acquired during that period), then
its initial base value is simply the sum of the valuation amounts (uplifted
interim expenditure) [paragraph 90‑25(1)(b)].
‘Interim period’ is explained below.
Initial
book value
7.85
The initial book value of a starting base asset is:
• the
amount recorded in the accounts that produced the most recent audited financial
report available before 2 May 2010, uplifted from the date of that
report until the end of the year in which the start time occurs; or
• if
the auditor’s report recorded another value in relation to the asset — that value,
uplifted from the date of the auditor’s report until the end of the year in
which the start time occurs.
The uplift factor is the LTBR + 7 per cent. [Subsections
90‑25(3) and (5)]
Valuation
amounts for interim expenditure
7.86
Valuation amounts for interim expenditure include
the interim expenditure (explained below) in relation to starting base assets,
uplifted by the LTBR + 7 per cent for the period between
when the amount is incurred and the end of the year in which the start time for
the asset occurs. [Subsections 90‑25(6) and (7)]
Base
value for later years
7.87
For every later MRRT year, the base
value of the asset is reduced by the decline in value, and the result is then
uplifted by the LTBR for the previous year + 7 per cent. [Section
90‑30]
Base
value under the market value approach
7.88
Under the market value approach, the
base value of a starting base asset reflects its market value as at
1 May 2010, plus any interim expenditure in relation to the asset. [Subsection
90‑40(1) and section 90‑35]
Base
value for the year in which the start time occurs
7.89
For the MRRT year in which the start time occurs,
the base value of a starting base asset that was held in relation to the mining
project interest (or the pre-mining project interest from which the mining project
interest originates) at all times from 2 May 2010 to
30 June 2012 is:
• the
market value of the asset on 1 May 2010 [subparagraph 90‑40(1)(a)(i)];
plus
• any
interim expenditure [subparagraph 90‑40(1)(a)(ii)].
7.90
If the starting base asset was not held at all
times in the interim period (because it was acquired during that period), then
its initial base value is simply the sum of the interim expenditure. [Paragraph
90‑40(1)(b)]
Market
value of the asset
7.91
‘Market value’ is not defined in the legislation,
though its ordinary meaning is modified for the effect of GST and the costs of
converting non‑cash benefits. [Section 300‑1, definition of ‘market value’]
7.92
The common law definition of market value
(discussed in Spencer v Commonwealth of
Australia (1907) 5 CLR 418) is based on the principles of:
• a
willing but not anxious vendor and purchaser;
• a
hypothetical market;
• the
parties being fully informed of the advantages and disadvantages associated
with the asset being valued; and
• both
parties being aware of current market conditions.
7.93
The market value of a starting base asset will be
the amount worked out using these principles. In addition, the general MRRT
valuation principles discussed in Chapter 14 are particularly relevant to the
determination of the market value of a starting base asset.
7.94
Where a mining project interest originates from a
pre‑mining project interest that existed on 1 May 2010, the market value of the
mining project interest is taken to be the market value of that pre‑mining
project interest as at 1 May 2010. [Section 90‑45]
7.95
The market value of a starting base asset that is
(or includes) a mining project interest should be worked out ignoring any
liability to pay a private mining royalty [subsection 90-40(3)].
This ensures that these liabilities, which would be excluded expenditure, do
not reduce the value of the starting base. However, this does not include
private mining royalties paid on or after 1 July 2012 under a pre 2‑May 2010
arrangement, as these are not excluded expenditure (explained in
Chapter 5).
Market
value of starting base assets that relate to a pre‑mining project interest that
existed on 2 May 2010
7.96
In some circumstances, an entity that has chosen to
write off its starting base assets using the market value approach will not be
required to actually market value those assets.
7.97
Where the market value approach is chosen for a pre‑mining
project interest that existed on 2 May 2010, an entity can make a further
choice to work out the base value of its starting base assets using a ‘look
back’ approach. The look‑back approach is intended to ease compliance costs
for entities that would otherwise find it difficult or costly to undertake a
proper market valuation of assets. [Subsection 180‑5(1)]
7.98
This choice (like the choice to use the market
value approach) is irrevocable and needs be made as part of the starting base
return (discussed above and in Chapter 18). [Section 180‑5 and Schedule 1 to the MRRT
(CA&TP) Bill, item 8, sections 117-20 and 119‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
7.99
The look‑back choice can only be made in relation
to a pre‑mining project interest that existed on 2 May 2010. However, the
choice itself will be made soon after the end of the first MRRT year. By this
time, a mining project interest may have originated from the pre‑mining project
interest. In this case, the choice applies to the starting base assets that
relate to that mining project interest. [Subsection 180‑5(1)]
7.100
The effects of the choice to use the look‑back
approach are that:
• all
the starting base assets are treated as a single asset; and
• the
initial base value of that single starting base asset is taken to be the sum of
pre‑mining expenditure incurred in the 10 years before 2 May 2010. Chapter
6 explains the types of expenses that are included in pre‑mining expenditure.
[Section 180‑10]
Interim
expenditure
7.101
The initial base value of a starting base asset
will also include any interim expenditure incurred in relation to it. In
contrast to the book value approach, interim expenditure under the market value
approach is not uplifted for the period between when it is incurred and the end
of the year in which the start time for the asset occurs. [Section
90-40]
Base
value for later years
7.102
For every later MRRT year, the base value of a
starting base asset is its base value for the previous year less the decline in
value for the previous year. In contrast to the book value approach, this
amount is not uplifted for the year under the market value approach. [Section
90-50]
Interim
expenditure
7.103
Under either the book value approach or the market
value approach, the base value of a starting base asset can include ‘interim
expenditure’. Interim expenditures are certain amounts incurred on starting
base assets in the interim period — being the period ending on 30 June 2012
and starting on:
•
under the book value approach — the date of the
accounts that are reflected in the audited financial report; and
• under
the market value approach — 2 May 2010.
[Subsections 90-55(1),
(4) and (5)]
7.104
Interim expenditure includes amounts incurred on assets
held throughout this period, as well as expenditure on assets that start to be
held in this period. [Subsection 90-55(1)]
7.105
Interim expenditure includes the following kinds of
amounts incurred in this period in relation to a starting base asset:
• if
the starting base asset is a ‘depreciating asset’ for income tax purposes —
amounts included in the ‘cost’ of that asset for income tax purposes [subparagraph
90-55(1)(a)(i)]; and
• if
the starting base asset is a ‘CGT asset’ (but not a depreciating asset) for
income tax purposes — amounts included in the ‘cost base’ of that asset for
income tax purposes, except for ‘third element’ costs (which are the costs of
owning the asset, such as interest costs — see subsection 110‑25(4) of the ITAA
1997) [subparagraph 90‑55(1)(a)(ii) and subsection 90-55(2)].
7.106
Interim expenditure also includes mine development
expenditure that relates to the mining project interest. [Subsection
90-55(6)]
Mine development
expenditure
7.107
Mine development expenditures are the amounts a miner
incurs between 2 May 2010 and 1 July 2012 in developing the
project area of its mining project interest as part of carrying on its upstream
operations. In particular, it includes expenditure incurred in:
• removing
overburden from the project area;
• excavating
a pit in the area; and
• sinking
a mineshaft in the area.
[Section 80‑35]
7.108
To the extent it is not interim expenditure on
another starting base asset, mine development expenditure itself is taken to be
a starting base asset [paragraph 80‑35(1)(c)].
The deemed asset is taken to be held for as long as the miner has the mining
project interest, and is taken to be used in the upstream mining operations [subsections
80‑35(2) and 250‑10(2)]. The deemed asset is not
a depreciating asset and so, if the market value approach is chosen, will be
written off accordingly [paragraph (b) of the definition of ‘remaining
effective life’ in subsection 90-15(1) and subsection 90-15(2)].
7.109
Mine development expenditure cannot itself be
interim expenditure relating to another amount of mine development expenditure [subsection
90-55(7)]. That is, any amount of mine
development expenditure that does not relate to another starting base asset
(other than one deemed to be an asset because it was another amount of mine
development expenditure) is taken to be a separate starting base asset.
Example 7.11:
Mine development expenditure is taken to be a starting base asset
Mystic Mining Co. incurs mine development expenditure on
1 June 2011. The expenditure does not relate to any of its other
starting base assets for the mining project interest. Therefore, the
expenditure is taken to be a new starting base asset that Mystic Mining Co.
holds and uses in the upstream mining operations of the mining project
interest.
Mystic Mining Co. incurs another amount of mine
development expenditure on 1 July 2011. The expenditure does not
relate to any of its other starting base assets for the mining project
interest. The expenditure cannot be considered interim expenditure relating to
the new starting base asset (that is, the earlier mine development
expenditure). Instead, the expenditure is taken to be another starting base
asset that Mystic Mining Co. holds and uses in the upstream mining operations
of the mining project interest.
Other
reductions to base value
Recoupment
of base value
7.110
In most cases where a miner receives an amount for
a starting base asset a starting base adjustment will apply (see
Chapter 13). However, if a miner receives an amount for a starting base
asset that is not part of a starting base adjustment event, then the base value
of the asset is reduced to the extent there is an economic recoupment of the
asset’s base value [section 90‑65]. This is
equivalent to the recoupment of mining expenditure (which is explained in Chapter
4).
Example 7.12:
Recoupment of the base value of a starting base asset
Continuing the previous example, on
30 June 2011 Mystic Mining Co. receives a government grant that
subsidises the activities on which Mystic Mining Co. had incurred the mine
development expenditure to the extent of 50 per cent. The base
values of the starting base assets that were taken to have arisen when the
expenditure was incurred are reduced by half of the subsidy (which is the
proportion of the grant that has the effect of offsetting the base value for
each asset).
Partial
disposals of starting base assets
7.111
The base value of a starting base asset is also
reduced to the extent that the miner disposes of any interest in the asset
before its start time. This ensures that the impaired value of an asset is
reflected in a lower base value for the asset. [Section 90-60]
7.112
Where a miner stops holding a part of a starting
base asset after the start time, there is a starting base adjustment, which is
discussed in Chapter 13.
Starting base
and schemes to avoid MRRT
7.113
The general anti-avoidance rule (discussed in
Chapter 17) applies to schemes that increase the base value of a starting base
asset. This means that the increase in the base value of a starting base asset
will be treated as an ‘MRRT benefit’ for the purposes of applying the general
anti‑avoidance rule. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 12]
7.114
The fact that the starting base is recognised over
a number of MRRT years (whereas capital expenditure is otherwise recognised
immediately under the MRRT) and that starting base losses are not transferable
(whereas mining losses are transferable to close associates) means that there
will be an incentive for entities to access the value in the starting base more
quickly than intended by transferring starting base assets between mining
project interests. Such arrangements are also subject to the general anti‑avoidance
rule, which is discussed in Chapter 17.
Outline of
chapter
8.1
This chapter explains:
• how
the low profit offset applies to fully or partially relieve small miners of
their Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) liability for an MRRT year; and
• the
operation of the simplified MRRT.
8.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Low profit
offset
8.3
There is no MRRT liability for miners with group
mining profits (as measured for MRRT purposes) of $50 million or less.
Nil liability is achieved through an offset, called a ‘low profit’ offset.
8.4
To ensure that the low profit offset does not
distort the production behaviour of an entity approaching the $50 million
threshold, it phases-out for profits between $50 million and
$100 million.
Simplified
MRRT
8.5
A miner can use the simplified MRRT method for an
MRRT year if its group profit (as measured for accounting purposes) is below
certain limits.
8.6
If a miner chooses to use the simplified MRRT
method, it will have no MRRT liability for the MRRT year, but its starting base
and its allowances are extinguished rather than carried forward.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Low profit
offset
Mining
profits equal to or less than $50 million
8.7
The low profit offset shields miners from an MRRT
liability when the miner’s group mining profit of each mining project interest
is less than or equal to $50 million in an MRRT year. [Subsection 45-5(1)]
8.8
A miner’s group mining profits include the mining profits (as
measured for MRRT purposes) of entities that are connected to or affiliated
with the miner in the way described in Subdivision 328‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997). [Subsection
45‑5(1)]
8.9
If a miner’s group mining profit is less than or
equal to $50 million, the offset is the sum of the miner’s MRRT
liabilities for each of the miner’s mining project interests for the year [subsection
45‑5(2)]. This reduces a miner’s MRRT liability
to nil [section
10-15].
8.10
The reason for basing the test on a miner’s group mining profits is
to ensure that miner’s cannot split their interests between different entities
so that each falls below the threshold and is able to access the offset.
Mining
profits between $50 million and $100 million
8.11
If an entity were fully liable for MRRT on mining
profits once its group mining profits exceeded the $50 million threshold,
an incentive would exist for the entity to delay production in order to remain
below the threshold. To remove this distortion, this formula phases-out the
offset for profits between $50 million and $100 million:

[Subsection 45-10(1)]
8.12
If the miner’s group mining profit is over $50
million and the formula produces a positive amount, the miner’s low profit
offset is:
[amount from the formula] × MRRT rate
[Subsection 45‑10(2)]
8.13
A miner’s group MRRT allowances is the sum of the MRRT
allowances for each mining project interest for the year of the miner and its
closely associated entities. [Subsection 45‑10(1)]
8.14
A miner’s share of group mining profit is the sum of
the miner’s mining profit for each of its mining project interests for the
year, divided by the miner’s group mining profit for the year. [Subsection 45‑10(1)]
8.15
The taper amount is the difference between the miner’s group
mining profit for the year and $50 million. [Subsection 45‑10(1)]
8.16
Where the result produced by this calculation is
less than zero, there is no low profit offset. Where the result is greater
than zero, the miner is entitled to a share of the offset amount calculated by
reference to its percentage share of the group’s mining profits.
8.17
The phase-out reduces the maximum possible tax
offset provided by the low profit offset by $0.225 for every $1 of group mining
profits above $50 million.
8.18
Once the low profit offset entitlement is
determined, it is applied to reduce the miner’s MRRT liability for the year. [Section
10-15]
Example 8.1:
Entitlement to a low profit offset where mining profits are greater than $50
million and less than $100 million
In the 2013‑14 MRRT year, Strayan Ltd operates
Project B. Strayan Ltd is a subsidiary of
Bigger Strayan Resource Corporation, which owns Project A.
|
|
Project
A
$m
|
Project
B
$m
|
Group
Total
$m
|
|
Mining
profits
|
$20.00
|
$60.00
|
$80.00
|
|
Royalty allowance
|
$4.40
|
$8.00
|
$12.40
|
|
Mining loss allowance
|
$0.10
|
$0.00
|
$0.10
|
|
Starting base allowance
|
$0.10
|
$0.20
|
$0.30
|
|
Total
MRRT allowances
|
$4.60
|
$8.20
|
$12.80
|
Strayan Ltd works
out if it is entitled to a low profit offset using the following steps:
Step 1:
It works out its group mining profits as $80 million by adding the mining
profits of Project A and Project B and the group MRRT allowances as
$12.8 million by adding the total allowances of Project A and
Project B. As group mining profits are greater than $50 million and
less than $100 million, Strayan Ltd may have a low profit offset.
Step 2: It applies
the formula as follows:
|
Taper amount:
|
$80m − $50m = $30m
|
|
Miner’s group MRRT
allowances:
|
$4.6m + $8.2m = $12.8m
|
|
Miner’s share of group
mining profits:
|
$60m/$80m = 75%
|
[($50m − $30m) − $12.8m]
× 75% = $5.4m
Step 3: Then it
multiplies its share of the group profit by the MRRT rate:
$5.4m ×
22.5% = $1.215m
Therefore, Strayan is entitled to a low profit offset
of $1.215 million.
8.19
The low profit offset is not intended to reduce
compliance costs. However, a miner with group mining profits below $50 million
may also be eligible to use the simplified MRRT method, which is intended to
have that effect.
Simplified
MRRT method
8.20
Some miners have the prospect of being below the
$50 million MRRT threshold for an extended period. Requiring such miners to
fully comply with the MRRT would be burdensome. These miners will have the
option of electing to use a simplified MRRT method.
Choosing
to use the simplified MRRT method
8.21
To be able to make the simplified MRRT choice, a
miner must satisfy one of two alternative tests.
8.22
Under the first test, the aggregate of the miner’s
group profit (as measured for accounting purposes) must be less than
$50 million for the year. [Subsection 200‑10(1)]
8.23
Therefore, the first test is similar to the low
profit offset test. Indeed, a miner that satisfies this requirement is unlikely
to have an MRRT liability in the year because its MRRT profits should be
sufficiently low as to fall below the $50 million threshold for the low profit
offset.
8.24
Under the second test, a miner is eligible for the
simplified MRRT method if the sum of the miner’s group profits is less than
$250 million. However, if the miner’s group profits are less than $250 million,
but it, or one of its close associates, has a mining project interest with
royalty liabilities that are less than 25 per cent of the profit for that
interest for the year, the miner is ineligible for the simplified MRRT. [Subsections
200‑10(2) and (3)]
8.25
The choice must be made in the approved form and
the miner must give it to the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) by the
date its MRRT return would have been due, had it been required to lodge one. [Subsection 200‑10(4), and Schedule 1 to the
MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8, Division 119 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953)]
Group
profit measured in accordance with accounting principles
8.26
An entity’s profit for simplified MRRT purposes is
its profit from activities relating to the mining of taxable resources,
determined in accordance with general accounting principles, and adjusted for
interest, taxation, royalties and exceptional items. [Section
200‑15]
8.27
The adjustments for interest, taxation and
exceptional items are made in order to produce an amount that is a reasonable
estimate of the entity’s earnings before interest and taxation. The further
adjustment for royalties is to align the earnings before interest and taxation
amount with the treatment of royalties under the MRRT.
8.28
The profit for simplified MRRT method purposes is
intended as a reasonable proxy for an entity’s mining profits that is simpler
to work out.
Consequences of using the simplified MRRT method
8.29
If a miner chooses to use the simplified MRRT
method for a year, then:
•
the miner’s MRRT liability for each mining project
interest the miner has for the year is zero [paragraph 200‑5(a)];
•
all allowance components the miner has that relate
to the mining project interest, or a pre‑mining project interest, are
extinguished [paragraph 200‑5(b)];
• the
starting base assets that the miner has that relate to the mining project
interest cease to accrue starting base losses [paragraph 200‑5(c)];
and
• the
entity does not have to lodge an MRRT return for the year [Schedule
1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8, paragraph 117‑5(4)(a) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953].
8.30
The allowance components are extinguished because a
miner who elects into the simplified MRRT method will have limited records from
which the historical tax attributes of a mining project interest can be
ascertained.
8.31
Miners that no longer satisfy either of the
requirements for electing into the simplified MRRT method or that opt not to
elect into it in a subsequent year would need to comply with their full MRRT
obligations in that subsequent year.
Outline of
chapter
9.1
This chapter explains when mining project interests
can combine and the effects of such combination. What constitutes a mining
project interest is fundamental to the operation of the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (MRRT).
9.2
Combined interests supersede the constituent
interests as the basis upon which MRRT liability is determined. Mining
revenue, mining expenditure and allowance components are tracked in relation to
combined interests.
9.3
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Combining
mining project interests
9.4
If a miner has two or more mining project interests
that are integrated, the mining project interests may be able to combine to
form a combined mining project interest.
9.5
Two mining project interests may be integrated if
the mining operations of the mining project interests are integrated.
9.6
Pre-mining project interest cannot be integrated or combine.
9.7
Integrated mining project interests can only
combine if the combination will not result in the effective transferability of
otherwise quarantined allowance components.
9.8
If mining project interests can combine, they must
combine.
9.9
Integrated mining project interests will combine
if:
• all
royalty credits (if any) are transferable between the integrated mining project
interests;
• all
pre‑mining losses (if any) are transferable between the integrated mining
project interests;
• all
mining losses (if any) are transferable between the integrated mining project
interests; and
• the
integrated mining project interests have starting base losses or starting base
assets and certain ownership requirements are met.
9.10
If the integrated mining project interests cannot
combine, the miner can choose to cancel the allowance components that are
preventing combination to allow the interests to combine.
9.11
A miner that has a combined mining project interest
will not have to separately track mining revenue, mining expenditure, allowance
components and base values of starting base assets for each of the constituent
interests. Instead, the miner will only need to track these amounts for the
combined mining project interest.
9.12
For the avoidance of doubt, mining project
interests can combine from 2 May 2010.
Detailed
explanation of new law
9.13
A miner that has a combined mining project interest
will not have to separately track mining revenue, mining expenditure, allowance
components and base values of starting base assets for each of the constituent
interests. Instead, the miner will only need to track these amounts for the
combined mining project interest.
9.14
The combined interest will provide the basis upon
which MRRT liability is determined. The combined interest will inherit the tax
histories of all the constituent interests. The combined mining project
interest will aggregate each type of allowance component that it inherits from
the constituent interests.
Integration
of mining project interests
9.15
Only integrated mining project interests can
combine. [Paragraph 115‑10(1)(a)]
9.16
Whether mining project interests are integrated is
a question of fact. If interests that were combined cease to be integrated there
will be a mining project split [paragraph 125‑10(3)(d)].
(Chapter 10 deals with mining project splits, which occur when interests cease to
be integrated.)
9.17
Two mining project interests will be integrated on a day
if:
•
the same miner has the two interests [paragraphs 255‑5(a) and 255‑10(a)];
• the
interests relate to the same type of taxable resource (that is, both relate to
iron ore or both relate to coal) [paragraphs 255‑5(b) and 255‑10(b)];
and
• the
interests either:
– relate
to the same mine or proposed mine (upstream integration) [paragraph
255‑5(c)]; or
– are
integrated in their downstream mining operations (or the mining operations as a
whole are integrated) and the miner has made the choice to be downstream
integrated [paragraphs 255‑10(c) and 255‑10(d)].
9.18
Each of these conditions must be satisfied for two
mining project interests to be integrated. Integration is automatic when all
these conditions are satisfied.
The
same miner must have the mining project interests
9.19
The same miner must have each of the
mining project interests for them to be integrated [paragraphs
255‑5(a) and 255‑10(a)]. The miner will have two
or more mining project interests if it is the entity that has each of the
interests [section 15‑5].
9.20
If a group has made the choice to
consolidate for the MRRT, then all the mining project interests that are within
the group are taken to be the interests of the head entity of the group. This
is discussed in Chapter 16. The effect of this is that it allows mining
project interests that are held by different subsidiaries in the one MRRT
consolidated group to combine (provided they meet all the other combination
requirements). [Division 215]
The
mining project interests must relate to the same type of taxable resource
9.21
The mining project interests must all relate to the
same type of taxable resource. A mining project interest will either relate to
iron ore or it will relate in some way to coal. [Paragraphs 255‑5(b) and 255-10(b)]
9.22
A mining project interest will relate to iron ore
if what is extracted from the production right area is:
•
iron ore [paragraph 20‑5(1)(a)];
or
•
anything produced from consuming or destroying iron
ore in situ [paragraph
20‑5(1)(c)].
9.23
A mining project interest will relate to coal, if
what is extracted from the production right area is:
• coal
[paragraph
20‑5(1)(b)];
• coal
seam gas extracted as a necessary incident of coal mining [paragraph
20‑5(1)(d)]; or
• anything
produced from consuming or destroying coal in
situ [paragraph 20‑5(1)(c)].
Example 9.1:
Mining project interests relating to iron ore
Rocky Resources has two mining project interests. One
mining project interest is in respect of production right A, the other mining
project interest is in respect of production right B. Production rights A and
B both give Rocky Resources the authority to extract iron ore.
The two mining project interests that Rocky Resources
has relate to iron ore.
Example 9.2:
Mining project interests relating to coal
Col Co has two mining project interests. One mining project
interest is in respect of a production right that entitles Col Co to extract
coal. The other mining project interest is in respect of a production right
that entitles Col Co to burn the coal in
situ and extract the gas produced.
The first mining project interest relates to coal.
The second mining project interest relates to the gas produced by consuming the
coal in situ.
Both mining project interests that Col Co has relate
to coal, meaning that this integration condition is satisfied.
Example 9.3:
Mining project interests that do not relate to the same taxable resource
Diverse Co has 10 mining project interests. Nine of
the mining project interests relate to iron ore. One mining project interest
relates to coal.
The nine iron ore mining project interests may be able
to be integrated but the one coal mining project interest is not capable of
integrating with the other nine mining project interests.
Whether
mining project interests relate to the same mine or proposed mine (upstream
integration)
9.24
The mining project interests must relate to the
same mine or proposed mine to be upstream integrated. [Paragraph
255‑5(c)]
What
constitutes a mine
9.25
The concept of a mine takes its ordinary meaning.
Usually, a mine is understood to be a combination of resource deposits,
workings, and equipment and machinery needed to extract or recover the resource
from its naturally occurring state. A mine can include underground excavations
and surface workings.
9.26
The question of whether particular operations
constitute one or more mines is a question of fact and degree to be determined
by reference to all of the circumstances of a particular case.
9.27
The following are factors that may be relevant in
determining if one or more mines exists:
• the
extent and location of relevant ore bodies (noting that the existence of a
single ore body does not necessarily equate to the existence of a single mine);
• the
geological and other connections between relevant ore bodies;
• the
extent and location of the workings;
• the
extent and location of extraction facilities and the manner in which they are
operated;
• systems
for managing the extractive operations; and
• the
existence and content of relevant mine plans, prepared in accordance with the
Joint Ore Reserves Committee’s Australasian
Code for Reporting of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves
(commonly known as the ‘JORC Code’), governing production in relation to one or
more ore bodies.
Example 9.4:
Two separate mines
Coal Co has two production rights, both of which
entitle it to extract coal. Coal Co has a mining project interest in relation
to each of the production rights.
Coal Co’s head office manages the human resources for
employees involved in the upstream mining operations of the two mining project
interests without any distinction between the two production rights.
Mine Co manages the logistics of the upstream mining
operations (that is, extraction and transportation of the taxable resource from
the project areas to the valuation point). These activities are managed
separately in relation to each production right. There is no shared upstream
equipment or infrastructure, nor are the extraction activities undertaken in a
coordinated manner.
The two mines are distinct and cannot be considered to
be the same mine. While Coal Co has both of the relevant interests, and both
interests relate to coal, it does not operate the two sites as a single mine.
Integrated human resources management alone is not enough to result in there
being one mine.
As each mining project interest has its own distinct
mine, the mining project interests are not upstream integrated.
Example 9.5:
One mine
MineCo Mining Pty Ltd has two mining project interests
in respect of two production rights (A and B). It extracts coal from five open
cut pits. Two of the pits are located on production right A and the other
three pits are located on production right B.
The five pits are managed by a single management group
and are covered by a single life‑of‑mine plan. Mining equipment is shared
across the five pits and is continually transferred between pits depending on
mining needs at any given time. All production employees are employed under a
single enterprise bargaining agreement. All administration and equipment
maintenance activities are performed from a central location and are shared
across all five pits.
All coal extracted from the pits is hauled by trucks
to a single run‑of‑mine stockpile before being beneficiated (screened,
dewatered, separated and washed) through a coal processing plant. The coal is
then processed through the plant to produce the saleable product and stored on
a single product stockpile. The saleable product is then loaded onto a train
and transported to port to be loaded for export.
Taking all these factors into account, MineCo Mining
is operating one mine because infrastructure and equipment is shared, there is
a single life‑of‑mine plan, the operations are managed by a single management
team and all the coal is placed on a single stockpile. Therefore, the mining
project interests are upstream integrated.
What
is a proposed mine
9.28
A proposed mine will be indicated by the existence
of an ore body and work preparatory to extraction. Such work might include:
• clearing
the site;
• installing
water, light and power;
• erecting
housing and welfare facilities; and
• locating
equipment or machinery at the site.
Example 9.6:
One mine, multiple mining project interests
Rock Doctor Co has mining project interests in
relation to each of its seven production rights.
The production rights are all governed by a single
life-of-mine plan under which production is scheduled to commence on all
production rights within a specified period.
Two production rights have not commenced production.
However, all production rights are planned to be in production concurrently for
a significant number of years.
Rock Doctor Co is producing from 11 open‑cut pits
across five of the production rights. Rock Doctor Co has employees that work
across all the pits. Similarly, all the trucks and other infrastructure that
are used across the production rights are operated in an integrated manner.
There is one manager responsible for all 11 pits. All the coal extracted from
these pits is taken to the one run-of-mine stockpile. The same staff will also
service two non-producing production rights when they commence production.
All of the ore bodies are structurally connected and
geologically similar.
Taking all these factors together, Rock Doctor Co is
operating one mine. Despite the fact that there are some timing differences,
the ore bodies are all connected and similar; the production rights are all
serviced, or will be serviced, by a single staff unit; the ore bodies are being
developed concurrently (albeit in a staggered manner); and the operations are
economically integrated.
Therefore the seven mining project interests are
upstream integrated with each other.
Whether
downstream mining operations are integrated (downstream integrated)
9.29
Two mining project interests are downstream
integrated if either the downstream mining operations for each of the interests,
or the mining operations as a whole for each of the interests, are integrated
and the miner has made a choice to be downstream integrated. [Paragraphs 255‑10(c)
and (d)]
Downstream
mining operations
9.30
Downstream mining operations are those mining
operations that are not upstream mining operations. Downstream mining
operations are those activities or operations that are necessary to get the
taxable resources from the valuation point and into the form and location in
which:
• a
mining revenue event happens to them [subparagraph 35‑20(1)(b)(i)];
or
• they
are first applied to producing something in relation to which a mining revenue
event happens [subparagraph 35‑20(1)(b)(ii)].
[Sections 35-15,
35-20 and 255‑15]
9.31
An activity or operation cannot, in the same instance,
be both an upstream and a downstream mining operation. However, the costs of
an activity may relate to both upstream and downstream operations and may need
to be apportioned between them on a reasonable basis.
Diagram 9.1: Mining operations, upstream
mining operations and downstream mining operations

9.32
Operations or activities are not downstream mining
operations if they are undertaken after the
taxable resources:
• reach
the form and location in which they are in at the mining revenue event; or
• are
first applied to produce something in relation to which a mining revenue event
occurs.
[Subsections 35‑20(1)
and 255‑15(1)]
Example 9.7:
Downstream mining operations
Deanna Coal Co has a mine covering a single production
right from which it extracts coal that is exported to a foreign steel maker.
Deanna has a single mining project interest. The coal is sold as it is loaded
onto the ship at the port. The coal extracted is taken to a run-of-mine stockpile.
The coal is removed from the run-of-mine stockpile by
a reclaimer and taken by conveyer belt to a common crusher for easier
processing. The coal is then sent to a processing plant where it is screened,
de‑watered and separated in order to produce the final saleable product. That
product is then taken from the processing plant, loaded onto a train and
transported to port. At port, the coal is offloaded to stockpiles, from which
it is loaded on to ships in the same form that it leaves the processing plant.
That is, it is not blended at port with any other coal. The coal is sold as it
goes over the rail of the ships.
Deanna’s downstream mining operations begin when the
coal is removed from the run-of-mine stockpile (that is, the valuation point)
and end when it goes over the rail at port. This is because the coal, at that
point, is in the form and location it is in when it is sold (the mining revenue
event).
Example 9.8:
Downstream mining operations — several mining project interests
Fox Fines Pty Ltd has two production rights which
entitle it to extract iron ore. Fox has a mining project interest in relation
to each of these production rights. The iron ore extracted from each
production right has different iron content. The miner contracts with a
foreign steel mill to provide iron ore of specific iron content and the
contract specifies that the iron ore is sold as it is loaded on to a ship.
The iron ore extracted from each production right is
taken to run‑of‑mine stockpiles, a different stockpile for each production
right. Iron ore is removed from a run-of-mine stockpile and taken to a crusher
and loaded onto trains operated by a third party. The trains take the iron ore
to a port where it is deposited in separate piles. A quantity is taken from
each pile, blended into one product which is loaded onto ships, such that the
shipment satisfies the contractual iron content.
The downstream operations for each of Fox’s mining
project interest begin when the iron ore is removed from the respective run-of-mine
stockpiles and end as it goes over the ship’s rail.
Integrated
9.33
‘Integrated’ takes its ordinary meaning. In
essence, things are integrated when separate elements come together in a
coordinated or interrelated manner.
9.34
Whether the downstream mining operations or the
mining operations of two mining project interests are integrated is a question
of fact, but must be determined having regard to the manner in which those
operations are carried on, including the way in which infrastructure and
equipment is used and operated. [Paragraph 255‑10(c)]
9.35
If the mining operations are managed as an
integrated operation, demonstrated through the same downstream infrastructure
being used or operated in an integrated manner in respect of production from
the mining project interests, then the downstream integration tests will be met.
9.36
The integration test would not be satisfied just
because two or more mining project interests utilise the same downstream
infrastructure. They would need to be integrated in the way they use that
infrastructure. For example, integration may be demonstrated through the
scheduling and use of the infrastructure, to combine resources from different
mining project interests into a blended product.
Example 9.9:
Downstream integration — blended product
Riley Co has five mines, each of which is a single
mining project interest. Each mine has its own run-of-mine stockpile. In
addition, each mine extracts iron ore with different iron content.
Riley Co also owns and operates a rail network system
which is connected to each of the run-of-mine stockpiles. The iron ore is
taken from the various run-of-mine stockpiles and delivered to Riley Co’s
trains, which travel on the rail network to the port facility, which it also
owns and operates. At port, iron ore from each of the mines is delivered to
separate holding piles, according to the iron content. Riley Co then blends
ore from the various piles in order to load a shipment with the required iron
content.
Riley Co contracts with overseas customers to deliver
iron ore, with specified iron content, to ships at its port. Riley Co’s
contracts specify that the iron ore is sold to its customers on a free-on-board
basis.
Riley Co schedules the extraction activities and
transportation of the extracted ore from each of the mines in a way that
ensures it has a constant supply of iron ore of varying iron content at the
port stockpiles.
Taking into account the manner in which the operations
are carried out and the extensive integration of infrastructure used and
operated in carrying out these operations, each of the mining project interests
that Riley Co has are downstream integrated.
Example 9.10:
Downstream integration — undertaken by a third party on behalf of the miner
Lachlan Co has three coal mines, each of which is a
separate mining project interest. Coal from each mine is of slightly varying
qualities and must be blended to be of a quality that satisfies customer
requirements.
Lachlan Co has a service agreement with Train Corp (an
entity unrelated to Lachlan Co) whereby Lachlan Co delivers coal from each of
its run-of-mine stockpiles to Train Corp trains for transport to port. Lachlan
Co pays Train Corp a fee for its transport service. Lachlan Co’s coal is
delivered to a port which is owned and operated by Port Coal Services Pty Ltd
(PCS). PCS is unrelated to Lachlan Co. Lachlan Co’s coal is stored in
stockpiles at the port facility until it is loaded onto ships to fulfil Lachlan
Co’s contracts with overseas customers. Lachlan Co’s sales contracts specify
that the coal is sold on a ‘free on board’ basis. Before Lachlan Co’s coal is
loaded onto ships, PCS blends the varying quality of coal to a blend that
satisfies the contract description. PCS provides this service to Lachlan Co
for a fee.
Although none of the downstream mining operations are
owned or operated by Lachlan Co, the transporting and blending at port are necessary
to get the coal into the form and location in which it is sold and are the
downstream mining operations of Lachlan Co in relation to its mining project
interest. Due to the manner in which the downstream operations are carried on
and the integrated way infrastructure is used in carrying out those downstream
operations, the downstream mining operations of each of the mining project
interests that Lachlan Co has are integrated for the purpose of the MRRT.
Example 9.11:
Downstream integration — mining operation as a whole is integrated
Mining Co has 10 coal mines, each of which is a
separate mining project interest. Each mine is operated under a separate
life-of-mine plan and has a separate run-of-mine stockpile. The coal is
removed from the run-of-mine stockpiles and taken to separate coal preparation
plants.
Mining Co has service agreements in place with
multiple rail and port operators. Mining Co schedules the transportation of
coal on the rail corridors and delivery to the port in a way that ensures that
the timing and rate of extraction from each of the mining project interests is
managed having regard to the quality, characteristics and volume across the
overall system. Contracted capacity for the rail corridors and the port is
managed in order to ensure reliable supply to customers in accordance with
contract descriptions and market demand.
Mining Co has a dedicated production, rail and port
infrastructure team that is responsible for managing the outbound supply
chain. This team is accountable for the integrated planning of the rail
corridors and the port. Sales and operations planning and supply chain
performance management is managed for each of Mining Co’s mining project
interests centrally. The scheduling of activities downstream of the run‑of-mine
stockpiles is undertaken in an integrated manner.
Each of the mining project interest that Mining Co has
is integrated because of the way in which it conducts its downstream
operations, taking into account the overall mining operations, are highly
coordinated.
Example 9.12:
Downstream integration — single processing plant
Francis Coking Coal has four production rights (A, B,
C, and D). There is a mining project interest in respect of each production
right. On production right A, there are three underground coal mines (A1, A2
and A3). On production rights B, C and D there are three open cut pits.
Premium coking coal is extracted from the three
underground mines located in production right A and medium quality coking coal,
pulverised coal injection coal and thermal coal is extracted from the three
open cut pits (on B, C and D). Each of the underground and open cut pits has
its own run-of-mine stockpile. The coal from each run‑of‑mine stockpile is
then conveyed on a series of overland conveyors to a single coal processing
plant.
All the coal from both the underground and open cut
operations is processed through a single coal processing plant in which the
coal is beneficiated (screened, dewatered, separated and washed) to produce
saleable product. As part of the beneficiation process, lower quality coal
from the open cut pits is blended in the processing plant with the premium
coking coal from the underground operations to produce a hybrid saleable
product. The beneficiated coal is then stored on a common product stockpile
area, separated according to the type and quality of coal. The saleable
product is then loaded onto trains and transported to port to be loaded for
export.
Francis Coking Coal’s mining project interests are
downstream integrated, due to the coordinated manner in which the coal is
processed and transported.
Downstream integration choice
9.37
Even if the downstream mining operations of the
mining project interests are factually integrated and the other conditions for
integration are satisfied, the interests will not be downstream integrated
unless the miner has made a choice to treat the interests as integrated. [Paragraph 255‑10(d)
and section 255‑20]
Example 9.13:
Integrated operations, but no choice has been made
On 1 July 2012, Geologue Jacqueline Pty Ltd has two
mining project interests, each relating to coal. The two interests do not
relate to the same mine but their downstream mining operations are factually
integrated.
Geologue Jacqueline Pty Ltd has not made the choice to
downstream integrate. Therefore, despite the downstream mining operations
being factually integrated, the two interests are not recognised as integrated
for the MRRT.
9.38
The downstream integration choice does not lapse.
Once made, the choice operates to integrate all mining project interests that
the miner has, including subsequent mining project interests that the miner
acquires (so long as they satisfy the other conditions for downstream
integration). [Section 255‑20]
9.39
The choice will have effect from the
day the choice is made, or the day all the other conditions for downstream
integration are met, whichever is later. Put simply, two mining project
interests will be integrated when they meet all the downstream integration
conditions, including the making of a valid choice. [Section
255‑10]
9.40
The choice to downstream integrate will cease to
have effect in relation to a particular mining project interest after the miner
that made the choice stops having the interest. [Subsection 255‑20(3)]
Example 9.14:
Integrated on day of choice
Following on from the example above, Geologue
Jacqueline Pty Ltd chooses downstream integration on 27 February 2013.
Geologue Jacqueline’s two mining project interests will be integrated with each
other from 27 February 2013.
Example 9.15:
Choice made in advance of integrated operations
On 1 July 2012, Bowen Integrated Materials Co (BIM Co)
holds several mineral development licences in various locations throughout the
Bowen Basin. BIM Co is in the process of obtaining production rights in
respect of the mineral development licences. BIM Co plans to manage the
downstream mining operations in relation to each of the production rights as an
integrated operation. BIM Co has determined it would want the mining project
interests to be recognised as integrated for the purpose of the MRRT (if they
are factually integrated in their downstream mining operations).
On 23 April 2013, the production rights are granted in
relation to each of the mineral development licences. BIM Co, now a miner with
mining project interests, also makes the downstream integration choice on that
day.
BIM Co satisfies all of the other conditions for
downstream integration on 1 September 2013. Each of the mining project
interests that BIM Co has are integrated with the other interests from
1 September 2013.
Retrospective
downstream integration
9.41
A transitional rule allows the downstream
integration choice to have retrospective effect in limited circumstances.
These limited circumstances are where the conditions for integration, excluding
the making of the choice, are satisfied in respect of mining project interests
between 2 May 2010 and 30 June 2012. In such cases, if the miner makes the
choice on or before the lodgement date for the MRRT return for the first MRRT
year, the interests will be taken to have been integrated from the time all the
other conditions were satisfied. [Schedule 4 to the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT
(CA&TP) Bill), subitem 7(2)]
9.42
This transitional rule takes account of the fact
that a miner cannot make a downstream integration choice before 1 July 2012.
Regardless, two mining project interests should still be able to be treated as
integrated at an earlier time. This enables mining project interests to be
integrated from 2 May 2010, despite the miner not having made a choice at
that time.
Example 9.16:
Downstream mining operations — transitional choice
On 2 May 2010, Miner Co has two production rights
which entitle it to extract iron ore. The downstream mining operations in
relation to each of the production rights are integrated.
Upon commencement of the MRRT, Miner Co will be taken
to have two mining project interests in relation to the two production rights
at 2 May 2010. Each interest relates to iron ore and the downstream
mining operations of the interests are integrated.
Miner Co makes the downstream integration choice at
the time it lodges its MRRT return in relation to the first MRRT year.
Despite having not made the downstream integration choice
on 2 May 2010, once it makes the choice Miner Co’s interests will be
treated as integrated with each other from 2 May 2010.
Combining
mining project interests
9.43
For the most part, mining project interests that
can combine, must combine. Combination is automatic and not optional. [Section 115‑10)]
9.44
Unlike integration, which tests the relationship
between two mining project interests, combination applies to a collection of
mining project interests. Mining project interests must combine to the fullest
extent possible. For example, a miner cannot choose to only combine two mining
project interests if there are actually four interests that can combine.
9.45
Mining project interests (‘constituent interests’)
that combine are taken to be a single mining project interest (‘combined
interest’) for the purposes of the MRRT law. [Subsection 115‑10(1)]
9.46
The constituent interests are not recognised as a
combined interest for the purpose of testing whether they must combine. This is
to allow the integration provisions to look-through the combined interest and
test whether the constituent interests are integrated. [Subsection
115-10(1)]
9.47
Mining project interests are taken to be a combined
interest from the time the constituent interests can combine. This time is
called the ‘combining time’. [Subsection 115‑10(1)]
9.48
Combination is not an annual test. It is
determined at and from the combining time. However the miner is liable to pay
MRRT for the combined interest as if the constituent interests had been
combined from the beginning of the MRRT year. [Subsection 115‑10(1) and section 115‑40]
9.49
A number of conditions must be satisfied for mining
project interests to combine. Integration is the first condition for
combination. Only interests that are integrated with each of the other
interests can combine. [Paragraph 115‑10(1)(a)]
9.50
Integrated mining project interests can only
combine if:
• any
royalty credits that any of the interests has would be able to be applied in
working out a transferred royalty allowance for each of the other interests [paragraph
115‑10(1)(b) and section 115‑20];
• any
pre‑mining loss that any of the interests has (or would have if the MRRT year
were to end at the combining time) would be able to be applied in working out a
transferred pre‑mining loss allowance for each of the other interests [paragraph 115‑10(1)(c)
and section 115‑25];
• any
mining loss that any of the interests has (or would have if the MRRT year were
to end at the combining time) would be able to be applied in working out a
transferred mining loss allowance for each of the other interests [paragraph
115‑10(1)(d) and section 115‑30]; and
• any
of the interests that has a starting base loss or a starting base asset:
– existed
on 2 May 2010 (or originated from a pre‑mining project interest that
existed on 2 May 2010) [paragraphs 115‑10(1)(e) and 115‑35(a)];
and
– has
been held, at all times since 2 May 2010, by the same miner as held all the
other constituent interests (or the pre‑mining project interests from which
they originated) [paragraphs 115‑10(1)(e) and 115‑35(b)].
9.51
A constituent interest that has had a suspension
day is unable to combine. See Chapter 11 for a discussion on suspension days. [Subsection 115-10(3)]
9.52
These conditions must be satisfied to ensure that
combination does not enable the transferability of either quarantined tax
history or future starting base losses.
9.53
If integrated mining project interests are unable
to combine because they have allowance components that do not meet the above
criteria, the miner can nonetheless make a choice to combine. However, this
would have the effect of cancelling those allowance components that otherwise
prevent it from combining. [Section 115‑15]
9.54
If two mining project interests are integrated with
each other and neither interest has a royalty credit, pre‑mining loss, mining
loss, starting base loss or starting base asset, the interests can and must
combine.
Royalty
credits must be transferable to combine
9.55
If any of the integrated mining
project interests has a royalty credit, it can only combine if all the royalty
credits are fully transferable to each of the other interests. Chapter 6
explains what a royalty credit is and when one arises. [Section
115‑20]
9.56
Royalty credits are transferable if they would be
available to be applied in working out a transferred royalty allowance for each
of the other interests. That is, they are transferable if the mining project
interests have been integrated from the time the royalty credit arose until the
time the mining project interests are seeking to combine (and the royalty
credit did not arise when the interest was using the alternative valuation
method). [Subsection 65‑20(1)]
9.57
In determining whether the royalty credits would be
transferable it does not matter whether the royalty credit would have been used
by another mining project interest if it was actually available to be applied.
[Paragraph 115‑20(b)]
Example 9.17:
Royalty credits not fully transferable
Miner Co has two mining project interests, one of
which existed at 1 July 2012 and another that was acquired in 2013
from another miner. On 1 July 2014, the interests become integrated in
their upstream mining operations. At the time of integration, each interest
has royalty credits for the previous MRRT year. The two interests are unable
to combine as they each have royalty credits that arose prior to the interests
being integrated. (However, the mining project interests may be able to
transfer future royalty credits that arise while the two mining project
interests are integrated with each other.)
9.58
If any of the royalty credits arose
while the mining project interests were not integrated, or they arose when
using the alternative valuation method, the mining project interests will be
unable to combine unless the miner makes a choice to cancel the royalty credits
and enable the combination. This is discussed below. [Section
115‑15]
Pre‑mining
losses must be transferable to combine
9.59
If any of the integrated mining project interests
has a pre‑mining loss (or would have a pre‑mining loss if the MRRT year ended at
the combining time) they can only combine if all the pre‑mining losses are
fully transferable to each of the other integrated mining project interests. Chapter
6 explains what a pre‑mining loss is and when one arises. [Section 115‑25]
9.60
A mining project interest would have a pre‑mining
loss if the MRRT year were to end at the combining time, if the pre‑mining
expenditure for the interest for the period from the start of the combination
year until the combining time exceeds the pre‑mining revenue for the interest
for the same period.
9.61
A mining project interest will only have pre‑mining
revenue and pre‑mining expenditure for the combination year if the mining
project interest originated from a pre‑mining project interest during the
combining year but before the combining time.
9.62
Pre‑mining losses are transferable
if they are available to be applied in working out a transferred pre‑mining
loss allowance for the other mining project interests. That is, the mining
project interests must relate to the same type of taxable resource (that is,
iron ore or coal), the mining project interests must be held by the same miner
or by close associates and the common ownership test must be satisfied. [Section
95‑20]
9.63
If one of the mining project interests is a
combined interest, for the pre‑mining loss to be transferable to the combined
interest it must be transferable to each of the constituent interests. [Paragraph 115‑25(b)
and section 115‑55]
9.64
In determining if the pre‑mining loss would be
transferable, it does not matter whether the pre‑mining loss would have
actually been used by another mining project interest. [Subparagraph 115‑25(a)(ii)]
9.65
If the pre‑mining losses are not
available for transfer, the two mining project interests will be unable to
combine, unless the miner makes a choice to cancel the pre‑mining losses to
enable the combination. This is discussed below. [Section
115‑15]
Mining
losses must be transferable to combine
9.66
If any of the integrated mining project interests
has a mining loss (or would have a mining loss if the MRRT year ended at the
combining time) it can only combine if all the mining losses are fully
transferable to each of the other integrated mining project interests. Chapter
6 explains what a mining loss is and when one arises. [Section 115‑30]
9.67
A mining project interest would have a mining loss
if, the MRRT year were to end at the combining time, the mining expenditure for
the interest for the period from the start of the combination year until the
combining time would exceed the mining revenue for the interest for the same
period.
9.68
Mining losses are transferable if
they are available to be applied in working out a transferred mining loss
allowance for the other mining project interests. That is, they are
transferable if the mining project interests relate to the same type of taxable
resource (that is, iron ore or coal), the mining project interests satisfy the
common ownership test and the mining loss did not arise when the interest was
using the alternative valuation method. [Subsection 100‑20(1)]
9.69
If one of the mining project interests is a
combined interest, for the mining loss to be transferable to the combined
interest it must be transferable to each of the constituent interests. [Paragraph 115‑30(b)
and section 115‑60]
9.70
In determining if the mining loss would be
transferable, it does not matter whether the mining loss would have actually
been used by another mining project interest. [Subparagraph 115‑30(a)(ii)]
9.71
If the common ownership test is not
satisfied or any of the mining losses arose when using the alternative
valuation method, the two mining project interests will be unable to combine,
unless the miner makes a choice to cancel the mining losses to enable the
combination. This is discussed below. [Section 115‑15]
Example 9.18:
Mining losses not fully transferrable
Miner Co has two mining project interests. It has
always had one of the interests but it only acquired the other interest
recently. The second interest it acquired has a mining loss for a previous
MRRT year.
The mining loss of the second interest cannot be
applied in working out a transferred mining loss allowance of the first
interest, as the common ownership test is not satisfied.
The two interests are unable to combine as the second
interest has a mining loss that is unable to be transferred to the first
interest.
Starting
base losses and starting base assets — the same miner must have had the
interests from 2 May 2010
9.72
If any of the integrated mining project interests
have a starting base loss or a starting base asset, the interests can only
combine if they existed, or originated from a pre-mining project interest that
existed, on 2 May 2010 and at all times since that time the miner
that has each of the interests (or the pre‑mining project interest from which
it originated) is the same miner. [Section 115‑35]
9.73
If mining project interests that were not held by
the same miner at that time but which had starting base losses or assets were
able to combine, this would effectively allow starting base losses to be
transferred from the old interest to the new interest. Chapter 7 explains when
a miner has a starting base loss and a starting base asset. Chapter 6 explains
what a pre‑mining project interest is and when a mining project interest
originates from a pre‑mining project interest.
9.74
A mining project interest that has a starting base
loss or a starting base asset may be able to combine with another interest, if
both interests (or the pre‑mining project interests from which they originated)
existed on 2 May 2010. [Paragraph 115‑35(a)]
9.75
If the mining project interests (or the pre‑mining
project interests from which they originate) existed on 2 May 2010, the
interests can combine if they have always been held by the same miner as each
other. [Paragraph 115‑35(b)]
9.76
This enables all mining project interests of a
miner that relate to exploration or production rights that existed on 2 May
2010 to be capable of combining with other interests that existed on this date
(subject to the other conditions).
Example 9.19:
Pre‑mining project interest existing on 2 May 2010
Expo Co holds an exploration right at 2 May 2010, in
respect of which there is a pre‑mining project interest. Subsequently, Expo Co
is granted a production right that covers an area that the exploration right
covered. The production right originates from the exploration right, therefore
the mining project interest that Expo Co now has originates from the pre‑mining
project interest.
The pre‑mining project interest from which the mining
project interest originated existed on 2 May 2010 and is therefore capable of
combining with other interests that existed on 2 May 2010 (subject to the other
conditions).
Example 9.20:
Pre‑mining project interest not existing on 2 May 2010
At 2 May 2010, Digger Co is in the process of
finalising its application to obtain an exploration right. The exploration
right was granted on 1 July 2010, triggering the existence of a pre‑mining
project interest. Subsequently, Digger Co is granted a production right that
covers an area that the exploration right covered. The production right
originates from the exploration right, therefore the mining project interest
originates from the pre‑mining project interest.
The pre‑mining project interest from which the mining
project interest was derived did not exist on 2 May 2010, it only started to
exist on 1 July 2010. Therefore, it is unable to combine with other
interests that existed on 2 May 2010.
9.77
Requiring the same miner to have each of the mining
project interests is similar to the ownership requirement in the common ownership
test for transferred mining loss allowances. One important distinction is
that, for the purpose of determining whether mining project interests can
combine, the same miner must have
the mining project interests; it is not sufficient that a closely associated
miner has that interest. If
a consolidated group has made the choice to consolidate for MRRT purposes, the
head company will be the miner that has all mining project interests that exist
within the group.
9.78
A change of ownership does not necessarily stop
interests from being combined. Rather, the test focuses on the relationship
between the two mining project interests and considers whether they have always
been held by the same miner, even if the identity of that miner has changed
from time to time. As long as there has been no interruption to the
relationship, the mining project interests will have always been held by the
same miner.
Example 9.21:
Same miner has mining project interests
Miner Co has two mining project interests at 2 May
2010. Each of those mining project interests has starting base assets that
will be depreciated in relation to the mining project interests. On
1 October 2012, Miner Co sells the two interests to CHPP Ltd.
From 2 May 2010 to 30 September 2012, Miner Co had the
interests. From 1 October 2012 onwards, CHPP Ltd had the two interests.
Despite different miners having the interests, at all
times both interests have been held by the same miner.
Example 9.22:
Same miner has not had mining project interests
Head Co is the head entity of a consolidated group for
income tax purposes. A Co and B Co are subsidiaries of Head Co.
Head Co has not made the choice to consolidate for the
purposes of the MRRT. Therefore, A Co is a miner as it has mining project
interest 1 (MPI 1) and mining project interest 2 (MPI 2). B Co is also a miner
as it has mining project interest 3 (MPI 3).
A Co and B Co have had their respective MPI’s since 2
May 2010.
MPI 3 cannot combine with MPI 1 or MPI 2 as the miner
that has MPI 3 (B Co) and the miner that has MPI 1 and MPI 2 (A Co) are
not the same miner.
MPI 1 and MPI 2 can combine as A Co has both the
mining project interests.

Example 9.23:
Combination in the case of acquisition of a group
Following on from the example above, Mega Co is the
head entity of a consolidated group for the purpose of income tax and the
MRRT. Mega Co has three subsidiaries, D Co, E Co and F Co, each of which has a
mining project interest, respectively, MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6. Because Mega Co
has made the choice to consolidate for the purpose of the MRRT, Mega Co is the
miner and has MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6. D Co, E Co and F Co are not entities
recognised for MRRT purposes.
On 1 July 2015, Mega Co acquires Head Co. Head Co is
now part of Mega Co’s consolidated group, therefore Mega Co is now the miner in
relation to MPI 1, MPI 2 and MPI 3.

Assume all of the mining project interests have
starting base assets with base values.
Mega Co can, provided all the other combination
conditions are met, combine all the mining project interests that it now has,
provided the same miner has always had each of the interests.
Therefore, Mega Co can combine MPI 1 and MPI 2. It
can also combine MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6. MPI 3 is unable to combine as there
is no other mining project interest that shares its ownership history.
|
|
Which miner has the MPI?
|
Same miner as each
other?
|
|
|
2 May 2010 — 30 June 2015
|
1 July
2015 onwards
|
|
|
MPI 1
|
A Co
|
Mega Co
|
The same miner has always had MPI 1 and MPI 2
|
|
MPI 2
|
A Co
|
Mega Co
|
The same miner has always had MPI 1 and MPI 2
|
|
MPI 3
|
B Co
|
Mega Co
|
No other MPI has the same ownership history as MPI 3
|
|
MPI 4
|
Mega Co
|
Mega Co
|
The same miner has always had MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6
|
|
MPI 5
|
Mega Co
|
Mega Co
|
The same miner has always had MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6
|
|
MPI 6
|
Mega Co
|
Mega Co
|
The same
miner has always had MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6
|
Upon combination, Mega Co
will be left with three mining project interests. Two combined interests, one
comprising MPI 1 and MPI 2 and the other comprising MPI 4, MPI 5 and MPI 6, and
the mining project interest that cannot combine with any of the others, MPI 3.

Choice
to combine — cancellation of allowance components
9.79
If a miner has interests that are unable to combine
because doing so would enable the transferability of either quarantined tax
history or future starting base losses, the miner can make a choice to combine. [Subsection
115‑15(1)]
9.80
The effect of making the choice is that any
allowance components that are otherwise preventing the interests from combining
are cancelled. This includes reducing the base value of starting base assets
to zero. [Subsection 115‑15(2)]
9.81
Not all the allowance components are necessarily
cancelled, only those which are preventing combination from being allowed.
9.82
This choice is intended to give a miner the ability
to combine without first having to use up the allowance components that are
preventing it from combining.
Example 9.24:
A miner can choose to combine and cancel relevant allowance components
Sprinklingheart Resources is a miner with two
integrated mining project interests (MPI 1 and MPI 2).
MPI 2 has no allowance components. MPI 1 has
unapplied mining losses for the 2013, 2014 and 2015 MRRT years. The 2014 and
2015 losses are transferable to MPI 2, however, the 2013 losses are not.
As some of the mining losses are not transferable, MPI
1 and MPI 2 are unable to combine.
Sprinklingheart Resources makes a choice to combine.
Having made this choice, the carried forward mining losses for the 2013 MRRT
year are cancelled. MPI 1 retains the mining losses for the 2014 and 2015 MRRT
years.
MPI 1 and MPI 2 combine. The combined interest will
therefore inherit MPI 1’s mining losses for the 2014 and 2015 MRRT years.
Effects of
combining mining project interests
Inherited
history
9.83
The MRRT liability for the whole MRRT year will
rest with the miner who has the combined interest at the end of the MRRT year.
[Section
115‑40]
MRRT
liability
9.84
In the year in which the constituent interests
combine, called the ‘combining year’, the miner that has the combined interest
will be liable to pay MRRT that is payable in relation to the combined
interest, as if the constituent interests had been combined from the start of
the year. The miner is not separately liable to pay MRRT in relation to the
constituent interests. [Section 115‑40]
9.85
The miner will also be liable to pay MRRT that is
payable in relation to the combined interests for future MRRT years (provided
the constituent interests remain combined and the miner continues to have the
combined interest). [Section 10‑1]
9.86
The allowance components of the constituent
interests are taken to be the allowance components of the combined mining
project interest. [Section 115‑45]
9.87
The royalty credits of the constituent interests
are inherited by the combined interest. Royalty credits are not aggregated (as
they arise for a particular day and not annually for an MRRT year). [Subsection 115‑45(1)]
9.88
Pre‑mining losses that the combined interest
inherits from the constituent interests are aggregated to the extent they
relate to the same MRRT year. [Subsection 115‑45(2)]
9.89
Mining losses that the combined interest inherits
from the constituent interests are aggregated to the extent they relate to the
same MRRT year. [Subsection 115‑45(3)]
9.90
Starting base losses that the combined interest
inherits from the constituent interests are aggregated to the extent they
relate to the same MRRT year and have had the same starting base valuation
method applied (that is, book value or market value). [Subsections
115‑45(4) and (5) and section 115‑50]
Starting
base losses — where some starting base assets are subject to book value and
others to market value
9.91
The starting base valuation method is a choice a
miner makes in relation to a mining project interest. The constituent
interests that relate to the combined interest may have different starting base
valuation methods applied to value their starting base assets. Book value and
market value starting base losses are subject to different uplift rates and
therefore cannot be aggregated in the same way as pre‑mining losses and mining
losses. [Subsections 115‑45(4) and (5) and section 115‑50]
9.92
The aggregated book value starting base losses will
be subject to the book value uplift long term bond rate + 7 per cent (LTBR + 7
per cent) and the aggregated market value starting base losses will be subject
to the market value uplift consumer price index (CPI). [Section
115‑50]
9.93
The starting base losses for the constituent
interests that the combined interest is taken to have are not necessarily
aggregated. Rather, the starting base losses are only aggregated to the extent
they relate to the same valuation approach for an MRRT year. [Section
115‑50]
9.94
If some starting base assets were initially valued
using book value and others using market value, the miner will have two starting
base losses for the combined interest for the MRRT year, a book value starting
base loss and a market value starting base loss. [Section 115‑50]
9.95
The book value starting base loss for an MRRT year
will be the sum of the book value starting base losses that would have arisen
for a constituent interest for the MRRT year. The market value starting base
loss for an MRRT year will be the sum of the market value starting base losses
that would have arisen for a constituent interest for the MRRT year. [Subsections
115‑50(2) and (3)]
9.96
The two starting base losses will be applied in
working out the starting base allowance for the miner. The starting base
losses that relate to book value will be applied first, then the starting base
losses that relate to market value. [Subsection 115‑50(4)]
Example 9.25:
Aggregating starting base losses with same valuation method
Miner Co has two mining project interests, MPI A and
MPI B. Miner Co made the choice to use the book value starting base
methodology for starting base assets that relate to MPI A and MPI B.
From 1 July 2015, MPI A and MPI B are taken to be a
combined interest, MPI AB. At the combining time, MPI A had a $200 starting
base loss for the 2013 year and a $500 starting base loss for 2014 year and MPI
B had a $100 starting base loss for the 2013 year and a $200 starting base loss
for the 2014 year.
Upon combination, MPI AB will be taken to have the
starting base losses that relate to MPI A and MPI B and the starting base
losses for each year will be aggregated as they apply to the same starting base
valuation method. Therefore, MPI AB will have a book value starting base loss
for the 2013 year of $300 ($200 + $100) and a book value starting base loss for
the 2014 year of $700 ($500 + $200).
Example 9.26:
Aggregating starting base losses with different valuation methods
Assume all the same facts as the previous example,
except this time Miner Co has made the choice to use the book value methodology
in relation to MPI A and the market value methodology in relation to
MPI B.
Upon combination MPI AB will be taken to have the
starting base losses that relate to MPI A and MPI B but none of the losses will
be aggregated as different starting base valuations applied in relation to the
starting base losses. Therefore, MPI AB will have book value starting base
losses for 2013 and 2014 of $200 and $500 respectively and market value
starting base losses for 2013 and 2014 of $100 and $200 respectively.
In the 2015 MRRT year, MPI AB has a mining profit.
Assume MPI AB has a $100 book value starting base loss and a $100 market
value starting base loss for the 2015 year. When it comes time to calculate
the starting base allowance for MPI AB there is $1,000 remaining mining profit,
therefore the starting base allowance cannot exceed $1,000.
In working out the starting base allowance, the book
value starting base losses are applied first, then the market value starting
base losses. Therefore, MPI AB will apply the starting base losses in the
following order, $200 book value starting base loss for the 2013 year
(attributable to MPI A), $500 book value starting base loss for the 2014 year
(attributable to MPI A), $100 book value starting base loss for the 2015
(attributable to MPI A), $100 market value starting base loss for the 2013 year
(attributable to MPI B) and $100 of the $200 market value starting base loss
for the 2014 year (attributable to MPI B). The remaining $100 from 2014 and
the $100 from 2014 (both market values starting base losses) will be carried
forward to 2016 and uplifted by the CPI.
Choices
9.97
The downstream integration choice and the
simplified MRRT choice both apply to all mining project interests a miner has.
When the constituent interests combine, if the miner had made a downstream
integration choice or a simplified MRRT choice, these choices will continue to
apply to the combined interest.
9.98
Similarly, the starting base valuation choice,
while made in respect of a mining project interest, continues to apply to the
starting base assets as per the choice made by the miner in relation to the
constituent interests.
9.99
An alternative valuation method choice made in
respect of a constituent interest will have no effect on the combined
interest. [Section 115‑65]
9.100
The miner can, if it meets the
requirements, choose to use the alternative valuation method in respect of the
combined interest.
Transfer
of pre‑mining losses and mining losses to and from a combined interest
9.101
There are special rules for transferring pre‑mining
losses and mining losses to or from a combined interest. [Sections 115‑55 and 115‑60]
9.102
When a miner is seeking to transfer a pre‑mining
loss, or a mining loss, to or from a combined interest, the common ownership
tests for the respective losses must be satisfied in relation to each of the
constituent interests and the other mining project interest that is
transferring or accepting the loss. [Sections 115‑55 and 115‑60]
9.103
This rule only applies in relation to pre‑mining
losses and mining losses that arose in an MRRT year before the combining year, as each of the constituent
interests will have the same ownership from the time of combination onwards. [Paragraphs
115‑55(1)(b) and (2)(b) and 115‑60(1)(b) and (2)(b)]
9.104
This rule applies regardless of whether a pre‑mining
loss or a mining loss is otherwise transferable under the general transfer
rules. [Subsections 115‑55(3) and 115‑60(3)]
Example 9.27:
Unable to transfer mining losses to combined interest
At the beginning of the 2016 MRRT year, Miner Co has
five mining project interests (MPIs). Since 1 July 2012, Miner Co has always
had MPI 1, 2, 4 and 5. Miner Co acquired MPI 3 at the beginning of the 2014
MRRT year.
MPIs 1 to 4 became factually integrated from the start
of the 2016 MRRT year and do not have any allowance components, so they combine
from the beginning of the 2016 year. MPI 5 is unable to combine as it is not
integrated with any of the other interests. The combined interest makes a
mining profit for the 2016 MRRT year. MPI 5 has a mining loss from 2013 and
makes another mining loss in 2016.
The combined interest still has a remaining mining
profit when it comes time to apply the transferred mining loss allowance. To
determine whether the mining loss for MPI 5 for the 2013 MRRT year can be
applied in working out the transferred mining loss allowance of the combined
interest, the common ownership test needs to be satisfied in relation to MPI 5
and each of the constituent interests, MPIs 1 to 4.
The common ownership test will be satisfied if the
same miner had MPI 5 and each constituent interest from the start of the year
for which the mining loss arose until the end of the year for which the mining
loss is being transferred.
The common ownership test will not be satisfied for
MPI 5 and constituent interest MPI 3 as Miner Co only acquired MPI 3 at the
beginning of the 2014 MRRT year.
Therefore, the 2013 mining loss of MPI 5 cannot be
applied in working out the transferred mining loss allowance of the combined
interest for the 2016 MRRT year.

Application
and transitional provisions
9.105
Mining project interests can combine from 1 July
2012.
9.106
However, there is a transitional
provision that ensures mining project interests can be taken to be combined
from a time earlier than 1 July 2012, provided they satisfy all the other
conditions for combination. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, subitem 7(1)]
9.107
Allowing mining project interest to be able to
combine from 2 May 2010 is particularly important for the purpose of
working out the starting base for mining project interests.
Outline of
chapter
10.1
This chapter explains when a mining project
interest, or a pre‑mining project interest, is transferred or split. The miner
that has an interest after a transfer or split is liable to pay the Minerals
Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) for that interest for the whole year, not just for the
period after the transfer or split.
10.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
10.3
A mining project interest is the basis upon which a
miner’s MRRT liability is determined. It anchors the operation of the MRRT.
If a miner has mining revenue, mining expenditure, allowance components or
starting base assets, it will have them for a mining project interest.
10.4
A mining project transfer is an arrangement that
results in the whole mining project interest being transferred from one miner
to a single other entity.
10.5
A mining project split is an arrangement that
results in the whole or a part of a mining project interest being transferred
from one miner to one or more other entities.
10.6
A mining project split also happens if:
• a
production right to which the mining project interest relates is split; or
• the
constituent interests of a combined interest cease being integrated with each
other.
10.7
A mining project interest that is transferred from
a miner to another entity by way of a mining project transfer is taken to
continue in the hands of the new miner. That is, the tax history of the
original interest remains with the interest after the transfer.
10.8
The miner that has the mining project interest
after the transfer is the miner liable to pay MRRT for that interest for the
entire MRRT year, including the period before the transfer.
10.9
Similarly, mining project interests that result
from a mining project split are taken to be continuations of the mining project
interest that was split. That is, the tax history of the mining project
interest is inherited by the interests that emerge from the split and the
miners that have those interests are liable for the MRRT payable in relation to
the original interest for the entire MRRT year, including the period before the
split.
10.10
For a mining project split, the extent to which the
tax history and tax liability of the original mining project interest are
inherited by the new interests is determined by applying the split percentage.
10.11
The split percentage is a reasonable approximation
of the market value of a new interest relative to the total market values of
all the interests arising from the split.
10.12
Similar rules deal with pre‑mining project
transfers and pre‑mining project splits.
Detailed
explanation of new law
When a mining
project transfer occurs
10.13
A mining project transfer is an arrangement that results
in a whole mining project interest being transferred from the original miner to
another entity, the new miner. [Subsection 120‑10(3)]
10.14
The miner’s entitlement may be a share in the
output of a mining venture or an entitlement to extract taxable resources [section
15‑5]. The mining project transfer is effected
when a miner gives that
particular entitlement, being the share in an output of a
mining venture or the entitlement to extract taxable resources, to another
entity.
Example 10.1:
Mining project transfer
A Co has a mining project interest because it has an
entitlement to extract taxable resources from the area covered by a production
right (a residual mining project interest).
A Co enters into an arrangement that has the effect of
transferring its entitlement to B Co. B Co now has the entitlement to extract
taxable resources from the area covered by the production right (the residual
mining project interest).
This is a mining project transfer.
10.15
‘Arrangement’ has the same wide meaning as in the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997).
[Section
300‑1, definition of ‘arrangement’]
10.16
A mining project transfer may be effected by a
sale, sub‑lease, gift, or by any other means.
10.17
To avoid doubt, a mining project
transfer can occur in the period 2 May 2010 to 30 June 2012. [Schedule
4 to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill 2011), item 8]
Deemed
mining project transfer
10.18
A mining project transfer will be deemed to have
occurred if a miner’s entitlement to extract taxable resources (a ‘residual
interest’) is replaced (in its entirety) with an entitlement to share in the
output of a mining venture (a ‘mining venture interest’). That is, if the type
of entitlement the miner had has changed. [Section 120-25 and subsections 15-5(1)
and (4)]
Example 10.2:
Deemed mining project transfer
Cavier is granted a production right by the State
Government. It has a mining project interest (MPI 1) because it has an
entitlement to extract taxable resources from the area covered by a production right.
MPI 1 is a residual mining project interest.
Cavier then undertakes to extract all the taxable
resources from the area covered by the production right. Once extracted, it
will process the taxable resource before exporting them for sale. This is a
mining venture that it participates in on its own. It takes 100 per cent of
the output.
The commencement of the mining venture gives rise to a
new mining project interest for Cavier (MPI 2). MPI 2 is a mining venture
interest which is separate and distinct from MPI 1. As the mining venture is
in respect of all the taxable resources to which MPI 1 related, MPI 1 no longer
exists. MPI 1 has effectively been replaced by MPI 2.
The start of the mining venture is taken to be a
mining project transfer: MPI 1 is the original interest, MPI 2 is the new
interest and Cavier is both the original and the new miner.
10.19
A deemed mining project transfer has all the same
effects as a normal mining project transfer.
Effects of a
mining project transfer
10.20
The main effect of a mining project transfer is
that:
• the
mining project interest in the hands of the new miner is taken to be a
continuation of the interest that the original miner had; and
• the
MRRT liability for the interest for the transfer year is payable by the new miner.
[Subsections
120-10(1) and (2)]
Continuation
principle
10.21
After a mining project transfer, the original miner
will cease to have the mining project interest and the new miner will start to
have the interest.
10.22
The mining project interest the new miner has after
the transfer is taken to be a continuation of the interest the original miner
had just before the transfer. Because the new interest is taken to be a
continuation of the original interest, everything that happened in relation to
the original interest is taken to have happened in relation to the new
interest. For the purpose of applying the MRRT law in the current and future
MRRT years, mining revenue, mining expenditure and allowance components for the
original miner for the original interest before the transfer are taken to be
mining revenue, mining expenditure and allowance components of the new miner
for the new interest. This ensures that the tax history of the original
interest is inherited by the new interest. [Subsections 120‑10(2) and (4)]
10.23
The new interest is taken to have started on the
same day as the original interest and the same miners had the original interest
will be taken to have had the new interest, at the same times as they had the
original interest.
10.24
Knowing when the interest started and which miners
have had the interest is relevant for determining whether a mining loss can be
applied in working out, for example, a transferred mining loss allowance in
relation to the interest.
Example
10.3: Inherit ownership history
On 1 July 2012, AlexandraGeo has a mining project interest
(MPI 1). At the start of 1 July 2014, it acquires another mining project
interest (‘new interest’) from Rocky Resources.
The new interest is taken to be a continuation of the
interest that Rocky Resources had and the new interest will continue to have
Rocky Resources’ ownership history. When acquired, the new interest has a
mining loss for the 2013 MRRT year.
At the end of the 2014 MRRT year, there is a mining profit
for MPI 1, while the new interest has made a mining loss. AlexandraGeo needs
to determine whether the 2013 or 2014 mining losses for the new interest can be
applied as a transferred mining loss allowance for MPI 1.
In relation to the 2013 mining loss, the mining loss can
only be applied if the same miner had both the new interest and MPI 1 from the
beginning of the 2013 MRRT year until the end of the 2014 MRRT year.
As the new interest is taken to be a continuation of the
original interest that Rocky Resources had, the new interest will be taken to
have been Rocky Resources’ interest for the 2013 MRRT year (before AlexandraGeo
had the new interest). Therefore, the common ownership test will not be
satisfied in relation to the 2013 MRRT year meaning the 2013 loss will not be
able to be transferred. The common ownership test would, however, be satisfied
in relation to the 2014 MRRT year and the loss for this year could be
transferred.
10.25
Any starting base asset that was
held by the original miner in relation to the original interest that is held by
the new miner in relation to the new interest (that is, after the mining
project transfer), continues to be a starting base asset in relation to the new
interest. The base value of the asset continues and is unaffected by the
transfer (although a change in use of the starting base asset by the new miner
will result in a starting base adjustment).
10.26
A starting base asset valuation
method choice that the original miner made in relation to the original
interest, continues to apply in relation to the starting base assets of the new
interest.
MRRT
amounts move with the interest
10.27
For the purpose of working out the MRRT liability
of the transfer year and later MRRT years, mining revenue and mining
expenditure for the original miner for the original interest are taken to be
mining revenue and mining expenditure of the new miner for the new interest.
All the dates and amounts that relate to the mining revenue and mining
expenditure are preserved when they are inherited. [Subsection 120‑10(4)]
10.28
Similarly, any allowance components for the
original miner for the original interest are taken to be allowance components
for the new miner for the new interest. All dates that are specific to the
allowance components are preserved when they are inherited. [Paragraphs
120-10(4)(c) and (d)]
10.29
Allowance components of the original interest are:
• royalty
credits;
• pre‑mining
losses;
• mining
losses; and
• starting
base losses.
[Section 300‑1,
definition of ‘allowance component’]
10.30
So, a mining loss for the original interest for the
2013 MRRT year remains a 2013 mining loss for the new interest.
10.31
The original miner is not able to use allowance
components for the MRRT year in which the transfer occurs. In particular, the
original miner would not be able to transfer or apply any allowance components
that have accrued for the year to the date of transfer.
MRRT
liability for the transfer year
10.32
The new miner is liable for any MRRT that is
payable for the interest for the whole transfer year. This includes being
liable for any MRRT that is payable for the interest for the part of the year
in which the original miner had the interest. [Subsection 120‑10(1)]
10.33
The original miner is not liable to pay any MRRT
that is payable for the interest for the transfer year. [Subsection
120‑10(1)]
10.34
If the original miner and the new miner have
different accounting periods, the transfer year may not be the same MRRT year
for both the original miner and the new miner. In such cases, the new miner
may be liable to pay MRRT for that interest for a period which is longer or
shorter than its normal MRRT year, as it will be liable to pay MRRT for the
period from the first day of the original miner’s transfer year. [Paragraphs
120‑10(4)(a) and (b)]
Diagram 10.1: Different accounting
periods

10.35
To enable the new miner to determine the MRRT
liability in the transfer year, amounts of mining revenue and mining
expenditure that the original miner had in relation to the original interest
for its MRRT year are instead taken to be mining revenue and mining expenditure
of the new miner in relation to the new interest for its MRRT year. Excluded
expenditure for the original interest remains excluded expenditure for the new
interest. [Paragraphs 120‑10(4)(a) and (b)]
10.36
The information transfer rules
require the original miner to notify the new miner of amounts that are relevant
to the mining project interest. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 8, Division 121 in Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA
1953)]
10.37
However, the information transfer rules do not
require such a notice where the original miner and the new miner are the same
entity, which would be the case in a deemed mining project transfer. [Section 120‑25]
10.38
Chapter 18 has further information on information
transfers.
10.39
In future MRRT years, the new miner will have the
interest from the beginning of the MRRT year and will be liable to pay MRRT for
the interest for the whole year, as it would for any other interest it has.
However, this does not mean that the amounts of mining revenue, mining
expenditure and allowance components that the new miner is taken to have had
for a previous year are no longer relevant. For example, if the new miner sells
an asset in respect of which the original miner included an amount as mining
expenditure, an amount of recoupment for the new miner would be determined with
reference to the mining expenditure that the original miner had (which the new
miner is taken to have). [Paragraph 120‑10(4)(b) and section 30-40]
Choices
10.40
Choices that the original miner made in relation to
the original interest generally continue to apply in relation to the new
interest. One example is the starting base valuation method choice.
10.41
There are some exceptions to this general rule.
Downstream
integration choice
10.42
If the original miner made a downstream integration
choice to treat its mining project interests as downstream integrated, that
choice does not affect the interest when the original miner stops having the
interest. That is, the new miner is not bound by the original miner’s
downstream integration choice. [Subsection 255-20(3)]
10.43
If the original miner is the same entity as the new
miner, which is the case where there is a deemed mining project transfer, the
original miner will not have ceased having the interest and therefore any
downstream integration choice will still apply to that interest. [Section 120‑25
and subsection 255-20(3)]
Alternative
valuation method and simplified MRRT method choices
10.44
If the original miner made one of the following two
choices in respect of the mining project interest for the transfer year, the
new miner is not bound by the choice for its transfer year (unless the new
miner is the same entity as the original miner, which can only occur when there
is a deemed mining project transfer):
• alternative
valuation method choice (see Chapter 14); or
• simplified
MRRT method choice (see Chapter 8).
[Subsection 120‑10(5)
and 120-25(2)]
10.45
After the transfer, the new miner
can determine whether or not it wants to make such choices in respect of the
new interest for the transfer year. [Subsection 120‑10(5)]
10.46
For example, if an original miner has made an
alternative valuation method choice for the transfer year and the new miner
does not make such a choice for the year, the new miner includes in its mining
revenue for the transfer year the raw mining revenue for the mining revenue
event (that is, the amounts unaffected by the alternative valuation method).
10.47
Similarly, if the original miner chose to use the
simplified MRRT method in the transfer year then the new miner will not be
bound by that choice. The new miner is obliged to account for MRRT in the same
manner as they would have if the choice had never been made for that MRRT year.
10.48
However, if the original miner, or another miner
who held the mining project interest, previously made the choice to apply the
simplified MRRT method in a prior MRRT year, then any consequences arising from
that choice, that is the cancellation of allowance components and the denial of
starting base losses, continue to remain in effect. The new miner will not be
able to reconstruct the allowance components for those previous years; they
will remain extinguished.
Example
10.4: The original miner made a simplified MRRT choice
Part way through the year, S&S Resources purchases
a mining project interest from HC Minerals. Before the transfer, HC chose to
use the simplified MRRT method for that year. HC made royalty payments in
relation to the interest during the pre‑transfer part year, but, because it
chose to use the simplified MRRT method, this will not give rise to royalty
credits in relation to the interest. HC had also chose to use the simplified
MRRT method in previous MRRT years and had a number of other allowance
components that were extinguished because of those choices.
When S&S Resources acquires the mining project
interest, it does not make the choice to use the simplified MRRT method.
S&S Resources will be able to have allowance components for the transfer
year, including any royalty credits that would have been extinguished if HC
continued to have the interest. However, S&S will be unable to reconstruct
previous years’ allowance components, they will remain extinguished.
Suspension
day choice
10.49
If the old miner made a suspension day choice, the
new miner will not be bound by that choice in future MRRT years (unless the new
miner is the same entity as the original miner, which can only occur when there
is a deemed mining project transfer). However, allowance components that have
previously been cancelled because of the suspension day will continue to be cancelled,
they cannot be reconstructed. Suspension days are discussed in Chapter 11. [Subsection 120-10(6)
and 120-25(2)]
10.50
After the transfer, the new miner can determine
whether or not it wants to choose to suspend the new interest.
Original
miner and new miner are the same entity
10.51
If the original miner and the new miner are the
same entity, all choices made by the original miner in relation to the original
interest continue to apply to the entity when it is the new miner in relation
to the new interest. The entity cannot remake the choice when it is the new
miner. [Subsection 120‑25(2)]
Events
happening to the original miner after the transfer
10.52
If an amount of mining revenue or mining
expenditure comes home to the original miner after the mining project transfer
has occurred, the amount is taken to be mining revenue or mining expenditure of
the new miner in relation to the new interest. The same applies to anything
that affects the MRRT liability, including allowance components and the
rehabilitation tax offset. This rule also applies if there has been more than
one mining project transfer (including pre-mining project transfers), and to
all the entities who were previously miners (or explorers) in respect of the
interest. [Section 120‑20]
10.53
The rule also applies if there has been one or more
mining project splits (or pre-mining project splits). In such cases it is
subject to the split percentage. [Subsection 120‑20(2)]
Example 10.5: Mining revenue after
transfer
OldMinerCo extracts 50,000 tonnes of iron ore from a
project area on 20 September 2012 and the full amount of the ore remains housed
at OldMinerCo’s run‑of‑mine stockpile.
On 21 January 2013, OldMinerCo transfers the mining
project interest to NewMinerCo. OldMiner Co does not supply any of the 50,000
tonnes of iron ore before the transfer time.
On 20 February 2013, OldMinerCo supplies the 50,000
tonnes of iron ore to ForeignCo. NewMinerCo does not receive any amount in
respect of this supply.
If OldMinerCo still had the interest, the amount in
relation to this supply would have been included as mining revenue of the
mining project interest.
The mining revenue in relation to the supply of the
50,000 tonnes of iron ore by OldMinerCo to ForeignCo, is an amount included in
the mining revenue of NewMinerCo in relation to its mining project interest.
OldMinerCo must notify NewMinerCo of the amount to be
included in the interest’s mining revenue.
10.54
These effects are specifically
provided for as they are things that happen to the original miner in relation
to the mining project interest when the original miner no longer has the
interest.
10.55
The information transfer rules
require the original miner (or an entity who was previously a miner in relation
to the interest) to notify the new miner of amounts that are relevant to the
mining project interest. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8,
Division 121 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
10.56
However, the information transfer
rules do not require such a notice where the original miner and the new miner
are the same entity, which would be the case in a deemed mining project
transfer. [Section 120‑25]
Property transferred with the
mining project interest
10.57
When property is transferred from the original
miner to the new miner as part of the arrangement that effects the mining
project transfer, the part of the consideration for the arrangement that is
attributable to the property would ordinarily be mining expenditure of the new
miner in relation to the transferred mining project interest [Division
35]. Similarly, the consideration that the new
miner paid to the original miner in respect of that property would be a
recoupment of mining expenditure for the original miner in respect of the
mining project interest [section 30‑40].
10.58
However, under inherited history, the new miner is
liable for the MRRT for the mining project interest for the whole transfer year
[subsection 120‑10(1)].
Therefore, the new miner would have mining expenditure on acquiring the
property and would also include the amount recouped by the original miner in
the mining revenue of the interest for the year [section 120‑20].
This would be somewhat circular.
10.59
To prevent that circularity, a special rule exists
to deal with these cases. The intended effect is to cancel out the mining
expenditure and the recoupment. [Subsections 120‑15(2) and (3)]
10.60
The special rule applies when:
• any
property, or any legal or equitable right that is not property (the transferred
property), is transferred to the new miner under the mining project transfer;
• the
original miner used the transferred property in the mining operations of the
mining project interest; and
•
the transferred property:
–
gave rise to an amount of mining expenditure for
the original miner, or a previous miner, in relation to the interest; or
– is,
or may become, a starting base asset in relation to the interest.
[Subsection 120‑15(1)]
Effect
of transferring property
10.61
The effect of transferring such property, is that:
•
the original miner is taken not to have received a
recoupment [subsection 120‑15(2)];
and
• the
new miner is taken to have an amount of excluded expenditure [subsection
120‑15(3)].
10.62
To avoid doubt, the mining project transfer, and
the transfer of transferred property, is not, of itself, an event or
circumstance that gives rise to an adjustment. [Subsection 120-15(4)]
10.63
The amount that is taken to not be a recoupment and
to be excluded expenditure is the amount of the consideration for the mining
project transfer that is attributable to acquiring the particular property.
Example 10.6:
Transferred property
Ironman Resources has a mining project interest (MPI
1). In 2015, it sells the interest, along with all the assets used in MPI 1 to
Washerman Co. Washerman pays Ironman $150 million for MPI 1 and the associated
property. Of the $150 million, $10 million is for a fleet of trucks. Ironman
purchased the fleet for $11 million in 2013 and included the $11 million in its
mining expenditure for the 2013 MRRT year.
The $10 million that Ironman received for the fleet of
trucks would normally be a recoupment to be included in the mining revenue of
the interest. However, as the fleet of trucks was transferred as part of a
mining project transfer, Ironman’s recoupment is ignored.
Similarly, rather than including the $10 million as
mining expenditure for the 2015 MRRT year, the expenditure is excluded
expenditure for Washerman.
10.64
Starting base assets that are transferred as part
of a mining project transfer continue to be starting base assets in relation to
the mining project interests and do not result in an amount of mining expenditure
for the new miner. [Section 120-15]
10.65
The new miner inherits the original miner’s use of
the starting base asset. If the new miner uses the starting base asset
differently (for example, uses it more or less than the original miner used it
in relation to the mining project interest) this will be reflected in the
calculation of the starting base loss. [Division
90]
10.66
Similarly, if the new miner uses a
non‑starting base asset more or less than the original miner, there would be an
adjustment. [Division 160]
When a mining
project split occurs
10.67
A mining project split is an arrangement that results in:
• the
whole of the entitlement comprising the mining project interest being
transferred from a miner to two or more other entities [paragraph
125‑10(3)(a)]; or
• a
part of the entitlement comprising the mining project interest being
transferred from a miner to one or more other entities [paragraph
125‑10(3)(b].
10.68
A mining project split will also happen if:
• a
production right to which the mining project interest relates is split [paragraph
125‑10(3)(c)]; or
• the
constituent interests of a combined interest cease being integrated with the
other constituent interests [paragraph 125‑10(3)(d)].
10.69
The entities which have a mining project interest
after the split will be the new miners in relation to their respective
interests. Unlike transfers, there will be multiple new interests and new
miners as a result of a split. However, if the original miner retains part of
the interest, it will be a new miner in respect of the part that it retains. [Paragraphs 125‑10(3)(b) to
(d)]
10.70
‘Arrangement’, which is necessary in some, but not
all, mining project splits, has the same wide meaning as in the ITAA 1997. [Section 300‑1,
definition of ‘arrangement’]
10.71
The arrangement may be effected by a sale,
sublease, gift, or any other means.
10.72
Constituent interests will cease to be integrated
if they no longer meet the conditions for integration [sections 255‑5
and 255‑10]. The conditions for integration are
discussed in Chapter 9.
10.73
A mining project split can occur in
the period 2 May 2010 to 30 June 2012. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 8]
Deemed
mining project split
10.74
A mining project split will be deemed to have
occurred if a miner’s entitlement to extract taxable resources (a ‘residual
interest’) is reduced because an entitlement to share in the output of a mining
venture (a ‘mining venture interest’) in respect of some of those taxable
resources starts to exist. [Paragraph 125-35(1)(a) and subsections 15-5(1) and (4)]
10.75
A mining project split will also be deemed to have
occurred if a miner stops having an entitlement to extract taxable resources (a
‘residual interest’) and entitlements to share in the output of a mining
venture (a ‘mining venture interest’) in respect of the taxable resources start
to exist for more than one entity (one of which may be the miner who had the
residual interest). All the new entitlements to share in the output of the
mining venture collectively cover all the taxable resources to which the
residual interest previously related. [Paragraph 125-35(1)(b) and subsections 15‑5(1)
and (4)]
Example 10.7:
Deemed mining project split
A Co has three production rights, in respect of which
it has three mining project interests (three residual interests).
A Co enters into a mining venture with B Co to extract
and process taxable resources from an area that spans across parts of each of
the production rights. The mining venture is to run for 10 years. A Co will
take 70 per cent of the output of the mining venture and B Co will take 30 per
cent.

The start of the mining venture gives rise to an
entitlement to an output of the mining venture for A Co and B Co. Therefore A
Co and B Co have mining project interests in relation to the mining venture
(‘mining venture interests’). As the mining venture spans across three
production rights, A Co and B Co will each have a separate mining venture
interest in respect of each production right.
As the mining venture is limited to a period of 10
years, the venture covers some but not all the taxable resources that were
previously part of MPI 1, MPI 2 and MPI 3, each of these mining project
interests will have reduced in value as they now only relate to the taxable
resources that are not covered by the mining venture.
As the start of the mining venture gives rise to
mining venture interests in relation to some of the taxable resources that MPI
1, MPI 2 and MPI 3 covered, there is a deemed mining project split of MPI
1, MPI 2 and MPI 3.
MPI 1 will split into three interests; the reduced
residual interest of MPI 1, the mining venture interest for A Co (MPI 4) and
the mining venture interest for B Co (MPI 5).
MPI 2 will split into three interests; the reduced
residual interest of MPI 2, the mining venture interest for A Co (MPI 6) and
the mining venture interest for B Co (MPI 7).

MPI 3 will split into three interests; the reduced
residual interest of MPI 3, the mining venture interest for A Co (MPI 8) and
the mining venture interest for B Co (MPI 9).
At the end of 10 years, when the mining venture ends,
each of the mining venture interests (MPI 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9) will also end.
However, the residual interests (MPI 1, 2 and 3) will continue in respect of
all the area covered by the respective production right, including the area
formerly covered by the mining venture.
Effects of a
mining project split
10.76
The main effect of a mining project split is that:
•
the mining project interest in the hands of the new
miner is taken to be a continuation of the interest that the original miner
had; and
•
the MRRT liability for the transfer year is payable
by the new miner.
[Subsections 125‑10(1)
and (2)]
Continuation
principle
10.77
The consequences of a mining project split are very
similar to those of a mining project transfer. The new interests are taken to
be a continuation of the original interest, the new miners will inherit the tax
history of the original miner in relation to the interest, and the new miners
are liable for the MRRT liability for the new interests for the whole split
year. [Subsection 125‑10(2)]
10.78
The important distinction is that each of these
will only happen to the new interests to the extent of their respective split
percentages. This ensures the tax history that is relevant to the original
interest is inherited by the new interests to the extent of their respective
shares. [Subsection 125‑10(4)]
10.79
If any starting base asset that was held by the
original miner in relation to the original interest is held by a new miner
after the mining project split to some extent, the asset continues to be a
starting base asset in relation to the new interest. The base value of the
asset continues unaffected by the split (although a change in use of the
starting base asset by a new miner will result in a starting base adjustment).
10.80
A starting base asset valuation
method election that the original miner made in relation to the original
interest continues to apply in relation to the starting base assets of the new
interest.
Split
percentage
10.81
The split percentage is a reasonable
approximation of the market value of the new interest, expressed as a
percentage of the total market values of all the new interests arising from the
split. The market values of the new interests are calculated immediately after
the split. Each new interest has its own split percentage, the sum of which
must equal 100 per cent. [Section 125‑15]
Example 10.8:
Simple split percentage
ACo sells half its entitlement to share in the output
of a mining venture in respect of a production right to BCo. After the mining
project split, there are two new interests of equal value. Therefore, the
split percentage for each of the new interests is 50 per cent.
Example 10.9:
Complex split percentage
ACo has a mining project interest (P). ACo sells to
BCo an entitlement to the first 1 million tonnes of a taxable resource
recovered from the project area for each year. This gives rise to a mining
project interest for BCo. In this case, the entitlement that ACo sells to BCo
cannot be expressed as a fixed percentage because it will change from year to
year.
ACo determines the market value of each of the new
interests immediately after the split. ACo’s new interest (P1) is valued at
$10.5 billion and the new interest that BCo has (P2) is valued at
$600 million. The split percentage for ACo’s P1 is 95 per cent and
the split percentage for BCo’s P2 is 5 per cent:
10.5/(10.5 + 0.6) = 95%
0.6/(10.5 + 0.6) = 5%
MRRT
liability for the split year and later years
10.82
The new miners are each liable to pay any MRRT that
is payable for their respective new interests for the whole transfer year but
only to the extent of their new interests. This includes being liable to pay
any MRRT that is payable for the interest for the part of the year prior to the
split. [Subsection 125‑10(1)]
10.83
The original miner is not liable for any MRRT that
is payable for the interest for the transfer year (unless it is one of the new
miners because it has retained part of the interest).
10.84
When a mining project split occurs, the tax attributes
(including mining revenue, mining expenditure and allowance components) of the
mining project interest are disaggregated and inherited by each of the new
interests to the extent of their respective split percentages. [Subsection 125‑10(4)]
10.85
If the original miner and the new miner have
different accounting periods, the split year may not be the same MRRT year for
both the original miner and the new miner. In such cases, the new miner may be
liable to pay MRRT for a period that is longer or shorter than its normal MRRT
year, as it will be liable to pay MRRT for the period from the first day of the
original miner’s split year. [Subsection 125‑10(4)]
Diagram 10.2:
Different accounting periods

10.86
In future MRRT years, the new miner
will have had the interest from the beginning of the MRRT year and will be
liable to pay MRRT for the interest for the whole year, as it would be for any
other interest it has.
MRRT
amounts move with the interest
10.87
To enable the new miners to
determine the respective MRRT liabilities for the new interests for the split
year and later years, amounts of mining revenue and mining expenditure that the
original miner had in relation to the original interest for the split year and
previous MRRT years are instead taken to be mining revenue and mining expenditure
of the new miners in relation to the new interest (to the extent of the split
percentage). Excluded expenditure for the original interest remains excluded
expenditure for the new interest. [Paragraphs 125‑10(4)(a) and
(b)]
10.88
Similarly, any allowance components
for the original interest will be taken to be allowance components for the new
miners for each of the new interests, to the extent of their respective split
percentages. This includes royalty credits that arose in the split year before
the split and also any allowance component that the interest was carrying
forward from a previous year. [Paragraphs 125‑10(4)(c) and (d)]
10.89
All the dates that are specific to the allowance
components are preserved when they are inherited. For example, a mining loss
for the original interest for the 2013 MRRT year will remain a 2013 mining loss
for the new interests.
10.90
The original miner will not be able to use the
allowance components or apply them before the split.
Example 10.10:
Applying split percentage to tax attributes
Following on from the previous example, the split
percentage for ACo’s P1 is 95 per cent and the split percentage for BCo’s P2 is
5 per cent.
The tax history of P will
be split between P1 and P2 as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mining revenue
|
500
|
475
|
25
|
|
Mining expenditure
|
200
|
190
|
10
|
|
Royalty credit (2013)
|
60
|
57
|
3
|
|
Royalty credit (2014)
|
10
|
9.5
|
0.5
|
|
Starting base loss
|
5
|
4.75
|
0.25
|
|
Pre‑mining loss (2012)
|
5
|
4.75
|
0.25
|
|
|
|
|
|
10.91
The information transfer rules
requires the original miner to notify the new miners of amounts that are
relevant to the mining project interest. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 8, Division 121 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
10.92
However, the information transfer rules do not
require such a notice where the original miner and the new miner are the same
entity, which would be the case in some mining project splits.
Choices
10.93
Choices the original miner made in relation to the
original interest generally continue to apply in relation to the new interests.
One example is the starting base valuation method choice.
10.94
However, there are some exceptions to this general
rule.
Downstream
integration choice
10.95
If the original miner had made a downstream
integration choice to treat its mining project interests as downstream
integrated, that choice does not affect the interest (or part of the interest)
when the original miner stops having the interest. That is, the new miners are
not bound by the original miner’s downstream integration choice. [Subsection
255-20(3)]
10.96
If the original miner is the same entity as the new
miner, the original miner will not have ceased having the interest and
therefore any downstream integration choice will still apply to that interest.
[Subsection 255-20(3)]
Alternative
valuation method and simplified MRRT method choices
10.97
If the original miner made one of the following two
choices in respect of the mining project interest for the transfer year, the
new miners are not bound by the choice for their split years (unless the new
miner is the same entity as the original miner):
• alternative
valuation method choice (see Chapter 14); or
• simplified
MRRT method choice (see Chapter 8).
[Subsections 125-10(5)
and (7)]
10.98
After the split, the new miner can
determine whether or not it wants to make such choices in respect of the new
interest for the split year. [Subsection 125‑10(5)]
10.99
For example, if an original miner has made an
alternative valuation method choice for the split year and the new miner does
not make such a choice for the year, it includes in its mining revenue for the split
year the raw mining revenue (subject to the split percentage) for the mining
revenue event (that is, the amounts unaffected by the alternative valuation
method).
10.100
Similarly, if the original miner chose to use the
simplified MRRT method in the split year then the new miner will not be bound
by that choice. The new miner is obliged to account for MRRT in the same
manner as they would have if the choice had never been made for that MRRT year.
10.101
However, if the original miner, or another miner
who held the mining project interest, had previously made the choice to apply
the simplified MRRT method in a prior MRRT year, then any consequences arising
from that choice, that is the cancelling of allowance components and the
inability to claim starting base losses, continue to remain in effect. The new
miner will not be able to reconstruct the allowance components for those
previous years; they will remain extinguished.
Suspension
day choice
10.102
If the old miner made a suspension day choice, the
new miner will not be bound by that choice in future MRRT years (unless the new
miner is the same entity as the original miner). However, allowance components
that have previously been cancelled because of the suspension day will continue
to be cancelled, they cannot be reconstructed. Suspension days are discussed
in Chapter 11. [Subsection 125-10(6)]
10.103
After the split, the new miner can determine
whether or not it wants to choose to suspend the new interest.
Original
miner and new miner are the same entity
10.104
If the original miner and the new miner are the
same entity, all choices made by the original miner in relation to the original
interest continue to apply to the entity when it is the new miner in relation
to the new interest. [Subsection 125‑10(7)]
Events
happening to the original miner after the split
10.105
If an amount of mining revenue or
mining expenditure relating to the original interest comes home to the original
miner after the mining project split has occurred, the amount is instead taken
to be mining revenue and mining expenditure of the new miners (to the extent of
their split percentages) in relation to the new interests. The same applies to
anything that affect the MRRT liability, including allowance components and the
rehabilitation tax offset. This rule also applies if there
has been more than one mining project split (including pre-mining project
splits), and to all the entities that were previously miners (or explorers) in
respect of the mining project interest. [Section
125‑30]
Example
10.11: Multiple mining project splits
Midnight Resource has a
mining project interest. Midnight sells half the mining project interest to
Sunset Mines. This sale results in a mining project split. Shortly
afterwards, Sunset then sells half of its mining project interest to Daybreak
Co. This results in another mining project split.

Midnight Co sells 2 million tonnes of resources that
it extracted from MPI 1, which results in $50 million of mining revenue for MPI
1. However, because MPI 1 has been subject to multiple mining project splits,
the $50 million is not included (at least not in its entirety) in the mining
project interest that Midnight retains.
Applying the various split percentages, $25 million
would be mining revenue of MPI 3, $12.5 million would be mining revenue of MPI
4 and $12.5 million would be mining revenue of MPI 5.

10.106
These effects are specifically
provided for as they are things that happen to the original miner in relation
to the mining project interest when the original miner no longer has the
interest.
10.107
The information transfer rules
require the original miner (or an entity who was previously the miner in
relation to the interest) to notify the new miner of amounts that are relevant
to the mining project interest. [Schedule
1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8, Division 121 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
10.108
However, the information transfer
rules do not require such a notice where the original miner and the new miner
are the same entity, which would be the case in some mining project splits.
Property transferred with the
mining project interest
10.109
When property is transferred from the original
miner to the new miner as part of the arrangement that affects the mining
project split, the part of the consideration that is attributable to the property
would ordinarily be mining expenditure of the new miners in relation to the new
interests [Division 35]. Similarly,
the consideration that the new miners paid to the original miner in respect of
that property would be a recoupment of mining expenditure for the original
miner in respect of the mining project interest [section 30‑40].
10.110
However, under inherited history, the new miners
are liable for the MRRT, to the extent of their split percentages, for the
mining project interest for the whole split year [subsections 125‑10(1) and (4)].
Therefore, the new miner would have mining expenditure on acquiring the
property and it would also include the amount recouped by the original miner in
the mining revenue for the new interest for the year [section 125‑30].
This would be somewhat circular.
10.111
To prevent that circularity, a special rule exists
to deal with these cases [section 125‑20]. The
intended effect is to cancel out the mining expenditure and the recoupment [subsections
125‑20(2) and (3)].
10.112
The special rule applies when:
• any
property, or any legal or equitable right that is not property (the transferred
property), is transferred to the new miner under the mining project split;
• the
original miner used the transferred property in the mining operations of the
mining project interest; and
•
the transferred property:
–
gave rise to an amount of mining expenditure for
the original miner, or a previous miner, in relation to the interest; or
–
is, or may become, a starting base asset in
relation to the interest.
[Subsection 125‑20(1)]
Effect
of transferring property
10.113
The effect of transferring such property, is that:
• the
original miner is taken not to have received a recoupment [subsection
125‑20(2)]; and
• the
new miner is taken to have an amount of excluded expenditure [subsection
125‑20(3)].
10.114
To avoid doubt, the mining project transfer, and
the transfer of transferred property, is not, of itself, an event or
circumstance that gives rise to an adjustment. [Subsection 125-20(4)]
10.115
The amount that is taken to not be a recoupment and
to be excluded expenditure is the amount of the consideration for the mining
project split that is attributable to acquiring the particular property.
10.116
Starting base assets that are transferred as part
of a mining project split continue to be starting base assets in relation to
the new interest and do not result in an amount of mining expenditure for the
new miners. [Section 125-20]
10.117
The new miner inherits the original miner’s use of
the starting base asset. If the new miner uses the starting base asset
differently (for example, uses it more or less) than the original miner used it
in relation to the mining project interest, this will be reflected in the
calculation of the starting base loss. [Division
90]
10.118
Similarly, if the new miner uses a
non‑starting base asset more or less than the original miner, there should be
an adjustment. [Division 160]
MRRT
liability for the split interest for an earlier year
10.119
The total MRRT liability that a mining project
interest has ever had is relevant in working out a rehabilitation tax offset
amount for the interest [section 225‑15]. For
more detail on the rehabilitation tax offset, see Chapter 11.
10.120
For the purpose of working out the rehabilitation
tax offset amount for a mining project interest that has resulted from a mining
project split (the new interest), the MRRT liability for the original interest
is not necessarily apportioned based on the split percentage. Rather, the
previous MRRT liabilities of the original interest should be allocated to the
new interests on a reasonable basis. [Section 125‑25]
10.121
This special rule recognises that the split
percentage is based on market values, which takes into account prospective
things, such as future profitability of the new interest. This is appropriate
for allocating allowance components but it is not necessarily appropriate for
allocating past MRRT liabilities. Previous MRRT liabilities should be
attributed to the new interest based on things that have happened in the past,
such as past profitability.
10.122
This is particularly relevant for
the interests that are split towards the end of their life, where there is
limited future earning capacity but large amounts of rehabilitation to be
undertaken. If previous MRRT liabilities of the interest were allocated based
on the split percentage this may significantly limit the new interests’ ability
to have a rehabilitation tax offset amount. [Subsection 225‑15(4)]
Example
10.12: Reasonably allocating previous year’s MRRT
liability
Big Miner has a mining project interest (MPI).
Throughout its life, MPI has had a total of $50 million MRRT liabilities. One
part of the project area has been heavily mined and Big Miner has extracted all
the resources it can from that particular area. Coalin’ Campbell Resources,
however, is resourceful and has very specialised skills to extract the small
amounts of remaining resources. Big Miner sells part of MPI to Coalin’
Campbell. MPI has been split into two interests, Big Miner retains part
of the interest (MPI 1) and Coalin’ Campbell has the other part (MPI 2).
After extracting the last resources from MPI 2,
Coalin’ Campbell will be required to undertake rehabilitation in respect of the
project area of MPI 2.
The split percentage for the split is 99 per cent for
MPI 1 and 1 per cent for MPI 2. If previous MRRT liabilities of MPI
were divided between MPI 1 and MPI 2 on the basis of the split percentage, MPI
2 will be taken to have had MRRT liabilities of $0.5 million. This does
not take into account that the area that now is covered by MPI 2 was both
heavily mined by, and extremely profitable for, Big Miner Co. In
fact, the area now covered by MPI 2 contributed about 50 per cent of
the profits of MPI and consequently 50 per cent of the MRRT liability.
For these reasons, the split percentage is not a
reasonable basis upon which to determine the allocation of past MRRT liabilities
of MPI for the purpose of calculating the rehabilitation tax offset amount.
Rather, $25 million of the MRRT liability of MPI (50 per cent) will be
allocated to MPI 2 for the purpose of calculating the rehabilitation tax offset
amount for MPI 2. This will ensure Coalin’ Campbell’s ability to have a
rehabilitation tax offset amount for MPI 2 is not unduly limited by the split
percentage.
10.123
While the allocation of MRRT liability for the
calculation of the rehabilitation tax offset amount is not required to be based
on the split percentage, this does not mean that there may not be circumstances
in which the split percentage would provide the most reasonable basis upon
which to allocate past liabilities.
Pre‑mining
project transfers and splits
10.124
Similar rules provide for the
transfer and splitting of pre‑mining project interests. [Divisions
145 and 150]
10.125
Pre‑mining project transfers and splits can occur
in the period 2 May 2010 to 30 June 2012. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 9]
Pre‑mining
project transfers
10.126
A pre‑mining project transfer is an arrangement that
results in the pre‑mining project interest being transferred from the original
explorer to another entity, the new explorer. [Subsection 145‑10(2)]
10.127
Unlike mining project interests, the commencement
of a mining venture is not relevant to holding a pre-mining project interest.
Accordingly, there are no special rules to deal with that case.
10.128
The new pre‑mining project interest is taken to be
a continuation of the original pre‑mining project interest. [Subsections 145‑10(1),
145-15(1) and (2)]
10.129
The new explorer is liable to pay any MRRT for the
transferred interest for the whole transfer year (although a pre‑mining project
interest is less likely to have an MRRT liability). [Section
145‑15]
10.130
If the original explorer chose to apply the
simplified MRRT method for the transfer year, the new explorer is not bound by
this choice. The new explorer can choose whether this method applies to the
new interest for the transfer year. [Subsection 145‑15(3)]
10.131
A difference between the mining project transfer
rules and those for pre‑mining project transfers is that the holder of a pre‑mining
project interest cannot choose to use the alternative valuation method and
cannot make a suspension day choice and, therefore, the alternative valuation
method and the suspension day choices are not relevant choices for a new
explorer.
10.132
Similarly, it is unlikely a pre-mining project
interest would make a downstream integration choice.
10.133
The effects of transferring property along with the
pre‑mining project interest are the same as for mining project interests. [Section
145‑20]
10.134
Events happening to the original
explorer after the transfer come home to the new explorer. [Section
145‑25]
Mining
project interest originates from a pre-mining project interest
10.135
A pre-mining project transfer is
taken to happen when the mining project interest originates from a pre-mining
project interest. See Chapter 6 for further discussion on when a mining
project interest originates from a pre-mining project interest. [Section
145‑30]
10.136
This ensures that the continuation principle will
apply to treat the pre-mining project interest and the mining project interest
that originated from it as the same interest, allowing the mining project
interest to inherit the tax history of the pre-mining project interest. [Paragraph 145‑30(1)(b)
and subsections 145-10(1), 145-15(1) and (2)]
Pre‑mining
project splits
10.137
A pre‑mining project split is an arrangement that has the
effect of transferring all or part of the pre‑mining project interest to one or
more other entities. [Paragraphs 150‑10(2)(a) and (b)]
10.138
A pre‑mining project split may also happen if the
exploration right that relates to the pre‑mining project interest is itself
split. [Paragraph 150‑10(2)(c)]
10.139
Unlike mining project splits, a pre‑mining
project split does not happen because the constituent interests of a combined
interest disintegrate, as pre‑mining project interests are not subject to the
integration rules. [Division 255]
10.140
Unlike mining project interests, the commencement
of a mining venture is not relevant to having a pre-mining project interest.
Therefore, there is no case in which a pre‑mining project split is deemed to
have happened.
10.141
The new pre‑mining project interests are taken to
be a continuation of the original pre‑mining project interest, to the extent of
the split percentage. [Subsections 150‑10(1), 150-15(1) and (2)]
10.142
The new explorer is liable to pay any MRRT for the
transferred interest for the whole split year, to the extent of the split
percentage. [Subsection 150‑15(1)]
10.143
A simplified MRRT choice of the
original explorer does not bind the new explorer for the split year. The new
explorer can make its own choice as to whether it should apply. [Subsection
150‑15(3)]
10.144
A difference between the mining project split rules
and those for pre‑mining project splits is that the holder of a pre‑mining
project interest cannot choose to use the alternative valuation method and
cannot make a suspension day choice and, therefore, the alternative valuation
method and the suspension day choices are not relevant choices for a new
explorer.
10.145
Similarly, it is unlikely a pre-mining project
interest would make a downstream integration choice.
10.146
A difference between the mining project split rules
and those for pre‑mining project split rules is that a pre‑mining project
interest cannot have a suspension day choice and therefore the suspension day
choice is not mentioned as one that the new explorer is not bound by.
10.147
The effects of transferring property along with the
split of the pre‑mining project interest are the same as for mining project
interests. [Section 150‑20]
10.148
Events happening to the original explorer after the
split, being things that would happen in relation to the original interest if
the original explorer still had the interest, come home to the new explorer. [Section 150‑30]
10.149
The split percentage for pre‑mining project
interest is worked out on the same basis as it is for mining project
interests. [Subsections 150‑15(5) to (7)]
10.150
For the purpose of working out a
rehabilitation tax offset amount for the pre‑mining project interest, previous
MRRT liabilities are allocated on a reasonable basis (not necessarily the split
percentage), as they are for mining project interests. [Section
150‑25]
Mining
project interest originates from a pre-mining project interest
10.151
A pre-mining project split is taken
to happen when the mining project interest originates from a pre-mining project
interest. See Chapter 6 for further discussion on when a mining project
interest originates from a pre-mining project interest. [Section
150-35]
10.152
This ensures that the continuation principle will
apply to treat the pre-mining project interest and the mining project interest
that originated from it as the same interest, allowing the mining project
interest to inherit the tax history of the pre-mining project interest (to the
extent of the split percentage). [Paragraph 150‑35(1)(b), subsections
150-10(1), 150-15(1) and 150‑15(2)]
Application
and transitional provisions
10.153
For the avoidance of doubt, there is
a transitional provision that ensures mining project transfers and splits can
occur from a time earlier than 1 July 2012. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 8]
10.154
Similarly, there is a transitional
provision that ensures pre-mining project transfers and splits can occur from a
time earlier than 1 July 2012. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
item 9]
10.155
A transitional provision exists to ensure the
information transfer provisions also apply to mining project transfer, mining
project splits, pre‑mining project transfers and pre-mining project splits that
occur between 1 May 2010 and 30 June 2012. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
subitem 14(1)]
10.156
This transitional provision contains a special rule
about the date by which entities are required to provide such notices. [Schedule
4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, subitem 14(2)]
Outline of
chapter
11.1
This chapter deals with things that become relevant
towards the end of a mining or pre‑mining project interest’s life.
11.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
11.3
The Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) recognises
that, towards the end of an interest’s life, the activities of the interest
will change. From that time on, special rules treat the interest differently.
Suspension
day
11.4
The suspension day for a mining project interest is
the earliest of:
• the
day chosen by the miner (after commercial production has ceased);
• ten
years after commercial production most recently took place; and
• the
termination day.
11.5
The suspension day has the effect of cancelling
allowance components and providing access to the rehabilitation tax offset.
Rehabilitation
tax offset
11.6
An entity is entitled to the refundable
rehabilitation tax offset if it has a rehabilitation tax offset amount for one
or more of its mining project interests or pre‑mining project interests and the
entity has paid MRRT for a previous year or has MRRT liabilities for the
current year.
11.7
An entity has a rehabilitation tax offset amount
for a mining project interest if:
•
the suspension day for the interest has occurred;
•
upstream rehabilitation expenditure has been
incurred in relation to the interest for the year;
• the
expenditure cannot be applied against mining revenue of the interest or mining
profit of another interest; and
• there
has been an MRRT liability for the interest for an MRRT year (regardless of
which entity had the interest when the liability arose).
Termination
day
11.8
The termination day for a mining project interest
is the day no entity has the mining project interest. From the termination day
onwards, the last entity to have the interest before it ended is taken to
continue to have it for the purpose of accounting for the MRRT. Therefore, the
interest will still be capable of having mining revenue, mining expenditure and
allowance components.
Pre‑mining
project interests
11.9
Pre‑mining project interests do not have suspension
days. They do, however, have termination days. The termination day for a pre‑mining
project interest is the day no entity holds the pre‑mining project interest.
The termination day for a pre‑mining project interest has the same effect as
the suspension and termination days have for a mining project interest.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Suspension
day
11.10
The suspension day for a mining project interest is
a point in the life of a mining project interest from which the interest is
taken to be drawing to a close.
11.11
The suspension day for a mining project interest is the
earliest of:
•
the day chosen by the miner (after commercial
production has ceased);
•
the day 10 years after commercial production most
recently took place; and
•
the termination day.
[Subsection 130‑10(1)]
11.12
If more than one of the events happen in relation
to the mining project interest, the suspension day falls on the earliest day.
Day
chosen by the miner
11.13
A miner may choose the suspension day for a mining
project interest, provided commercial production of taxable resources from the
project area for the interest has ceased. [Paragraph 130‑10(1)(a) and subsection 130‑10(2)]
11.14
All the general rules for making a choice under the
MRRT apply to this choice. In addition, the miner must notify the Commissioner
of Taxation (Commissioner) of the choice. [Subsection 130‑10(4) and Schedule 1 to
the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill); item 8, Division 119 of Schedule
1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953)]
Ten
years after commercial production
11.15
The suspension day for a mining project interest
may be the day occurring 10 years after the most recent day on which commercial
production of taxable resources took place from the project area. [Paragraph
130‑10(1)(b)]
Commercial
production
11.16
‘Commercial production’ takes its ordinary
meaning. However, there are certain factors that must be taken into account
when considering whether commercial production of taxable resources takes place
from a project area.
11.17
The factors that must be taken into account are:
• past
and current production of taxable resources;
• past
and current expenditure relating to the upstream mining operations; and
• the
extent to which upstream mine equipment has been decommissioned.
[Subsection 130‑10(3)]
11.18
Other factors that may be relevant in determining
when commercial production of taxable resources is taking place include:
• implementation
of closure plans;
• demolition
and removal of infrastructure;
• reshaping
of remaining mining landforms;
• completion
of rehabilitation and remediation processes; and
• monitoring,
measuring and reporting on the performance of closure activities.
11.19
In assessing whether there is commercial
production, each situation turns on its own particular facts and no one factor
is decisive. All factors must be considered in combination and as a whole.
Whether there is commercial production will depend on the larger or general
impression gained and whether it has a commercial flavour.
Example 11.1:
Commercial production has ceased
Durpy Limited announces the premature closure of its
Gaullcos coal mine (a mining project interest) on 10 July 2013. Following the
announcement, Durpy Limited commenced preparation of a detailed mine site
rehabilitation plan. The rehabilitation plan included the following
activities:
• decommissioning
and removing plant and equipment;
• retaining
all mined materials on site and a rehabilitated storage area;
• ensuring
effective waste management;
• re‑contouring
and revegetating the land; and
• ongoing
monitoring of soil and water conditions.
The rehabilitation plan will be implemented over 10
years and rehabilitation work begins on 16 December 2013. Consistent
with the rehabilitation plan, commercial production from the Gaullcos coal mine
ceases on 1 September 2014.
From 1 September 2014, Durpy Limited can
choose a suspension day. If Durpy Limited does not make such a choice, the
suspension day for the mining project interest will be
1 September 2024, or the termination day of the mining project interest,
whichever occurs first.
11.20
Commercial production can cease at a mine well
before a mine formally closes and before the mining lease has been
relinquished.
11.21
In some circumstances, ceasing commercial
production may only be temporary, or the mine may enter a period of care and
maintenance. Provided the cessation of commercial production does not exceed
10 years (and the miner does not choose a suspension day), it will not result
in a suspension day for the mining project interest.
Example 11.2:
Care and maintenance
Colecoal Resources Limited operates the Pertep coal
mine (a mining project interest). The Pertep mine produces 1 million tonnes a
year. Due to an economic downturn, Colecoal places the Pertep coal mine under
a care and maintenance program. As part of the care and maintenance program,
coal production stops on 29 June 2013.
On 29 June 2023, the Pertep mine remains in a care and
maintenance program. This will be the suspension day for the mining project
interest because it is now 10 years since the last commercial production from
the mine.
Recommencing
commercial production
11.22
If commercial production recommences before a
suspension day for a mining project interest has occurred, there is no
consequence, the mining project interest will continue.
11.23
However, if a suspension day has occurred for a
mining project interest and the miner undertakes upstream mining operations
with a view to recommencing commercial production from the project area for the
mining project interest, the interest will be taken to have ceased and a new
interest will be taken to have started. The deemed cessation will be a
termination day for the old interest. [Subsection 130‑20(1)]
11.24
The deemed cessation of the old interest and the
deemed creation of the new interest is not a mining project transfer. [Subsection 130‑20(2)]
Example 11.3:
Recommencing commercial production
Rexneilad Limited operates the Nanihall iron ore
mine. As at 11 July 2012, the upstream mining operations of the
Nanihall iron ore mine:
• employed
1,000 people;
• operated
500 trucks;
• had
annual operating expenditure of $50 million;
• had
$1 billion of capital; and
• produced
10 million tonnes of iron ore a year.
Iron ore production from the Nanihall mine steadily
declines to 1 million tonnes a year in 2013. On 24 December 2013,
Rexneilad decides to close the mine and begins rehabilitation of the mine site.
On 12 May 2024, the world iron ore price
triples and Rexneilad decides to recommence mining. By the end of that year,
it:
• employs
500 people;
• operates
250 trucks;
• has
operating expenditure of $40 million; and
• produces
5 million tonnes of iron ore.
By the end of 2025, production has increased to 15
million tonnes.
On 8 December 2026, iron ore prices return to long
term averages and Rexneilad stops producing iron ore and restarts mine site
rehabilitation.
Rexneilad, after taking into account all the relevant
factors including past production, expenditure and use of mining equipment,
determines that commercial production ceased (sometime on or before
24 December 2013). On 12 May 2024, Rexneilad started undertaking upstream
mining operations with a view to recommencing commercial production.
Commercial production ceased for a second time on 8 December 2026.
A suspension day occurs for the interest because there
was no commercial production for 10 years (24 December 2013 to 24 December
2023). When Rexneilad decided to recommence commercial production, on
12 May 2024, the interest is taken to have ceased and a new mining
project interest is taken to exist. Therefore, the production from 12 May 2024
is an activity of the new mining project interest.
Termination
day
11.25
The termination day for a mining project
interest is the day on which there is no longer any entity that has the
interest [section 135‑5]. The
termination day may also give rise to the suspension day, if the miner no
longer has the interest and a suspension day for the interest has not already
occurred [paragraph 130-10(1)(c)].
11.26
The concept of a termination day is discussed in
further detail below. Generally it is the day on which the mining venture or
the production right giving rise to a mining project interest no longer exists.
Effect of
suspension
11.27
The suspension day is a point in the life of a
mining project interest that represents the winding down of the interest.
There are two consequences of an interest being suspended.
11.28
First, allowance components can no longer be
carried forward and uplifted and, second, rehabilitation tax offsets may be
available. [Section 130-15 and Division 225]
Cancelling
allowance components
11.29
Allowance components are not intended to be carried
forward and uplifted indefinitely. The uplift rate reflects the possibility
that a miner may not get to use its allowance components.
11.30
The suspension day signals a new phase of a mining
project interest, that is, the beginning of the end (or the end, if the
suspension day is also the termination day).
11.31
From the suspension day onwards, the mining project
interest will be less likely to be producing amounts of taxable resources and
consequently less likely to have mining profits against which its allowance
components can be applied.
11.32
A mining project interest that has had a suspension
day will still accrue allowance components within each year and will be able to
apply those allowances against mining profits for the year, be those its own or
those of a related mining project interest.
11.33
In the year in which the suspension day occurs, the
mining project interest can use all its allowance components carried forward
from a previous year and those that have arisen in the current MRRT year. The
interest must apply the allowance components against its mining profit or the
components may form part of a transferred allowance for use by another
interest. The allowance components that remain unapplied at the end of that
year are cancelled. That is, they are not carried forward for use in a future
year. [Paragraph 130‑15(a)]
11.34
In an MRRT year after the MRRT year in which the
suspension day for a mining project interest occurred, allowance components
will still arise for the interest and they will be available for use at the end
of the year. However, any allowance components that cannot be applied in that
year are cancelled and cannot be carried forward. [Paragraph 130‑15(b)]
11.35
Beyond the cancellation of the allowance components
(and the access to the rehabilitation tax offset which is discussed below), the
mining project interest is otherwise unaffected by having a suspension day.
11.36
The interest would continue to exist and the miner
would still be liable to pay MRRT. A mining project interest will still be
able to accrue allowance components within each year (including starting base
allowances and transferred allowances) and have the ability to use them at the
end of each year (whether against their mining profit or transferred for use
against another interest’s mining profit). But any unapplied allowance
components (including pre‑mining losses attaching to the mining project
interest) will be cancelled at the end of the year and not carried forward to
the next MRRT year.
Example 11.4:
Cancellation of allowance components
Miner A has two mining project interests, MPI 1 and
MPI 2. Commercial production has ceased from MPI 1. The miner makes a choice
that 1 October 2015 will be the suspension day for the MPI 1.
At this time, there are $100 million of mining loss
allowances that have been carried forward from previous years in relation to
MPI 1. At the end of the MRRT year (30 June 2016) MPI 1 has a $30 million
mining profit. MPI 1 uses $30 million of the mining losses to reduce its
profit to zero. MPI 2 can absorb $40 million of MPI 1’s mining losses.
Therefore, MPI 1 transfers $40 million of the losses to MPI 2 for use as a
transferred mining loss allowance.
MPI 1’s remaining $30 million of mining losses cannot
be applied for the year. These mining losses are cancelled.
Rehabilitation
tax offset
11.37
Rehabilitating a mine site is a necessary condition
that is attached to most, if not all, production rights. Some rehabilitation
may be undertaken throughout the life of a mining project interest. However,
most is commonly undertaken towards the end of the mine’s life.
11.38
Throughout the life of a mining project interest,
rehabilitation expenditure, to the extent it relates to upstream mining
operations, is mining expenditure that is deductible [sections
35‑10 to 35-20]. If mining expenditure exceeds
mining revenue, a mining project interest makes a mining loss for an MRRT year [subsection
75‑20(1)]. Mining losses can therefore be
attributable to rehabilitation expenditure.
11.39
While the rehabilitation expenditure is mining
expenditure, the time at which it is mostly incurred makes it less likely that
the interest will have mining revenue against which the expenditure can be
applied. To recognise this, the expenditure may give rise to a rehabilitation
tax offset.
Entitlement
to a rehabilitation tax offset
11.40
The rehabilitation tax offset is an amount claimed by the
miner for an MRRT year. It is an entity level offset and not an offset that is
applied against the individual MRRT liabilities of the mining project
interests. However, the amount of the offset that the miner is entitled to is
determined by reference to the rehabilitation tax offset amounts for each
relevant mining project interest. [Section 225‑10]
11.41
A miner is only entitled to a rehabilitation tax offset
for an MRRT year if:
• it
is, or has been, liable to pay MRRT for any MRRT year [subsection
225-10(2)]; and
• it
has a rehabilitation tax offset amount for a mining project interest [subsection
225-10(1)].
Amount
of a rehabilitation tax offset
11.42
If a miner is entitled to a rehabilitation tax
offset amount for an MRRT year, the amount of the offset is equal to the sum of
all the rehabilitation tax offset amounts that the miner has for its mining
project interests. [Paragraph 225‑10(3)(a)]
11.43
However, the amount of the rehabilitation tax
offset that a miner is entitled to for an MRRT year cannot exceed the total
MRRT that the miner is or has been liable to pay, in relation to any mining
project interest that it has ever had (reduced to take into account the miner’s
entitlements to offsets). [Paragraph 225‑10(3)(b)]
11.44
The offsets that are taken into account in reducing
total MRRT liabilities are any:
•
rehabilitation tax offsets for a previous year [subparagraph 225‑10(3)(b)(i)];
and
•
any low‑profit offset the miner is entitled to for
the current year [subparagraph 225‑10(3)(b)(ii)].
11.45
This limits the miner’s ability to claim a
refundable tax offset if the miner has liabilities (in the current or previous
years) which have been previously offset.
11.46
The rehabilitation tax offset reduces the miner’s
liability to pay MRRT for the year [subsection 225‑25(1)].
If the offset exceeds the amount of MRRT the miner is liable to pay in any
particular year, the Commissioner will pay the excess to the miner (provided
the miner has no other outstanding tax liabilities) [subsections
225‑25(2) and (3)]. Therefore, the rehabilitation
tax offset is a refundable tax offset.
Joint
and several liability
11.47
When determining the amount of MRRT that a miner is
or has been liable to pay, there are some instances in which one or more
entities other than the miner may be responsible for discharging the miner’s
liability. This occurs where the entities have, or are taken to have, joint
and several liability. For example, if the head company of an MRRT
consolidated group does not pay its MRRT liability, all the members of the
group are jointly and severally liable for that liability.
11.48
To ensure that a single liability is not counted by
two or more entities when working out their respective rehabilitation tax
offsets, only the primary entity is taken to have the liability, regardless of
which entity actually pays the debt. [Subsection 225‑10(4)]
Rehabilitation
tax offset amount for a mining project interest
11.49
A miner has a rehabilitation tax offset amount for a mining
project interest for a year if:
• there
was an MRRT liability for the interest for a previous year [subsection
225‑15(2)];
• the
suspension day for the mining project interest has occurred [paragraph
225‑15(1)(a)];
• rehabilitation
expenditure was incurred for the interest for the year [paragraph 225‑15(1)(b)];
and
• a
mining loss for the current year is cancelled as a result of the suspension day
having occurred [paragraph 225‑15(1)(c)].
11.50
The rehabilitation tax offset amount
for an interest is the allowable rehabilitation expenditure multiplied by the
MRRT rate. However, the rehabilitation tax offset amount cannot exceed
the total MRRT liabilities for the mining project interest (for any
year, payable by any
miner). [Subsections 225‑15(3) and (4)]
11.51
This ensures that a rehabilitation tax offset
amount for a mining project interest cannot be greater than the MRRT
liabilities that relate to the interest.
Allowable
rehabilitation expenditure
11.52
The allowable rehabilitation expenditure is the lesser of:
•
the sum of all the upstream rehabilitation
expenditure incurred in relation to the mining project interest for the year [paragraph
225‑15(3)(a)]; and
• the
amount of mining loss for the current MRRT year that was cancelled as a result
of the suspension day having occurred [paragraph 225‑15(3)(b)].
11.53
This means that the miner’s rehabilitation tax
offset amount for a mining project interest, only represents rehabilitation
expenditure that has been unable to be applied for the year.
Example 11.5:
Allowable rehabilitation expenditure
Lyon Resources has a mining project interest that has
had a suspension day. For the 2018 MRRT year, Lyon incurred $27 million on
upstream rehabilitation expenditure. The interest has a $50 million mining
loss for the year. Lyon is required to transfer $10 million of the loss to a
related interest but the remaining $40 million cannot be used. The
$40 million mining loss is cancelled. The allowable rehabilitation
expenditure for the interest for the year will be $27 million (being the lesser
of $27 million and $40 million).
The rehabilitation tax offset amount for the interest
is $6.075 million (being the allowable rehabilitation expenditure multiplied by
the MRRT rate).
Upstream
rehabilitation expenditure
11.54
The upstream rehabilitation expenditure that can give rise
to a rehabilitation tax offset amount comprises any expenditure on
rehabilitating the project area for the mining project interest or any other
area affected by an upstream activity. Expenditure cannot give rise to a
rehabilitation tax offset to the extent that it relates to rehabilitating areas
affected by downstream activities. [Paragraph 225‑15(1)(b]
11.55
To be upstream rehabilitation expenditure, the
expenditure must be:
• included
as mining expenditure for the interest for the year [subparagraph
225‑15(1)(b)(i)]; and
• necessarily
incurred in carrying on mining operations that are rehabilitation activities,
or activities done in furtherance of that rehabilitation [subparagraph
225‑15(1)(b)(ii) and paragraphs 35‑20(2)(f)
and (h)].
11.56
The first requirement brings in all mining
expenditure for the year. The second requirement limits it to the expenditure
relating to rehabilitation.
Example 11.6
ReakesFox Resources Limited intends to close down the
Surajeeve iron ore mine (a mining project interest). ReakesFox Resources
engages an environmental scientist to assist with the rehabilitation of the
mine site, being the area affected by the upstream mining operations. The
environmental scientist works only on rehabilitating the Surajeeve mine.
The costs of employing the scientist are necessarily
incurred in carrying on upstream rehabilitation activities of the mining
project interest.
11.57
Further examples of upstream rehabilitation
expenditure can be found in Chapter 5.
Diagram 11.1: Calculating the
rehabilitation tax offset

Termination
day
11.58
A termination day occurs for a mining project interest
when no entity has the mining project interest [section 135‑5].
A change in the identity of the miner who has the interest will not result in a
termination day. However, it will result in a mining project transfer or a
mining project split.
11.59
The most obvious time that no entity will have an
interest is when there is no longer any production right. However, the
cessation of a mining venture may also give rise to no entity having a particular
mining project interest.
Example 11.7:
Production right ends
A miner has a mining project interest because it holds
a production right. The production right expires and is not renewed. This
will be the termination day for the mining project interest.
11.60
Whether an interest has ceased to exist should be
determined by considering the facts and determining whether the facts fall
within the definition of a mining project interest.
11.61
If a suspension day for the mining
project interest has not already happened, the termination day will also be the
suspension day. [Paragraph 130‑10(1)(c)]
11.62
As discussed above, a mining project interest will
be deemed to cease if the miner decides to recommence commercial production
after the suspension day for the interest has occurred. This will be the
termination day for the mining project interest (if it has not already had
one). [Subsection 130‑20(1)]
No
termination day
11.63
A termination day does not occur merely because:
• there
is a change to, or renewal of, the production right;
• there
is a change to, or renewal of, the mining venture; or
• there
is a mining project transfer or mining project split.
[Sections 135‑10,
135-15 and 135‑20]
Change
to, or renewal of, the production right
11.64
A termination day does not occur merely because there
is a change to or renewal of the production right to which the mining project
interest relates. [Subsection 135‑10(1)]
11.65
Production rights typically run for a defined
period of time. However, the various mining laws provide for the rights to be
renewed (see, for example, section 147 of the Mineral
Resources Act 1989 (Qld), section 113 of the Mining Act 1992 (NSW) and section 78 of
the Mining Act 1978 (WA)).
Similar provisions exist to allow production rights to be changed. The
conditions that are attached to the right or the area covered by the right may
change.
11.66
When there is a change to, or renewal of, the
production right that relates to the mining project interest, the change or
renewal does not result in a termination day. [Section 135‑10]
11.67
However, if there is an additional area when a
production right changes, or is renewed, the additional area does not form part
of the mining project interest and forms part of a different mining project
interest. [Subsection 135‑10(2)]
11.68
If production rights could be expanded, this would
be a way of circumventing the combination rules and, effectively, opening up
transferability of otherwise quarantined allowance components.
Example 11.8:
Additional area
RTIG Co has a mining project interest in respect of a
production right. In 2014, the production right is altered to include a small
area adjacent to the production right.

The mining project interest that relates to the
production right does not include the additional area. RTIG Co will have a new
mining project interest in respect of the additional area.
Change
to, or renewal of, a mining venture
11.69
Similarly, a termination day does not occur merely
because there is a change or renewal of the mining venture to which the mining
project interest relates. [Section 135‑15]
11.70
This rule ensures there is a continuation of the
mining project interest when there are changes to, or a renewal of, a mining
venture.
11.71
Circumstances which should not result in the
termination of a mining project interest are:
• a
change to the entities who are participating in the mining venture;
• minor
changes to the terms of the mining venture; and
• an
extension to the term of the mining venture (renewal).
Example 11.9:
No termination where mining venture extended
Queen Co and Duke Resources have a mining venture to extract
taxable resources from an area covered by a production right. They each have a
mining project interest in respect of their share of output from the mining
venture. Queen is the production right holder.
The mining venture is for a limited period of three
years. Due to bad weather, production has not met expectations and it is going
to take another year to complete the mining venture. Queen and Duke agree to
extend the mining venture for an extra year.
The extension of the mining venture does not result in
the termination of the mining project interest.
11.72
This rule is not designed to ensure continuity when
the mining venture has substantially changed to the extent that the mining
venture can be characterised as a different mining venture.
11.73
If the mining venture changes and
the change results in the mining venture covering an additional area, this
would result in the miner being entitled to a further extent and there would be
a new mining project interest in respect of that extent. [Subsection
15-5(5)]
Mining
project transfer and mining project splits
11.74
A mining project transfer or mining
project split does not result in a termination day for the mining project
interest [section 135‑15]. There
is a continuation of a mining project interest if it is subject to a transfer
or split [subsections 120‑10(2) and 125‑10(2)].
Effect of
termination
11.75
Even though a mining project interest has had a
termination day, the MRRT still operates as usual in respect of that interest.
This is achieved by deeming the entity who had the mining project interest when
the termination day occurred to continue to have the interest after the
termination day. [Subsection 135‑25(1)]
11.76
If the entity that last had the interest is no
longer a miner, which will be the case if the interest in respect of which the
termination day occurred was the only mining project interest that the entity
has, that entity will be deemed to be a miner. [Subsection 135‑25(2)]
11.77
These rules ensure that, if a mining revenue event
occurs after the termination day, the fact that the interest has ended does not
result in the mining revenue escaping taxation.
11.78
If a miner extracts taxable resources from a
project area but the mining project interest has a termination day before the
miner sells the resources, there is still mining revenue despite the interest
having ended. All future royalties incurred in respect of those resources are also
recognised. Similarly, mining expenditure that is incurred in carrying on
mining operations for the interest after the termination day is recognised even
if the termination day has occurred before the expenditure is incurred.
11.79
There is nothing stopping a starting base loss
arising for a mining project interest that has had a termination day. However,
the starting base asset giving rise to the loss would still need to be used in
relation to the upstream mining operations of the interest. If there is
insufficient remaining profit to offset the starting base loss at the end of
the MRRT year, the loss will be cancelled. [Division 90 and section 130-15]
11.80
The effects of the suspension day continue to apply
to the interest after it has had a termination day. All allowance components
are cancelled at the end of each year and the miner may have a rehabilitation
tax offset amount in respect of the mining project interest.
Pre‑mining
project interests
11.81
Like mining project interests, there are special
rules to deal with the operation of the MRRT in respect of pre‑mining project
interests that are nearing the end of their lives.
11.82
Generally, the rules for pre‑mining project
interests mirror those for mining project interests. However, there are some
differences.
Suspension
day
11.83
There is no suspension day for a pre‑mining project
interest. Of the three events that cause a suspension day for a mining project
interest, the termination day is the only one relevant for pre‑mining project
interest, as such interests would never satisfy the commercial production
threshold.
11.84
Therefore, allowance components are cancelled, and
access to the rehabilitation tax offset arises, from the termination day for
the pre-mining project interest.
Termination
day
11.85
There will be a termination day for a pre‑mining
project interest when no entity holds the interest. [Section
155‑5]
11.86
The termination day generally occurs when the
exploration right that gives rise to the pre‑mining project interest no longer
exists. For example, it may have expired.
11.87
Similar to the rules for termination of mining
project interests, a termination day will not occur for a pre‑mining project interest
merely because:
• there
is a change to, or renewal of, the exploration right; or
• there
is a pre‑mining project transfer or split.
[Sections 155‑10
and 155‑15]
Change
to, or renewal of, an exploration right
11.88
A termination day does not occur if there is a
change to or renewal of the exploration right to which a pre‑mining project
interest relates [subsection 155‑10(1)].
Unlike mining project interests, there is no similar provision for changes to
mining ventures, as mining ventures are not relevant to an entity having a pre‑mining
project interests.
11.89
If the varied or renewed exploration right results
in the pre‑mining project interest covering an additional area, it needs to be
determined whether that additional area is insignificant. [Subsection 155‑10(2)]
11.90
The insignificant area test is only relevant to
changes to pre‑mining project interests (not mining project interests). The
insignificant area test seeks to recognise two things. First, alterations of
an insignificant nature are frequently made to exploration rights (as distinct
from production rights). Second, pre‑mining project interests do not have
starting base loss allowances and therefore the risk of insignificant changes
to an exploration right resulting in the opening up of otherwise quarantined
allowance components is relatively low.
Insignificant
additional area
11.91
‘Insignificant’ takes its ordinary meaning. In
determining whether an additional area is insignificant, the ‘additional area’
includes all previous additional areas that have been included in the project
area as a result of changes to, or renewals of, the exploration right. This
requires all the additional areas to be added together and an assessment made
as to whether, when taken together, they constitute a significant change to the
area covered by the original exploration right. [Subsection 155‑10(3)]
Example 11.10:
Determining insignificance of an additional area
RTIG Co holds a pre-mining project interest. In 2014,
the exploration right is altered to include a small area adjacent to the original
exploration right (on the right).

There have been other changes to the exploration right
over the past 12 months (the striped areas). When considering whether the
latest addition is insignificant, all the other previous insignificant
additions are also taken into account.

While the most recent addition to the area may be
insignificant by itself, the test requires all
the previous insignificant additional areas to be added together and
assessed, collectively, as to whether they constitute an insignificant change.
Taking into account the two previous insignificant
additions, as well as the most recent addition, the collective area is not
insignificant and therefore the most recent addition is an area of another
pre-mining project interest.
11.92
If the additional area is insignificant, that
additional area will form part of the pre‑mining project interest. [Paragraph 155‑10(2)(a)]
11.93
However, if the additional area is a significant
area, the additional area that is the subject of the most recent change or
renewal will be a different pre‑mining project interest. [Paragraph
155‑10(2)(b)]
Pre‑mining
project transfers and pre‑mining project splits
11.94
A pre‑mining project transfer or pre‑mining
project split does not result in a termination day for a pre‑mining project
interest [section 155‑15].
There is a continuation of a pre‑mining project interest if it is subject to a
transfer or split [subsections 145‑10(1) and 150‑10(1)].
Effects
of termination
11.95
Like mining project interests, a pre‑mining project
interest is taken to continue to be held after the termination day by the last
entity to hold it. [Section 155‑20]
11.96
For the most part, the MRRT continues to operate in
respect of such a pre‑mining project interest in the usual way. There are some
exceptions.
11.97
From the termination day for the pre‑mining project
interest, the interest:
• has
all its allowance components cancelled [section 155‑25];
and
• may
have a rehabilitation tax offset amount [paragraph 225‑20(1)(a)].
11.98
The termination day for a pre‑mining project interest
has the same effect for the pre‑mining project interest as a suspension day has
for a mining project interest. That is, from the termination day onwards,
allowance components of the pre‑mining project interest cannot be carried
forward and uplifted but the entity may have a rehabilitation tax offset amount
for the interest.
11.99
However, there is an exception. The effects of
termination do not apply if the termination day for the pre-mining project
interest occurs because a mining project interest originated from the
pre-mining project interest. [Subsection 155-25(2)]
11.100
Where a termination day occurs because a mining
project interest originates from the pre-mining project interest, the
allowances that relate to the pre-mining project interest are not cancelled,
rather they are inherited by the mining project interest. [Subsection 155-25(2)
and sections 145‑30 and 150-35]
Outline of
chapter
12.1
This chapter explains how the general rules that
apply to mining project interests also apply to pre‑mining project interests.
It also explains the special rules that exist for pre‑mining project profits
and royalty credits in Division 140.
12.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 (MRRT Bill) unless otherwise
indicated.
Summary of
new law
12.3
Many aspects of the MRRT Bill apply to pre‑mining
project interests in the same way they apply to mining project interests. In
particular, the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) law taxes the pre‑mining
profit of a pre‑mining project interest in the same way as it taxes the mining
profit of a mining project interest.
12.4
Other aspects of the MRRT law which apply to pre‑mining
project interests in the same way they apply to mining project interests include:
• low
profit offsets;
• rehabilitation
tax offsets;
• non‑cash
benefits, currency translation and substituted accounting periods;
• valuation
principles; and
• anti‑profit
shifting and the anti‑avoidance rules.
12.5
Other rules in the MRRT have been specially adapted
to treat pre‑mining project interests in a similar way to mining project
interests.
• A
liability to pay a mining royalty in relation to a pre-mining project interest
gives rise to a royalty credit for that interest in the same way it would have
if the interest had been a mining project interest and the exploration right
had been a production right (see below).
• Pre‑mining
expenditure and revenue arises for a pre‑mining project interest in a similar
way to the mining expenditure and revenue that arises for a mining project
interest. A difference, however, is that special provision is made to
recognise pre-mining expenditures associated with failed farm-out arrangements.
• Pre‑mining
losses can arise for pre‑mining project interests in a similar way to the losses
that arise for mining project interests. While mining losses are only
transferable if they satisfy a common ownership test, pre‑mining losses are
transferable even if they fail to meet the test (though in some cases the
losses that can be transferred are capped).
• A
starting base can arise in relation to pre‑mining project interests that
existed on 2 May 2010 in the same way it arises in relation to mining project
interests. However, the starting base does not begin to produce starting base
losses before a mining project interest originates from the pre‑mining project
interest. A further difference is that, when applying the market value
approach to mining project interests, a miner must work out the base value of
its starting base assets by undertaking a market valuation of those assets.
However, when applying the market value approach to pre‑mining project
interests, an entity can instead choose to work out the base value of its
starting base assets by using a ‘look‑back’ approach.
• Pre‑mining
project interests are taken to end, transfer and split in a similar way to
mining project interests.
12.6
Finally, there are some aspects of the MRRT law for
which there is no equivalent treatment for pre‑mining project interests. For
instance, pre‑mining project interests cannot combine with other pre‑mining
project interests (nor with mining project interests). This is explained in
Chapter 9.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Treatment of
pre‑mining profits
12.7
The MRRT law taxes the pre‑mining profit of a pre‑mining
project interest in the same way as it taxes the mining profit of a mining
project interest.
12.8
An entity works out its total MRRT liability for an
MRRT year by adding together the MRRT liabilities from its pre‑mining project
interests and its mining project interests. [Sections 10‑1 and 140‑10]
12.9
It works out the MRRT liability for a pre‑mining
project interest in much the same way as it works it out for a mining project
interest. It deducts the interest’s pre‑mining expenditure from its pre‑mining
revenue to get to its pre‑mining profit. It subtracts the MRRT allowances for
the interest from that pre‑mining profit and multiplies the result by the MRRT
rate to work out the interest’s MRRT liability. [Sections 10‑5, 140‑5 and 140‑10]
12.10
A pre‑mining project interest is an interest in an
exploration right (that is, a right to explore for taxable resources, other
than a production right). This is explained in more detail in Chapter 6. [Section 70‑25]
12.11
A pre‑mining profit is the amount by which a pre‑mining
project interest’s pre‑mining revenue exceeds its pre‑mining expenditure for an
MRRT year. The concepts of pre‑mining revenue and pre‑mining expenditure are
also explained in more detail in Chapter 6. [Section 140‑5]
12.12
To allow an entity to treat pre‑mining project interests
in the same way as mining project interests for the purpose of working out its
MRRT liability, the MRRT law applies as if:
• its
pre‑mining project interests were mining project interests and its exploration
rights, to which the pre-mining project interest relates, were production
rights [paragraphs 140‑10(2)(a)
and (f)];
• its
pre‑mining profits were mining profits [paragraph 140‑10(2)(b)];
and
• it
were a miner (that is, as if it had a mining project interest) for that MRRT
year and earlier years [paragraph 140‑10(2)(g)].
12.13
The result is that allowances that would arise for
a mining project interest also arise for a pre‑mining project interest.
Royalty liabilities for the interest can give rise to royalty allowances; its
pre‑mining losses from earlier years can give rise to pre‑mining loss
allowances; and the mining losses and pre‑mining losses of other interests can
give rise to transferred pre‑mining loss allowances and transferred mining loss
allowances, just as they do for a mining project interest.
12.14
However, in working out the MRRT liability of a pre‑mining
project interest, some specific differences between the MRRT treatments of
mining project interests and pre‑mining project interests are preserved. The
fact that a pre‑mining project interest is being treated as a mining project
interest does not mean that:
• it
is treated as having originated from itself as a pre‑mining project interest.
That is, it does not attract the rules that apply when a mining project
interest originates from a pre‑mining project interest [paragraph
140‑10(2)(c)];
• its
pre‑mining losses from earlier MRRT years are treated as mining losses, or that
it can start to generate starting base losses for that MRRT year or any earlier
MRRT year [paragraph 140‑10(2)(d)];
and
• it
is integrated with mining project interests it could not integrate with as a
pre‑mining project interest [paragraph 140‑10(2)(e)].
12.15
An allowance applied in working out the MRRT
liability of a pre‑mining project interest is not available to be used again
for a mining project interest or another pre‑mining project interest. [Section
140‑15]
A
mining project interest originating from a pre‑mining project interest
12.16
In the MRRT year that a mining project interest
originates from a pre‑mining project interest, the year’s pre‑mining profit is
still worked out for the first part of the year but it is added to the mining
project interest’s mining revenue. There is no need to work out a separate
MRRT liability for the pre‑mining project phase of the year. [Section
140‑20]
12.17
If there is a pre‑mining profit, this treatment is
akin to treating the pre‑mining revenue and pre‑mining expenditure as mining
revenue and mining expenditure. However, the slightly more complex approach of
working out the separate amount from the pre‑mining phase of the year is used
to ensure that any pre‑mining loss for that period is not converted into a
mining loss.
Example 12.1:
Mining project interest originates from a pre‑mining project interest
Bronmore Exploration Co has a single development
licence over an area from which it has extracted and supplied small quantities
of taxable resources and paid State mining royalties when it supplied them.
Halfway through the year, Bronmore is issued with a production right over the
area. At that point, a mining project interest originates from its pre‑mining
project interest.
Bronmore works out its pre‑mining profit for the first
part of the year by deducting its pre‑mining expenditure from that period from
its pre‑mining revenue for that period. Then it includes this pre-mining
profit as mining revenue for the mining project interest. Bronmore then
deducts the royalty credits arising from the entire year (along with any pre‑mining
losses the interest has from earlier years) and multiplies the result by the
MRRT rate to work out the interest’s MRRT liability.
Treatment of
pre‑mining royalty credits
12.18
A liability to pay a mining royalty in relation to
a pre-mining project interest gives rise to a royalty credit for that interest
in the same way it would have if the interest had been a mining project
interest and the exploration right had been a production right. [Section
140‑25]
12.19
The amount of a royalty credit for a
pre-mining project interest is worked out in exactly the same way as it is for
a mining project interest. Royalty
credits are used up in reducing the pre-mining profit of a pre‑mining project
interest in the same way as they are used up in reducing the mining profit of a
mining project interest. [Subsection 140‑25(2)]
Treatment of
farm-out arrangements
12.20
Farm-out arrangements are common during the
exploration phase of a project. A farm-out typically involves an agreement
between:
• an
entity that holds a pre-mining project interest (the farmor) wanting to explore
that project area; and
• another
entity (the farmee) who incurs expenses exploring the project area, in exchange
for an interest in the pre-mining project interest.
12.21
Costs incurred by farmees during the exploration
phase will sometimes be included in the farmor’s pre-mining expenditure [Divisions 35
and 195, and subsection 70-35(7)]. This is
explained in Chapter 6.
Outline of
chapter
13.1
This chapter explains the adjustments that are made
to:
• mining
revenue, mining expenditure, pre‑mining revenue and pre‑mining expenditure
when, as a result of a change in circumstances, the original amount that was
accounted for under the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) is no longer
appropriate (Division 160); and
• starting
base losses (and, in some cases, to mining revenue) when a starting base asset
ceases to be part of a mining project interest’s starting base (for example,
because the miner disposes of it) (Division 165).
13.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Mining
adjustments for changes in circumstances
13.3
If there is a change in the circumstances affecting
the amount of a previous item of mining revenue, mining expenditure, pre‑mining
revenue or pre‑mining expenditure, an adjustment is made so that, in net nominal
terms, the correct result is achieved.
13.4
In other words, an adjustment applies to the extent
that the quantum of the original MRRT amount depended on assumptions or
estimates relating to future events or circumstances and those assumptions or
estimates turn out to be incorrect.
13.5
The main case in which the rules apply is ensuring
that the cost of an asset is only recognised in a mining project interest’s net
mining expenditure to the extent that the asset is used in the upstream mining
operations of the mining project interest. The rules do this by including an
amount in mining revenue or mining expenditure to reflect any change in the
extent to which the asset is used in the upstream mining operations of the
mining project interest.
Starting base
adjustments
13.6
Broadly, a starting base adjustment is made when a
miner:
• stops
holding a starting base asset; or
• stops
(or never started) using a starting base asset in the upstream mining
operations and decides never to so use it in the future.
13.7
In these cases, the termination value of the asset
(usually what the miner received to stop holding it) is compared with its
adjustable value (which is its base value less its decline in value to that
time). If the termination value exceeds the adjustable value, the difference
is applied to reduce any starting base losses, with any excess being included
in mining revenue. If the termination value is lower than the adjustable
value, the difference is included as a starting base loss.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Mining adjustments
for changes in circumstances
When
does a mining adjustment arise?
13.8
A mining adjustment arises when an original amount
of mining revenue, mining expenditure, pre‑mining revenue or pre‑mining
expenditure was determined according to some expectation about later
circumstances, and those expectations are revised, or the expected
circumstances do not eventuate, or they turn out differently. An adjustment is
made to reflect any impact that these new circumstances would have had on the
original amount so that, in net nominal terms, the correct amount is accounted
for under the MRRT overall. The adjustment is made in the MRRT year in which
the new circumstances arise. [Subsection 160‑10(1)]
13.9
The most common example of this is where the extent
to which an item of expenditure relates to the upstream mining operations of a
mining project interest changes because a miner so uses an asset to a greater
or lesser extent than it initially anticipated. [Subsections 160‑10(1) and (3)]
13.10
Under the general mining expenditure rule, both
revenue and capital expenditure is immediately deductible to the extent that it
is necessarily incurred by a miner in carrying on upstream mining operations
for a mining project interest. As discussed in Chapter 5, this is based on the
income tax test of deductibility (though the income tax test excludes capital
expenditure). Under the MRRT, the extent to which an expense (especially a
capital expense) is included in a miner’s mining expenditure can depend on the
miner’s expectations about future circumstances in relation to that expense.
Example 13.1:
Change in extent to which an asset is used in upstream mining operations
Shelby Co. is a miner that has one mining project
interest. Shelby purchases an asset on the last day of its 2012‑13 MRRT year for
$1 million. The whole purchase price is included in mining expenditure as
it is necessarily incurred in carrying on the upstream mining operations, since
Shelby expects (at the time the expense is incurred) to use the asset entirely
within the upstream mining operations of its mining project interest. Even
though Shelby does not use the asset in 2012‑13, the $1 million is still
included in its mining expenditure.
In 2013‑14, Shelby acquires a second mining project
interest and begins to use the asset equally in both project interests. This
is a change in circumstances which leads to adjustments for both of Shelby’s
mining project interests since the new circumstances (the change in the way the
asset is used) would have affected the amount included in mining expenditure
for the mining project interests had those circumstances been anticipated when
Shelby purchased the asset.
The first mining project interest has an adjustment in
relation to the $1 million originally included in its mining expenditure.
The second mining project interest has a mining adjustment in relation to the
original non‑inclusion of any part of the purchase price in its mining
expenditure.
Example 13.2:
Change in extent to which an asset relates to excluded expenditure
Dheera Co. is a miner. In its 2012‑13 MRRT year,
Dheera purchases a building with a view to using it to conduct its
administrative and accounting activities. The building is not adjacent to the
project area of its mining project interest and so the purchase price is
excluded expenditure.
In its 2013‑14 MRRT year, Dheera does not use the
building for its administrative and accounting activities and instead uses it
solely to remotely control the upstream mining operations — expenditure on this
activity is not excluded expenditure. Had it anticipated these new
circumstances, Dheera would have included an amount in its mining expenditure
for its mining project interest. Therefore, a mining adjustment arises in
relation to the original non‑inclusion of any part of the purchase price in its
mining expenditure.
Example 13.3:
Debt being written off as bad
Michelle is a miner. In her 2012‑13 MRRT year, she
sells taxable resources to Peter who promises to pay her $1 million. Michelle
includes an amount in her mining revenue when the $1 million becomes
receivable. However, Peter absconds without paying Michelle and, in her 2013‑14
MRRT year, Michelle writes off the $1 million as a bad debt.
This is a change in circumstances that gives rise to a
mining adjustment for Michelle’s mining project interest. Had she anticipated
that the debt would be written off as bad, Michelle would not have included an
amount in mining revenue, as she would not have seen the $1 million as being
receivable.
13.11
A mining adjustment only arises where the extent of
the original amount included in revenue or expenditure was dependant on the
miner’s expectations of future events or circumstances. An adjustment does not
arise when the original amount was determined by a set of facts that do not
change, even when those facts were themselves were decided or settled according
to some expectation of the future.
Example 13.4:
Where the original amount is not subject to a mining adjustment
Penney Co. is a miner and during the 2014-15 MRRT year
enters into a three year contract with a customer for the supply of coal for a
fixed price of $120 per tonne. The price was determined by Penney Co. based on
estimates regarding the future price of coal which indicated that coal prices
were likely to fall. The company includes an amount in its mining revenue over
the next three MRRT years having regard to the fixed price in the contract.
During the three year contract period, the market
price for coal actually increases. Even though Penney Co. took into account
expected changes in the price of coal at the time of entering into the contract
for the purposes of determining the contract price, the change in the market
price of coal does not constitute
an event or circumstance that gives rise to an adjustment to mining revenue as
it does not change the contracted price agreed between the parties.
What
is the amount of the mining adjustment?
13.12
The amount of the mining adjustment
is equal to the difference between the original amount and the amount that
would have been included had the changed circumstances been taken into account
in working out that original amount. [Subsection 160‑10(2)]
13.13
For example, if the new circumstances would have
reduced the original amount that was included in pre‑mining expenditure, then
the adjustment is equal to the amount of that reduction.
Example 13.5:
Amount of the mining adjustment
In MRRT year 1, a miner incurs expenditure of $100
million on some machinery that the miner expects to use to the extent of 40 per
cent in the upstream mining operations of a mining project interest for each of
five years, after which the machinery will be sold. On this basis,
$40 million is included in the miner’s mining expenditure for the mining
project interest for MRRT year 1.
In MRRT year 2, the miner’s use of the machinery in
those operations increases to 50 per cent, and the miner expects that extent of
use to continue for the rest of the five years. As a result, the extent to
which the expenditure relates to the interest increases to 48 per cent (that
is, (40% + 50% + 50% + 50% + 50%)/5). Had these circumstances been taken
into account in MRRT year 1, the miner would have included $48 million in its
mining expenditure. The difference between that amount and the $40 million it
did include in its mining expenditure ($8 million) is the amount of its mining adjustment.
What
is the effect of the mining adjustment?
13.14
The purpose of the mining adjustment is, to the
extent possible without revisiting earlier MRRT assessments, to place a mining
project interest in the same MRRT position as if the new circumstances had been
taken into account in working out the original amount of mining revenue, mining
expenditure, pre‑mining revenue, or pre‑mining expenditure. However, an
adjustment does not account for any uplift or for any transfer of allowance
components after the MRRT assessment that included the original amount. That
is because the adjustment is made in the year the new circumstances exist
instead of amending the original assessment.
13.15
The adjustments give effect to this purpose by
including amounts in mining revenue, mining expenditure, pre‑mining revenue, or
pre‑mining expenditure so that overall the correct net MRRT amount has been
accounted for. Table 13.1 lists the effects of the different mining
adjustments that arise in different cases. [Subsection 160‑15(1)]
Table 13.1:
Effect of mining adjustments
|
|
|
|
|
mining revenue
|
increase
|
mining revenue
|
|
mining revenue
|
decrease
|
mining expenditure
|
|
mining expenditure
|
increase
|
mining expenditure
|
|
mining expenditure
|
decrease
|
mining revenue
|
|
pre‑mining revenue
|
increase
|
pre‑mining revenue
|
|
pre‑mining revenue
|
decrease
|
pre‑mining expenditure
|
|
pre‑mining expenditure
|
increase
|
pre‑mining expenditure
|
|
pre‑mining expenditure
|
decrease
|
pre‑mining revenue
|
Example 13.6:
Mining adjustment which increases mining expenditure
Continuing the previous example, had the new
circumstances been taken into account in MRRT year 1, the miner would have
increased its mining expenditure from $40 million to $48 million for the mining
project interest. The $8 million mining adjustment is included in mining
expenditure for the mining project interest in MRRT year 2, so that, overall, a total of $48 million has been
included in mining expenditure.
13.16
In practice, a miner may account for these kinds of
changes in another way that gives an equivalent outcome. For instance, a miner
may account for adjustments that reflect a decrease in a previous amount of
mining revenue for its mining project interest by reducing another amount of
its mining revenue for that mining project interest, rather than including an
amount of mining expenditure.
13.17
In some cases, a mining adjustment
will arise in relation to a pre‑mining project interest that no longer exists
because it has been replaced by a mining project interest. This idea of a
mining project interest ‘originating’ from a pre‑mining project interest is
discussed in detail in Chapters 6 and 10. Broadly speaking, the mining project
interest is taken to be a continuation of the pre‑mining project interest, so
any adjustment that would have arisen for the pre‑mining project interest
should instead be attributed to the mining project interest. For this reason,
where a mining project interest has originated from a pre‑mining project
interest, a mining adjustment will give rise to an amount of mining revenue or
mining expenditure for that mining project interest, rather than pre‑mining
revenue or pre‑mining expenditure for the pre‑mining project interest. [Subsection
160‑15(2)]
Accounting
for previous mining adjustments
13.18
Only one mining adjustment can arise in relation to
a particular expense or receipt in any particular MRRT year, but there may be
such adjustments in more than one MRRT year. In these cases, the original
amount included in mining revenue, mining expenditure, pre‑mining revenue, or
pre‑mining expenditure is taken to itself be adjusted by the amount of the
mining adjustment. [Subsection 160‑15(3)]
13.19
This adjusted original amount is then taken to be
the original amount against which any later adjustment is worked out.
Example 13.7:
Accounting for previous mining adjustments
Continuing the previous example, in MRRT year 3, the
miner’s use of the machinery on the interest increases to 100 per cent, and the
miner expects that extent of use to continue for the rest of the five years.
As a result, the extent to which the expenditure relates to the interest
increases to 78 per cent (that is, (40% + 50% + 100% + 100% + 100%)/5).
The ‘original amount’ for MRRT year 2 is taken to be
the original amount for MRRT year 1 ($40 million of mining expenditure)
increased by the adjustment that was made in MRRT year 2 ($8 million of
mining expenditure), which is $48 million of mining expenditure.
The adjustment in MRRT year 3 is the difference
between the $48 million of mining expenditure and the $78 million of
mining expenditure that would have been recognised in MRRT year 2 if the new
circumstances were known at that time. The mining adjustment is the $30
million difference and, since this would have increased the MRRT year 2 amount
of mining expenditure, it is included in mining expenditure for MRRT year 3.
Starting base
adjustments
13.20
A starting base adjustment is made when a starting
base adjustment event happens. The amount of the adjustment reflects the
difference between the adjustable value of the asset and its termination value.
Starting
base adjustment events
13.21
A starting base adjustment event occurs for a starting
base asset when the miner stops holding the asset. This includes the disposal,
sale, loss or theft of the asset. [Paragraph 165‑5(1)(a)]
13.22
A starting base adjustment event also occurs when a miner
stops using a starting base asset in carrying on upstream mining operations
relating to the mining project interest and expects never to use it again in
this way. [Paragraph 165‑5(1)(b)]
13.23
A starting base adjustment event also occurs when a miner
has been using a starting base asset for upstream mining operations and stops:
• having
it installed ready for such use; or
• stops
constructing it for such use,
and the miner expects to never again have the asset
installed ready for such use, or never to restart constructing it for such
use. [Paragraph 165‑5(1)(b)]
13.24
A starting base adjustment event also happens where a
miner has never used a starting base asset for upstream mining operations and
stops:
• having
it installed ready for such use; or
• stops
constructing it for such use,
and the miner decides never to so use it. [Paragraph 165‑5(1)(c)]
13.25
However, there is no starting base adjustment in
relation to a starting base asset that:
• is,
or includes, a right or an interest that constitutes a mining project interest
(for example, the single starting base asset); or
• is
transferred with such a right or interest.
[Subsection 165‑5(2)]
13.26
This exception recognises that, when a mining
project interest is transferred from one miner to another, the tax history of
the interest will be inherited by the other miner. One consequence of this is
that, where starting base assets are transferred as part of the transfer of a
mining project interest, those assets will retain their character as starting
base assets in relation to the mining project interest.
13.27
Chapter 7 discusses how — under the market value
approach —mining information, improvements to land, and goodwill are taken to
be part of the same starting base asset as the rights and interests that
comprise the mining project interest. As a consequence, there will be no
starting base adjustment in relation to any of these things. However, where a
miner receives an amount that has the effect of recouping the base value of a
part of the single starting base asset (such as on the sale of mining
information), this will reduce the base value of the asset. This is also
discussed in Chapter 7.
Starting
base adjustment amounts
13.28
If a starting base adjustment event occurs for a
starting base asset, then:
• if
the asset’s adjustable value exceeds its termination value — that excess is included
in a starting base loss [subsection 165‑10(2), section 165-20 and
subsections 165‑25(1) and (2)]; or
• if
asset’s termination value exceeds its adjustable value — that excess is applied
to reduce any available starting base loss (with any remaining excess being
included in mining revenue) [subsection 165‑10(1), section 165-20 and
subsections 165‑25(3) and (4) and section 165‑30].
Adjustable
value
13.29
The adjustable value of a starting base asset is the
difference between:
• the
base value of the asset for the MRRT year in which the event occurred; and
• the
decline in value of the asset for the part of the year before the starting base
adjustment event occurred.
[Subsection 165‑10(7)]
Termination
value
13.30
The termination value of a starting base asset (usually what
was received under a starting base adjustment event) is:
•
if the miner has received or is taken to have
received an amount — that amount; or
• if
the miner has not received an amount, or has received an amount under a non‑arm’s
length arrangement — the market value of the asset.
[Subsection 165‑10(3)]
Amounts
a miner has received or is taken to have received
13.31
Generally, termination value includes the amounts
that a miner received (or is taken to have received) in relation to the asset
because of the starting base adjustment event, including money or non‑cash
benefits.
13.32
The main case is simply receiving money under a
starting base adjustment event, in which case the termination value is that
amount. This covers the most common case, where money is received on the sale
of an asset.
13.33
Where a miner receives non‑cash benefits under a
starting base adjustment event, the market value of those benefits at that time
will be included in the termination value under the general non‑cash benefit
rules. Those rules are explained in detail in Chapter 15.
13.34
When a miner’s liability to pay an
amount to another entity is reduced (or terminated) because of a starting base
adjustment event, this economic benefit is included in the asset’s termination
value for the miner. [Subsection 165‑10(5)]
13.35
If a miner receives an amount for
several things that include a starting base asset, only a reasonable part of the
amount is to be treated as being for the starting base asset. In other words,
the amount will be apportioned between the termination value of the asset and
those other things. [Subsection 165‑10(6)]
Example 13.8:
Apportioning the amount received for several starting base assets
Belluk Resources receives $1 million for the sale of
two starting base assets. The $1 million will be apportioned between the
termination values of each starting base asset, based on their relative market
values.
Where
no amount is received or an amount is received under a non‑arm’s length
arrangement
13.36
In some circumstances a miner will continue to hold
a starting base asset after a starting base adjustment event. For instance, an
adjustment event occurs where a miner stops using an asset in the upstream
mining operations of its mining project interest and the miner expects that
they will never again use the asset for that purpose. In these cases, the
miner will often not receive an amount because of the event and so the
termination value will be the market value of the asset at the time of the
event.
Example 13.9:
No amount received under a starting base adjustment event
Toni Co. operates a coal mine. Due to falling prices
for coal, it stops using a conveyor belt it holds (a starting base asset). It
expects that coal prices will never recover sufficiently for it to ever use
this asset again. This is a starting base adjustment event. The termination
value of the conveyor belt is its market value just before the moment
Toni Co. formed the expectation that it would never use the asset again.
13.37
In addition, where a miner receives an amount under
an arrangement in which it did not deal at arm’s length with one or more of the
other parties to that arrangement, the termination value is the market value of
the asset at the time of the starting base adjustment event. This is an
integrity rule to cover non-arm’s-length dealings. [Paragraph 165‑10(3)(b)]
13.38
Whether parties are dealing at arm’s length is a
question of fact. It is necessary to look at the nature of the dealing between
them to assess whether the outcome of their dealing is the result of real
bargaining.
Where
the starting base adjustment event gives rise to mining expenditure that
exceeds the amounts received
13.39
Alternatively, the termination value will instead
be the total of:
• an
amount included in mining expenditure because of the event; and
• any
amount by which that mining expenditure is reduced because of an amount
received by the miner,
where this total exceeds the amount the miner received
or is taken to have been received. [Subsection 165‑10(4)]
13.40
This rule deals with the case where a miner is
entitled to an amount of mining expenditure as a consequence of the starting
base adjustment event.
Example 13.10:
Mining expenditure arising because of a starting base adjustment event
Bridie Co. gives a starting base asset to one of its
customers. Under the non‑cash benefit rules (explained in Chapter 15), the
market value of the asset will be included in mining expenditure for Bridie’s
mining project interest. So, the termination value for the asset will include
that amount.
13.41
The second limb of the rule deals with the case
where the mining expenditure is reduced because the miner received something of
value as a consequence of the starting base adjustment event.
Example 13.11:
Reduced mining expenditure arising because of a starting base adjustment
Continuing the previous example, if Bridie received
some cash from its customer for the asset, Bridie’s mining expenditure would be
reduced by that amount (assuming it was not mining revenue), so the termination
value for the asset should include the full value that Bridie received for the
asset, being the amount included in mining expenditure as well as the amount by
which mining expenditure was reduced.
Reduction
for non‑mining operations
13.42
The amount of a starting base adjustment is reduced
to the extent that the decline in value of the asset has been ignored in
working out a starting base loss for the mining project interest for that MRRT
year or an earlier year. The reduction is:
[(Sum of reductions) / (Total decline)] × Starting
base adjustment amount
[Section 165‑15]
13.43
The ‘total decline’ refers to the sum of all
declines in value for the asset up until the time of the starting base
adjustment event.
13.44
The ‘sum of reductions’ is the total of all amounts
by which the decline in value of the starting base asset has been ignored in
working out a starting base loss. These reductions are explained in Chapter
7. Broadly, the reductions are made to ensure that the starting base loss does
not include any part of the asset’s decline in value that:
• is
attributable to the miner’s use of the asset, or having it installed ready for
use, or constructing it for use, for a purpose other than upstream mining
operations in relation to the mining project interest [subsection
80‑40(3)]; or
• would
be excluded expenditure if it was an amount that the miner was taken to have
incurred on or after 1 July 2012 [subsection 80‑40(4)].
Partial
disposals of starting base assets (other than the single starting base asset)
13.45
Further rules deal with partial
disposals of starting base assets after the start time. Where a miner stops holding
a part of a starting base asset, the general starting base adjustment rules
apply to that part in the same way they would apply if that part was a starting
base. For this purpose, the adjustable value of the disposed part is taken to
be a reasonable proportion of that of the entire starting base asset at the
time. [Subsections 165-35(1) and (2)]
Example 13.12:
Partial disposal of a starting base asset
Maher and Paher Co. (MPC) uses a starting base asset
to the extent of 10 per cent in the upstream mining operations of its mining
project interest. The base value of the asset at the beginning of the MRRT
year is $10 million and its remaining effective life is 10 years. Halfway
through the year, MPC sells a 75 per cent interest in the underlying asset for
$6 million.
The adjustable value of the asset at the time of the
sale is $9.5 million.
The adjustable value of the 75 per cent interest is
$7.125 million ($9.5m × 75%). The termination value of the 75 per cent
interest is $6 million (being the sale price). So, there is a starting
base adjustment of $1.125 million that is included in a starting base
loss.
The base value for the remaining 25 per cent interest
is $2.375 million ($9.5m × 25%).
Assuming MPC used its 25 per cent interest in the
asset for the second half of the year to the same extent (10 per cent in the
upstream mining operations of its mining project interest), then it would have
a starting base loss equal to $62,500, being the sum of the following:
• For
the use of the asset in the first half of the year:
10% × ½ × $1m =
$50,000
• For
the use of the 25 per cent interest in the second half of the year:
10% × ½ × $250,000 =
$12,500.
13.46
After a partial disposal occurs, the general rules
for starting base assets apply in relation to the remainder of the asset. For
the MRRT year in which the part disposal occurs, the decline in value for the
remainder of the asset takes into account both:
• the
decline in value for the entire asset (including the disposed part) for the
period in the MRRT year before the part disposal; and
• the
decline in value for the remainder of the asset (not including the disposed
part) for the period in the MRRT year after the disposal.
[Section 165-40]
13.47
The decline in value for the entire asset
(including the disposed part) for the period in the MRRT year before the part disposal, is worked out as
if that period was a MRRT year. [Paragraph 165-40(1)(a)]
13.48
Similarly, the decline in value for the remainder
of the asset (not including the disposed part) for the period in the MRRT year after the disposal, is worked out as if
that period was the next MRRT year. Although the periods are treated as
separate MRRT years to work out the decline in value, there is no uplift of the
base value at the end of the earlier period (regardless of whether the book
value method is used). [Paragraphs 165-40(1)(b) and (2)(a)]
13.49
Also, if the book value method is used, the same
write-off rate applies to each period in the MRRT year as would normally apply
to the entire MRRT year (and not the next MRRT year). [Subsection
165-40(4)]
13.50
Where more than one partial disposal occurs in
relation to the same starting base asset in the same MRRT year, the periods
between those disposals are treated as separate MRRT years in working out the
declines in value for the remainder of the starting base asset. For example,
where a second partial disposal occurs in relation to the same starting base
asset in the same MRRT year, then the period in the entire MRRT year before the
first disposal is treated as an MRRT year. The period after the first disposal
and before the second disposal is treated as another MRRT year. Finally, the
period after the second disposal and before the end of the entire MRRT year is
treated as another MRRT year. [Subsection 165-40(3)]
13.51
Following a partial disposal of a
starting base asset, the amount of a starting base loss for the remainder of
the asset is worked out taking into account the use of the remaining asset, but
not taking into account any use of the disposed part. [Section 165‑45]
Partial
disposal rules do not apply where the entire asset is disposed of
13.52
The partial disposal rules do not apply to a
partial disposal that occurs at the same time the miner stops holding all other
parts of the starting base asset. For example, if a miner sells a 50 per cent
interest in its starting base asset to one entity and another 50 per cent
interest to another entity at the same time, then the miner will apply the
general starting base adjustment rules to the entire asset it stops holding
(rather than applying the partial disposal rules separately to each part it
stops holding). [Subsection 165-35(3)]
Partial
disposal rules do not apply to the single starting base asset
13.53
As discussed above, a starting base
adjustment event does not apply in relation to the single starting base asset
under the market value approach. So, a ‘partial disposal’ of that asset (such
as through the sale of mining information that is included in that asset) is
not subject to the rule about partial disposals of starting base assets. However,
as discussed above, this may represent a recoupment of the base value of the
single starting base asset, which will result in the base value of the asset
being reduced accordingly. [Paragraph 165-5(2)(a)]
Using
a starting base asset in other project interests
13.54
As discussed in Chapter 7, a starting base loss is
reduced to the extent that a starting base asset is used, installed ready for
use, or being constructed for use, for a purpose other than upstream mining
operations of the mining project interest. Where that other purpose includes a
use in the upstream mining operations of another mining project interest of the
same miner, then the miner can include an amount in mining expenditure for that
other interest. The amount included in mining expenditure is so much of the
reduction in the decline in value for the first mining project interest as is
attributable to that use in the other interest, and as would be included in
mining expenditure for the other interest had the miner actually incurred the amount.
This ensures that the base value of the starting base asset is realised by the
miner to the extent it is used in the miner’s upstream mining operations,
regardless of whether the asset is used in another mining project interest of
the miner in relation to which the asset is not a starting base asset. [Subsection
165-55(1), paragraph 165‑55(2)(a), subparagraph 165-55(2)(b)(i) and subsection
165-55(5)]
Example 13.13:
Using a starting base asset in a miner’s other mining project interest
Crag Co. has two mining project interests, A and B.
Crag holds a starting base asset in relation to mining project interest A. In
an MRRT year, it uses the asset 50 per cent in the upstream mining operations
of mining project interest A and 50 per cent in the upstream mining
operations of its other mining project interest B.
The starting base loss for mining project interest A
does not include half of the decline in value for the asset for the year,
reflecting the use of the asset outside of the upstream mining operations of that
interest.
Crag Co. can include that half of the decline in value
for the MRRT year in the mining expenditure of mining project interest B for
that year.
13.55
Similarly, a miner can include an
amount in the pre-mining expenditure of its pre-mining project interest where
it uses a starting base asset in the pre-mining operations of that interest. [Subsection
165-55(1), paragraph 165-55(2)(a), subparagraph 165-55(2)(b)(ii) and subsection
165-55(5)]
Using
a starting base asset after a starting base adjustment event
13.56
As discussed above, a miner may continue to hold a
starting base asset after a starting base adjustment event. This will occur
when the starting base adjustment happens because the miner decides never to
use an asset in the upstream mining operations of the mining project interest
in the future.
13.57
If, after this time, the miner starts to use the
asset in the upstream mining operations of another
mining project interest (for which the asset is not a starting base asset), then an amount may be included
in the mining expenditure of its other mining project interest. The amount
included in mining expenditure will be so much of the asset’s termination value
from the earlier starting base adjustment event as would be included in mining
expenditure if the miner had actually incurred that termination value when it
starts to use the asset in the other mining project interest. [Subsections
165-55(3) to (5)]
13.58
If, after a starting base adjustment event (other
than ceasing to hold the asset), the miner starts to use the asset in the
upstream mining operations of the same
mining project interest (for which the asset is a starting base asset), then
the starting base asset is taken to have a base value equal to its termination
value under the earlier starting base adjustment event. This means that the
decline in value for the asset will restart from a value that reflects the
basis of the earlier starting base adjustment. This ensures that the entire
base value of the starting base asset will be recognised by the miner to the
extent it is used in the upstream mining operations of the mining project
interest, regardless of whether an earlier starting base adjustment event
(other than ceasing to hold the asset) has happened. [Section
165-60]
Outline of
chapter
14.1
This chapter describes:
• the
valuation principles in Division 170 that are applied in working out the value
of assets, rights and other things for the purposes of the Minerals Resource
Rent Tax (MRRT); and
• the
alternative valuation method in Division 175 that is available for working out
the MRRT revenue of some smaller miners and miners with vertically integrated
transformative operations.
14.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Valuation
principles
14.3
MRRT taxpayers may need to value certain assets and
rights in order to determine their MRRT liability.
14.4
For example, the value of an asset may be used in
determining the starting base of a mining project interest, and as an input in
calculating the amount of mining revenue that arises from a particular sale of
taxable resources. Valuations are also used when project interests are split
or transferred between taxpayers, and when certain non‑cash benefits are
received.
14.5
Because of their role in determining MRRT outcomes,
it is important that these valuations be reasonable, both in isolation and when
considered alongside other valuations done in relation to a project interest.
14.6
To this end, valuations must comply with a set of
principles, which recognise that reasonable valuations depend on:
• the
consistent application of appropriate assumptions;
• each
thing that is to be valued being counted exactly once; and
• avoiding
hindsight when estimating the value of something at an earlier point in time.
Alternative
valuation method
14.7
Miners producing less than 10 million saleable
tonnes of taxable resources in a year can choose to use an alternative
valuation method to work out the mining revenue attributable to taxable resources
from their mining project interests for that year.
14.8
Miners with a vertically integrated transformative
operation (that is, an operation that both extracts resources and turns them
into a different product) that existed just before 2 May 2010 can
always use the alternative valuation method for that operation. If their group
production is under 10 million saleable tonnes, they can also use it for the
rest of their mining project interests.
14.9
The alternative valuation method is a variant of
the netback method. It starts with the consideration for supplies of taxable
resources and deducts the project interest’s post‑valuation point (downstream)
operating costs, depreciation on its downstream assets and a return on its
downstream capital. The rate of return is the same long term bond rate plus 7
per cent (LTBR + 7 per cent) used to uplift carried forward mining
losses and royalty credits.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Valuation
principles
When
the valuation principles apply
14.10
The valuation principles apply broadly,
wherever the value of something is used in working out an amount under the MRRT
law. [Subsection 170‑5(1)]
14.11
An obvious example is the way the value of certain
starting base assets is used to determine the starting base losses of project
interests that existed on 1 May 2010.
14.12
The starting base is an example where values are
used directly in working out an MRRT amount. In other cases, the relationship
between the value of an asset and an MRRT amount may be less direct.
14.13
The valuation principles apply whether or not a
provision of the MRRT law expressly requires the amount to be worked out by
making a valuation. [Paragraph 170‑5(3)(b)]
14.14
The valuation principles do not
prescribe or prevent the use of any specific valuation method, nor does their
operation depend on a certain method being used. They apply in relation to
starting base assets, for example, whether the market value or book value
approach is chosen by the taxpayer. [Paragraph 170‑5(3)(a)]
14.15
However, the valuation
principles do not operate to exclude the operation of any specific rules elsewhere
in the MRRT law. [Subsection 170‑5(2)]
14.16
For example, the alternative valuation method
(described below) allows certain taxpayers to calculate MRRT revenue in a
specific way, using a version of the ‘retail price’ or ‘netback’ method. Under
this method taxpayers use a concept of ‘total adjustable values’ when
calculating a return on their capital costs. The specific rule setting out how
‘total adjustable values’ are to be calculated under this method takes
precedence over the valuation principles, in the event of any conflict between
them. Similarly, the rule setting out how a mining revenue amount is
determined prevails over these principles if there is any inconsistency between
the two.
What
the valuation principles are
Basic
principle
14.17
The valuation principles consist of one basic
principle and five supporting sub‑principles.
14.18
The basic principle requires each
valuation relating to a mining project interest (or pre‑mining project
interest) to be reasonable, having regard to the objects of the MRRT law. [Subsection
170‑10(1)]
14.19
This requirement of reasonableness means that each
valuation is to be governed by logic and reflect the application of common
sense and sound thinking. Reasonable valuations are also free from
contradiction and extreme argument.
Sub‑principles
14.20
Each of the five valuation sub‑principles is
designed to support the basic principle, by explaining in further detail some
of the things which must be recognised and criteria which must be satisfied in
order for a valuation to be reasonable.
14.21
However, to the extent that there is
any conflict between the basic principle and any of the sub‑principles, the
basic principle applies. [Subsection 170‑10(7)]
14.22
The sub‑principles require that a valuation done
for the purposes of working out an amount under the MRRT law:
• avoids
using hindsight when valuing something as at an earlier point in time;
• counts
each thing that is being valued exactly once;
• treats
identical assets equally;
• applies
appropriate assumptions consistently; and
• takes
into account relevant previous valuations.
Sub-principle
1: The use of hindsight is to be avoided when valuing something as at an
earlier point in time
14.23
A taxpayer may use the value of something at a
particular point in time for the purpose of working out an amount under the
MRRT law. For example, a taxpayer choosing to use the market value method to
determine the starting base amount for a project interest uses the market value
of certain things as at 1 May 2010.
14.24
Such valuations are generally conducted after the
time to which they relate. This is unavoidable and in itself poses no great
difficulty provided that the valuation takes into account only those facts,
estimates, and predictions which prevailed at the time to which the valuation
relates. A valuation of something at a point in time is not valid to the
extent it draws on observations made since that time.
14.25
This concept is captured by the first sub‑principle,
which clarifies that a valuation made as at a particular time may only take
into account:
• things
that have actually happened before that time; and
• things
that, as at that time, are reasonably expected to happen after that time.
[Subsection 170‑10(2)]
14.26
That is, things only known with the benefit of
hindsight cannot be taken into account.
Example 14.1:
Valuations cannot reflect the application of hindsight
Block Ore Co has an iron ore mining project interest
as at 1 May 2010. As at that time, the market value of the rights and
interests which constitute the mining project interest is $1 billion. This
figure takes into account all relevant factors, such as the current and
anticipated production of the mine and expected iron ore prices and capital and
operating costs.
In December 2011, the iron ore price received by Block
Ore unexpectedly decreases sharply. This reduces the value of its mining
rights and interests to $300 million.
In February 2012, Block Ore (intending to use the
market value method) seeks to determine its starting base amount. In doing so,
it has no regard to the unexpected fall in the iron ore price because to do so
would be to apply hindsight to the determination of a value at a particular
point in time (1 May 2010). The amount to be included in the starting base is
$1 billion.
14.27
The avoidance of hindsight in no way means that
estimates and assumptions about future events and circumstances are prevented
from being taken into account. It only means that their likelihood must be
evaluated by reference to information available at the time to which the
valuation relates.
Example 14.2:
Assumptions about the future are to be taken into account
On 1 May 2010, Seagull Resources has a small pre‑mining
project interest in remote Queensland. The viability of turning this interest
into an operating coal mine depends on whether a railroad is built to service
nearby major deposits. The railroad has been talked about as a possibility for
some time, but it is generally accepted that it will be built by 2012, or not
at all in the foreseeable future. As at 1 May 2010, the chances of the railroad
being built are 50 per cent.
Without the railroad, Seagull Resources’ pre‑mining
project interest has little value, $5,000. However, if it were known with
certainty that the railroad would be built, the value of the interest as at
1 May 2010 would be $20 million.
Based on this information, if in 2012 Seagull
Resources were to use the market value method to determine its starting base
amount, then it would be appropriate to include slightly over $10 million
for the pre‑mining project interest (being 50 per cent of $20 million plus
50 per cent of $5,000). Although the railroad was not built by the
valuation date, the likelihood of it being built in the future should be taken
into account, along with the effect that building it would have on the value of
the project interest.
It would not be valid for Seagull Resources to cite an
announcement in early 2012 that the railroad would be built as a justification
for increasing its starting base amount towards $20 million, because this fact
was not known on 1 May 2010.
Sub-principle
2: Each thing being valued is to be counted exactly once
14.28
The second sub‑principle states that the sum of the
values of all things in a set must equal the value of the set. This ensures
that each thing being valued is counted exactly once. [Subsection
170‑10(3)]
14.29
A common situation where this principle is relevant
is the use of a residual method to determine the value of the rights and
interests of a mining project interest. A valuer might first determine the
value of an integrated mining operation (the set, using the language of the
principle) and then subtract the value of the physical assets. The residual
amount is then attributed, on a collective basis, to those remaining assets
which were not valued separately.
14.30
In some situations, the value of an asset within a
mining operation may depend not only on its intrinsic qualities, but also on
how it functions within the context of the overall operation. The valuation
principles do not prevent any synergy value from being recognised, but they do
insist that it only be counted once.
Example 14.3:
Valuations must not count the same thing more than once
Blob Energy uses a crusher and a railway in its
downstream mining operations. The value of the crusher is $100 million.
The value of the railway, which is used exclusively in transporting coal from
Blob Energy’s mine to the port, is $500 million.
The value of the crusher and the railway, taken
together, is the sum of their respective values, $600 million. It would
be invalid to seek to ascribe any additional value to any synergy arising from
the use of the crusher and railway in close proximity.
Sub-principle
3: Identical assets are to be valued equally
14.31
The third sub‑principle requires identical assets
to be treated equally in valuations. It states that identical things in
identical circumstances have the same value. [Subsection 170‑10(4)]
14.32
In practice, it will be rare to find two assets
which are identical in all respects, including the circumstances in which they
are used. The conditions of the sub‑principle may never strictly be satisfied.
14.33
However, the corollary of the principle is that a
difference in two assets’ values must be explainable by differences in their
nature or circumstances.
14.34
This is essentially another expression of the
requirement for valuations to be reasonable when considered alongside other
related valuations. Things not relevant to the value of a particular asset,
such as whether it operated upstream or downstream of the valuation point in a
particular period, should not influence any estimate of the asset’s value.
Example 14.4:
Identical assets in identical circumstances have the same value
Pod Power Co purchases a fleet of 10 identical new
trucks in 2013‑14 for use in its coal mining operations. Each truck performs
the same tasks as the others: picking up coal, transporting it from one place
to another, and unloading it. While five of the trucks operate mostly upstream
of the valuation point and the other five mostly downstream, the conditions are
equivalent and the trucks operate interchangeably.
The total value of the 10 trucks at the end of 2014 is
$20 million. The trucks are the same make, model and age. In the absence of
any reasonable argument to the contrary, each truck has the same value,
$2 million.
It would not be valid to suggest the value of the
trucks used mostly downstream of the valuation point was greater than the
others, because the location of the valuation point is not relevant in
determining the value of an asset.
Sub-principle
4: Valuations are to consistently apply appropriate assumptions
14.35
The fourth sub‑principle goes to the consistent
application of reasonable assumptions and estimates, when valuing a thing to
work out an amount under the MRRT law.
14.36
An assumption or estimate relating to a mining
project interest or pre‑mining project interest:
• is
to be reasonable when considered in isolation;
• is
to be reasonable when considered together with all other assumptions or
estimates made in relation to the interest; and
• is
to be made consistently for all things relating to the interest.
[Subsection 170‑10(5)]
14.37
The task of valuing an asset usually involves
making assumptions and estimates, which are used as inputs in the application
of a particular valuation method.
14.38
The basic principle requires the product of this process
(that is, the value ascribed to the asset, or other thing) to be reasonable.
The sub‑principles discussed so far cover matters relating to the
reasonableness of the valuation method.
14.39
This sub‑principle focuses on the reasonableness of
the assumptions and estimates used as inputs to a process of valuation. Its
inclusion recognises that even the soundest valuation method will seldom be
able to overcome the use of unreasonable inputs to produce a reasonable
valuation outcome.
14.40
The first of the three parts of the
sub‑principle requires each assumption and estimate used in a valuation to be
reasonable when considered in isolation. [Paragraph 170‑10(5)(a)]
14.41
In practice, there is likely to be a range of views
on the most appropriate assumptions to make when valuing something for the
purposes of the MRRT. For instance, there is no single universally accepted
‘correct’ value of expected future exchange rates or commodity prices that a
valuer can draw on, or could be compelled to employ.
14.42
It is wholly to be expected, and perfectly
legitimate, for views to differ as to the most appropriate assumptions and
estimates to use in a given circumstance. However, this does not mean that a
taxpayer is free to choose any assumption, no matter how unrealistic or remote
the likelihood of it being borne out.
Example 14.5:
Assumptions used in valuations must be reasonable in isolation
Iron Grid Co is an exploration company with a pre‑mining
project interest on 1 May 2010. At that time, the interest had an indicated
resource of 1 million tonnes of iron ore.
As an input into the determination of its market value
starting base for the MRRT, Iron Grid makes an assumption about the proportion
of this indicated resource that will ultimately be converted into a measured
reserve able to be economically extracted and sold.
This assumption must be reasonable, a standard
permitting some discretion but not so wide as to include any conceivable
possibility. If the demonstrated success of conversion for comparable
tenements in recent years had ranged between zero and 15 per cent, it might be
considered reasonable for Iron Grid to adopt an assumption lying somewhere
between those limits. It would not be reasonable to assume that, say, 90 per
cent of the indicated resource would prove economically recoverable.
14.43
The second part of the sub‑principle
requires each assumption and estimate to also be reasonable when considered
together with other assumptions and estimates made in relation to the
interest. [Paragraph 170‑10(5)(b)]
14.44
This recognises that, as is the case for the values
themselves, it is possible for two assumptions or estimates to be reasonable
when considered separately but inconsistent (such as being mutually exclusive),
and so not reasonable, when taken together.
Example 14.6:
The relationship between assumptions must be taken into account
In determining as at 1 May 2010 the market value of
its starting base assets, Geordie Minerals Co makes assumptions about future
movements in several exchange rates, including those between:
• the
United States dollar and the Australian dollar;
• the
Japanese yen and the Australian dollar; and
• the
United States dollar and the Japanese yen.
Having had appropriate regard to market forecasts and
other relevant information, Geordie Minerals considers anything between
−20 per cent and +20 per cent would represent a reasonable forecast
of the change in the strength of the Australian dollar (A$) relative to the
United States dollar (US$) over the period relevant to its valuation. Geordie
Minerals considers the same range also captures all reasonable forecasts of the
change in the A$ relative to the Japanese yen (¥), and of the change in the US$
relative to the ¥.
Geordie Minerals decides to assume that the A$ will
remain unchanged against both the US$ and the ¥ over the relevant period.
These assumptions are reasonable in the circumstances, both when considered
separately and when considered together.
It would not be reasonable though, for Geordie
Minerals to concurrently assume that the US$ would markedly increase (or
decrease) against the ¥. While such an assumption could be reasonable in
isolation, it is not reasonable when considered alongside the other assumptions
made in relation to the project interest. This is because it would not reflect
the very strong correlation observed in practice between the exchange rate
movements of highly liquid currencies such as the A$, US$ and ¥.
14.45
The third part of the sub-principle
requires each assumption and estimate to be made consistently for all things
relating to the interest. [Paragraph 170‑10(5)(c)]
14.46
For example, if a forecast increase in the coal
price is used to estimate the overall value of an integrated mining operation
at a particular time, then this forecast must be applied consistently when
valuing the separate assets used within that operation.
14.47
It would not be valid, for example, to assume that
interest rates will increase for the purposes of valuing a crusher, while at
the same time assuming that interest rates will decrease when valuing a digger
used in relation to the same project interest.
Example 14.7:
Assumptions and estimates can reasonably vary over time
Boro Coal Co is a miner subject to the MRRT. It takes
the value of its mining rights as at 1 May 2010 into account when determining
its market value starting base. For the purpose of that valuation, Boro Coal uses
its assumption as of 1 May 2010 that the average coal price it will receive
over the following five years would be $250 per tonne. It is required to use
this assumption (or one consistent with it) when valuing other assets relating
to this project interest at that time.
In 2013‑14, Boro Coal again values its mining rights
for the purpose of splitting a mining project interest. It is not required to
use the same assumption for future coal prices it used previously. Boro Coal
should make an assumption which is reasonable in the circumstances (and then
apply that assumption consistently for all its valuations done at that time).
Sub-principle
5: Valuations are to be reconcilable with relevant previous valuations
14.48
The fifth (and final) sub‑principle recognises
that, just as the estimates and assumptions used in a valuation should be reasonable
when considered together, so too should the set of valuations be reasonable.
14.49
The sub‑principle states that each
valuation done for the MRRT after 1 May 2010 should be reconcilable
with certain other valuations relating to the interest (including, if relevant,
a valuation relating to a pre‑mining project interest from which a mining
project interest originated). [Subsection 170‑10(6)]
14.50
Only valuations made after 1 May
2010 and for the purposes of working out an amount under the MRRT law are
required to be taken into account. [Paragraphs
170‑10(6)(a) and (b)]
14.51
In some cases an asset or other
thing will have been valued multiple times for the purposes of working out an
MRRT amount. The sub-principle requires a new valuation of that thing to be
reconcilable only with the most recent relevant valuation, rather than every
previous valuation. [Paragraph 170‑10(6)(c)]
14.52
Requiring valuations relating to the same project
interest to be reconcilable, or broadly consistent, is designed to avoid, over
time, a set of valuations which is not reasonable, perhaps because some of its
elements are mutually contradictory, despite each individual valuation being
reasonable considered in isolation.
14.53
The requirement for valuations done in relation to
a project interest to be reconcilable does not mean that they must be the same.
It is sufficient that they accord with each other, are compatible, and are free
from contradiction.
14.54
In practice, there will be many valid reasons for
the value of an asset within a mining project interest to change over time. It
is entirely appropriate for a valuation to take into account any changes in
circumstances since any previous valuation.
Example 14.8:
Two valuations can be reconcilable without being the same
In 2012‑13, Buzz Coal Co values a digger at $20
million and a crusher at $10 million.
By 2015‑16, the collective value of the digger and
crusher decreases to $15 million, owing to a change in the configuration of
Buzz Coal’s operations and the wear and tear placed on the assets due to their
continual use. Buzz Coal ascribes this decrease in value between the two
assets proportionately, so the digger is now worth $10 million and the crusher
$5 million. This is reconcilable with the previous valuation, even though it
produces different results.
14.55
In practice, there will nearly always be some
change in circumstances and available information from one valuation to the
next, even if this change is nothing more than the passage of time.
14.56
This sub‑principle does not prevent such changes
from being taken into account when an asset is valued. However, it does
require a miner performing a valuation of something to have due regard to the
value previously ascribed to the thing.
Example 14.9:
A valuation must be reconcilable with previous valuations done in relation to
the project interest
In 2012, Buzz Coal Co estimates the value as of 1 May
2010 of a digger and a crusher for the purpose of working out the starting base
amount for its interest in the Basic Coal project. The digger is used upstream
of the valuation point (so its value is used directly in calculating the
starting base) and the crusher forms part of its downstream mining operations.
Buzz Coal estimates that, collectively, the digger and
the crusher were worth $30 million on 1 May 2010. Because the digger and
crusher play an interdependent role in an integrated operation, Buzz Coal finds
it could split this $30 million in any one of a number of ways, with any
valuation of the digger between $10 million and $20 million being
reasonable in the circumstances. For the purpose of determining its starting
base amount, Buzz Coal values the digger at $20 million, and the crusher (which
is not a starting base asset) at $10 million.
In 2013, Buzz Coal seeks to use the value of the
crusher during the 2012‑13 MRRT year for the purpose of splitting a mining
project interest. Assume that the circumstances of the Basic Coal project are
such that the combined value of the digger and the crusher in 2012‑13 remains
$30 million. In splitting this value between the two items, Buzz Coal must do
so having regard to its earlier valuation. In the absence of any specific
factor suggesting otherwise, Buzz Coal would value the crusher at $10 million.
If the task of estimating the value of the crusher in
2012‑13 were to be looked at in isolation, any value between $10 million and
$20 million might be considered reasonable. However, this task is not to be
performed in isolation, but in the context of previous valuations done in
relation to the project interest. It would be unlikely to be reasonable for
Buzz Coal to suggest the value of the crusher was twice as much, say, as the
value of the digger, for the purpose of the mining project split, having
previously suggested the opposite for the purpose of determining its starting
base amount.
Alternative
valuation method
14.57
It can sometimes be difficult to apply the normal
methodologies for working out what part of the consideration for selling
resources is attributable to the condition and location of the resources at
their valuation point. The difficulties may be greater for smaller miners who
have less access to the specialist advice necessary to apply those
methodologies properly. They can also be greater for miners who transform
resources they mine in an integrated operation, such as steel manufacturing or
electricity generation.
14.58
Accordingly, an alternative, and simpler, valuation
method is provided for those miners to work out the mining revenue attributable
to their resources. [Section 175‑5]
The
alternative valuation method is a choice
14.59
The alternative valuation method is a choice,
available to a miner who satisfies the conditions, in relation to each of its
mining project interests. A miner can choose to use the method for some
interests but not for others. [Paragraph 175‑10(2)(a)]
14.60
The election is also available on an annual basis.
A miner can choose to use the method for some years but not others [paragraph 175‑10(2)(b)].
However, choosing to use the method for a mining project interest in one year
could affect the future transferability of allowance amounts arising in that
year and whether the interest can combine with other interests in later years
(see Chapters 6 and 9).
14.61
A miner must make the choice by the time it lodges
its MRRT return for that year, or by the time it was due to provide its MRRT
return if it does not lodge it within time. The Commissioner of Taxation
(Commissioner) can allow for further time. This is a standard approach to
choices under tax laws, so the Commissioner’s usual processes for deciding
whether to extend time can be expected to apply. [Schedule 1 to the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT
(CA&TP) Bill), item 8, subsection 119‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953)]
14.62
A choice to use the alternative
valuation method for a mining project interest for a year, once made, is
irrevocable. This ensures that miners consider carefully whether to make the
choice, rather than later seeking to undo it if circumstances change. [Schedule
1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 8, section 119‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953]
Effect of making the choice
14.63
If a miner makes the choice to use the alternative
valuation method for a mining project interest for a year, the revenue relating
to the interest’s resources is worked out using the alternative valuation
method rather than the other methods that might be used. The resources would
still have to be supplied, exported or used before any amount would be included
for them in mining revenue. [Section 175‑20]
Conditions for making the choice
14.64
Before it can choose to use the alternative
valuation method, a miner must:
• have
group production of taxable resources of less than 10 million saleable
tonnes in the year; and/or
• carry
on an operation, which existed before 2 May 2010, that supplies
things made using the resources extracted from the mining project interest’s
project area.
[Subsection 175‑10(1)]
14.65
If a miner’s group production is 10 million
saleable tonnes or more in the year, it cannot make the choice generally but it
could still make it for each mining project interest that is part of an
operation that existed before 2 May 2010 that uses the resources to
produce something else.
Group
production
14.66
A miner’s group production includes the production
of taxable resources across all its mining project interests and pre-mining
project interests and those of all the entities connected to, or affiliated
with, it. [Subsection 175‑15(1)]
14.67
Broadly, entities are connected to or affiliated
with one another if either controls the other (or both are controlled by a
third entity) or if it is reasonable to expect that one would act in accordance
with the wishes of the other. These concepts are dealt with by sections 328‑125
and 328‑130 of the ITAA 1997.
14.68
A project area for a miner’s mining project
interest could also be the project area for another miner’s interest (for
example, in a joint venture). In such cases, only the miner’s share of the resources extracted from that
project area would be counted towards the 10 million tonnes (unless, of
course, the miners in question were connected to or affiliated with each
other). [Subsection 175‑15(1)]
14.69
Resources only count towards the 10 million tonnes
if the miner has the interest from which the resources were extracted at the end of the MRRT year. It may not have
extracted those resources itself. For example, if a mining project interest is
transferred from one miner to another during the year, the resources extracted
from it would count towards the threshold for the transferee and not towards
that for the transferor. [Subsection 175‑15(1)]
14.70
The weight of taxable resources is measured when
they reach the form in which they are to be supplied or exported. In many
mining processes, the weight of the taxable resource extracted
declines during processing as waste material is separated and discarded.
The 10 million tonnes is determined, not by reference to the weight
of the resource at extraction, but by reference to its weight after it has
reached the relevant point in the operation. This is commonly referred to as
‘saleable tonnes’ in the mining industry. [Paragraph 175‑15(1)(b) and subsection 175‑15(2)]
14.71
The 10 million tonnes is also measured
regardless of the type of taxable resource. It includes the cumulative weight
of all the taxable resources produced: the tonnes of gas extracted as an
incident of coal mining as well as the tonnes of coal and iron ore. [Subsection
175‑15(1)]
14.72
However, for gas subject to the MRRT because it is
converted from coal in situ, the tonnes
of coal consumed in the gas production are measured (rather than the weight of
the gas) and they are measured when they are consumed. [Subsection 175‑15(3)]
14.73
Obviously, coal in the ground cannot actually be
weighed but there are accepted methods for estimating the weight of the coal
consumed based on relevant factors, such as the amount of gas produced. Using
such a method is sufficient for this purpose.
Vertically
integrated transformative operations
14.74
Some miners supply something they produce using the
coal or iron ore they mine, rather than supplying the coal or iron ore itself
(they may, of course, supply both). The most common cases are operations that
convert iron ore into steel and operations that burn coal to produce
electricity.
14.75
It can be more difficult than usual to work out the
value of the taxable resources at their valuation point in such operations,
because of the extent of capital investment after the valuation point and the
less direct relationship between the value of the resources and that of the
product sold.
14.76
The legislation recognises this by allowing miners
with such operations to access the alternative valuation methodology even if
their group production exceeds 10 million tonnes. This only applies to
miners whose vertically integrated transformative operation produces something
other than a taxable resource. It would not apply, for example, to a miner who
simply refines iron ore or produces coal briquettes. [Subparagraph 175‑10(1)(b)(i)]
14.77
The operation in question must have existed before
2 May 2010, so the method is not available to newly created
vertically integrated transformative operations (which would have the
opportunity to establish an advance pricing agreement with the Australian
Taxation Office (ATO). However, it is not necessary that the miner with the
operation is the same miner who had it just before 2 May 2010. This
ensures that the legislation does not affect commercial decisions about selling
an operation that qualifies for the alternative valuation method. [Subparagraph
175‑10(1)(b)(ii)]
14.78
Whether an operation is one that existed just
before 2 May 2010 is a question of fact. This can involve difficult
judgments. Obviously, it would not be an existing operation if the miner
acquired either the mine or the transformative operation after that date.
14.79
But it is not always obvious even if the same miner
did own both of those elements before that date. The question in that case
would be whether those two elements were part of a vertically integrated
operation at that time.
14.80
Changing components of each of the two elements can
also raise difficult problems. Using a different power plant or steelworks
would probably change the operation so that it was no longer one that existed
at 2 May 2010. But replacing buildings, plant and staff would probably not
change the operation, even if upgrades were involved.
14.81
Similarly, using a new mining project interest to
supply the transformative operation would probably change the operation.
However, combining further interests with an existing mining project interest
that was supplying the transformative operation at 2 May 2010 would probably
not change the operation because the effect of the combination rules is that it
would still be the same mining project interest.
Example 14.10:
Steel making operation
As at 2 May 2010, Freiheit Resources owns two adjacent
mining leases. Mining lease 1 is being mined and produces ore to
supply Freiheit’s steelworks. The other lease is inactive. Freiheit has
two mining project interests.
In 2015, the mining leases are renewed. The renewals
do not change Freiheit’s vertically integrated operation. The
2 May 2010 elements of the operation are still intact.
In 2017, Freiheit extends its mine into the second
mining lease. Because both of the mining project interests satisfy the
upstream integration tests and were owned by Freiheit on 2 May 2010, the
interests are combined into a single mining project interest.
Some of the ore from an area covered by the second
mining lease is put into the steelworks. Again, the 2010 elements of the
operation are intact because the combination of the two mining project
interests means that the same mining project interest is still supplying the
steelworks (even though the combined interest did not exist at
2 May 2010). The whole of that combined interest can use the
alternative valuation method even if Freiheit exceeds the 10 million tonnes
limit.
In 2018, Freiheit also starts supplying the steelworks
with ore from a second, unrelated, mine. The new mine is not part of a
vertically integrated operation that existed at 2 May 2010. If
Freiheit exceeds the 10 million tonnes limit, it would not be able to use the
alternative valuation method for the new mine but it could continue to use it
for the old mine (as extended).
Relationship
between different mining project interests
14.82
Special quarantining rules prevent the mining
losses and royalty credits from vertically integrated projects being
transferred to other projects. [Paragraphs 65‑20(1)(b) and 100‑20(1)(b)]
14.83
Lower than normal resource values could be
generated by the alternative valuation method (because the required valuation
methodology might inflate the value of the downstream capital or because the
prescribed rate of return on downstream capital is too high for a particular
operation). Quarantining the mining losses and royalty credits from an
interest using the alternative valuation method ensures that mining losses and
royalty credits available because of those low values cannot be used to shield
the mining profits of other interests, limiting the effects of any
inappropriately low resource values.
What
is the alternative valuation method?
14.84
The alternative valuation method is a version of
the ‘netback’ method, which starts with a verifiable price and deducts costs to
‘net back’ to the value at an earlier point. Miners who have not elected to
use the alternative valuation method may use the netback method to value their
taxable resources, but they will have to work out the inputs using the most
appropriate method instead of using those prescribed for the alternative
valuation method.
14.85
The alternative valuation method starts by working
out the amounts for supplying the miner’s resources (or something produced
using the resources) for the year. These are the same amounts used as the basis
for working out mining revenue:
• the
consideration received or receivable for a supply;
• what
would be the arm’s length consideration for a supply at the time and place the
resources are (or something produced using the resources is) exported from Australia;
or
• what
would be the arm’s length consideration for a supply of something produced
using the resources at the time and place the thing is used by the miner.
How those amounts are worked out is discussed in
Chapter 4. [Section 175‑25, steps 1 and 2, and section 175‑30]
14.86
The miner then reduces that amount by its post‑valuation
point (or ‘downstream’) costs, leaving it with the mining revenue from the
taxable resources. The downstream costs are:
• the
miner’s downstream operating costs;
• depreciation
on the miner’s downstream assets; and
• a
return on the miner’s downstream capital costs.
[Section 175‑25,
steps 3 and 4]
14.87
It is important to note that the legislation only
‘reduces’ the amount by those costs; it is not a mathematical subtraction. The
difference is that a reduction cannot produce a figure below zero, while a
subtraction could produce a negative result. That means the value of the
taxable resources worked out under the alternative valuation method can never
be less than zero.
Downstream
operating costs
14.88
The miner’s downstream operating costs for a mining
project interest are the expenditures the miner necessarily incurs in carrying
on the activities related to the taxable resources from the interest that occur
after the resources have passed the valuation point [paragraph
175‑35(1)(a)]. They do not include any
expenditure of capital or of a capital nature [paragraph 175‑35(1)(b)].
14.89
Expenditure cannot be deducted as a downstream
operating cost if it would be excluded expenditure in working out the upstream
expenses. This ensures there is a symmetrical treatment of upstream and
downstream expenditure. [Subsection 175‑35(2)]
Depreciation
of assets
14.90
The alternative valuation method allows a reduction
for the depreciation of assets held by the miner that are used, installed ready
for use, or being constructed for use, in relation to a mining project
interest’s activities after the valuation point and before the resources are
supplied, used or exported [subsection 175‑40(1)].
The assets themselves might not be depreciating assets but the calculation will
provide a depreciation deduction as if they were [paragraph 175‑40(3)(a)].
Assets that are eligible for depreciation include improvements to, and fixtures
on, land as if they were separate assets in the same way they are for income
tax purposes [subsection 175‑40(7)].
14.91
Depreciation is worked out using the broad approach
described in the uniform capital allowance provisions in Division 40 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
(ITAA 1997) but is not limited to the prime cost and diminishing value
methods that can be chosen under that Division. The alternative valuation
method allows any method of depreciation that is accepted for the particular
asset in accordance with accounting principles (for example, the units of
production method could also be available). [Subsections 175‑40(2), (3) and (5)]
14.92
However, a miner must use a consistent depreciation
method for a particular asset; it cannot use one method in one year and a
different method in the next. [Subsection 175‑40(4)]
14.93
If a miner chooses to use the alternative valuation
method in the MRRT year starting on 1 July 2012, the depreciation of assets the
miner held immediately before 1 July 2012 starts from a value at that
date worked out using the depreciated optimised replacement cost method. In
effect, that value becomes the asset’s opening adjustable value for the year
and it would be written‑off over the remainder of the asset’s effective life.
Assets the miner did not hold at that time would be depreciated from the time
they are acquired, and from their cost. [Paragraph 175‑40(3)(d)]
14.94
If a miner does not choose to use the alternative
valuation method in the first MRRT year but chooses to use it in a later year,
the method would depreciate the miner’s downstream assets from their opening
adjustable value for that later year. [Subsections 175‑40(2) and (3)]
14.95
The legislation does not define ‘depreciated
optimised replacement cost’ but relies on its meaning within the valuation
industry. Broadly, an asset’s depreciated optimised replacement cost is the
amount it would cost to buy a new asset of identical or similar utility, written‑down
to reflect the shorter remaining life of the actual asset. The reference to
the cost being ‘optimised’ means that it is adjusted to account for the
existing asset having excess capacity or being redundant. In other words, the
depreciated optimised replacement cost of an operation’s assets reflects the
cost of replicating the whole operation in the most efficient way possible, written‑down
to reflect the age and extent of use of the existing assets.
14.96
A proportion of the asset’s opening adjustable
value will be depreciated in each year, worked out according to the asset’s
remaining effective life, as is done under Division 40 of the ITAA 1997. The
year’s depreciation will then be apportioned in accordance with the extent of
use of the asset (or its installation for use) in relation to the mining
project interest’s downstream activities. [Subsection 175‑40(6)]
14.97
Therefore, if an asset is used in both a mining
project interest’s upstream and downstream activities, its depreciation will be
apportioned to reflect only the downstream use. If an asset is used in
relation to several mining project interests, its depreciation will be apportioned
between them.
Return
on capital costs
14.98
The final amount that reduces the revenue amount to
produce the value of the resource under the alternative valuation method is the
return on capital costs.
14.99
The return is equal to the adjustable value of the
assets for which depreciation was allowed under the previous step, multiplied
by the LTBR + 7 per cent:
|
Total adjustable
values ×
|
|
LTBR + 0.07
|
|
[Subsection 175‑45(1)]
14.100
This is the same rate of return used to uplift
those mining losses and royalty credits that cannot be applied as allowances in
an MRRT year. However, if the miner is using a transitional accounting period
for a particular MRRT year that is longer or shorter than 12 months, it will
adjust the return by multiplying it by:
|
Days in the MRRT year
|
|
365
|
so that the miner gets a
return that properly reflects the actual number of days in its MRRT year. [Subsection
175‑45(1)]
14.101
If the depreciation allowed for an
asset is reduced because it was not fully used, installed ready for use, or
being constructed for use on the mining project interest’s downstream
activities for the year, the return on capital for the asset is reduced by the
same proportion. [Subsection 175‑45(2)]
Example 14.11:
Applying the alternative valuation method — under 10 million tonnes
Wind Sun Energy Pty Ltd
operates two coal mines, one that supplies coal to Wind Sun’s power station and
another that supplies coal for export. Each is a separate mining venture and
therefore each represents a separate mining project interest.
The operations are
unchanged since 2005. In the MRRT year starting on 1 July 2012, it
produces 9 million tonnes of coal, 8 million tonnes of which it uses
in its own power station and 1 million tonnes of which is exported.
Its downstream operating
costs for the year are $100 million. The opening adjustable value of its
downstream assets (namely, the plant at its power station), worked out using
the depreciated optimised replacement cost, comes to $1.5 billion and their
remaining effective lives are each 20 years.
Wind Sun sells the 1
million tonnes for $120 million. It sells the electricity it generates using
the rest of the coal for $600 million.
Because its production in the year is less than
10 million tonnes, it can choose to use the alternative valuation method
for that year for both of its mining project interests. To work out the MRRT
revenue for the coal it extracts, it would start by adding together the amounts
it derives from selling the coal and the electricity ($720 million). From
that, it would deduct its $100 million downstream operating costs, its
$75 million downstream depreciation ($1.5b/20 years — it chooses to use
the prime cost depreciation method), and its $180 million return on downstream
capital ($1.5b × 0.12, assuming a long term bond rate of 5%). That
gives Wind Sun a total mining revenue of $365 million attributable to the
taxable resources it produces from the two interests in that year.
Example 14.12:
Applying the alternative valuation method — 10 million tonnes or more
Continuing the previous
example, in the next year, Wind Sun is acquired by another mining company that
produces 20 million tonnes of coal a year. Wind Sun cannot use the
alternative valuation method for its whole operation because its group
production is now 29 million tonnes (that is, its own 9 million
tonnes + its affiliate’s 20 million tonnes). However, it could use the
method to work out the value of its resources from the mine supplying its
integrated electricity generation operation.
Wind Sun chooses to use
the alternative valuation method for its mine supplying its vertically
integrated transformative operation. It would have to separate its downstream
assets into those used for each operation (some might have to be apportioned
between the two). Assume that, of the $1.425 billion opening adjustable value
of its downstream assets ($1.5b — $75m for last year’s depreciation),
$1.2 billion relates to the integrated electricity generation operation.
Of its downstream operating costs, $75 million relate to that operation.
For that operation, Wind Sun would start with $600
million for its electricity sales and deduct its $75 million downstream
operating costs, its $63.16 million depreciation ($1.2b/19) and its $144
million return on capital ($1.2b × 0.12). That gives it mining revenue
for the resources used in its electricity generation operation of
$317.84 million. It would also work out the MRRT revenue for the coal it
exported but would have to use the normal methods to do that.
Outline of
chapter
15.1
This chapter explains the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (MRRT) rules for uncommon accounting situations. It covers the rules in
Division 195 about the treatment of non‑cash benefits, the Division 185
rules about the treatment of entities that account in a currency other than Australian
dollars, and the rules in Division 190 about how the MRRT law applies to an
entity using an accounting period other than a financial year.
15.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Non‑cash
benefits
Barter
transactions
15.3
A barter transaction, where an entity provides one
non‑cash benefit in return for another, is treated as:
• selling
the benefit the entity provides for money equal to the market value of the
benefit it receives in return; and
• using
that money to buy the benefit it receives.
Gift
transactions
15.4
An entity that gifts a non‑cash benefit is treated
as:
• selling
the benefit for money equal to its market value; and
• gifting
that money.
15.5
An entity that receives a non‑cash benefit as a
gift is treated as:
• receiving
money equal to the market value of the benefit it receives; and
• using
that money to buy the benefit.
Currency
translation
15.6
A miner’s MRRT liability is calculated by measuring
amounts in Australian dollars, even where those amounts are denominated in a
foreign currency. This is similar to how amounts are measured to determine an
income tax liability for the purposes of the income tax law.
15.7
The translation rules for the MRRT
are adapted from the translation rules in Subdivision 960‑C of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA
1997), apart from several special MRRT translation rules.
15.8
If an entity has a valid choice in place to use an
applicable functional currency for income tax purposes it will be required to
work out its instalment income, mining profit, pre‑mining profit, allowances
and rehabilitation tax offset by reference to that currency rather than
Australian currency. It will also use that functional currency to work out its
accounting profit for the purposes of choosing whether to use the simplified
MRRT.
15.9
If a valid choice to use an applicable functional
currency is in place, an entity will use a two‑step translation process to
calculate these amounts. This is the same process a taxpayer with an
applicable functional currency uses to calculate its taxable income for income
tax purposes.
Accounting
periods
15.10
An entity that uses an accounting period for income
tax other than the standard 1 July to 30 June financial year, treats that
substituted accounting period as its MRRT year.
15.11
If an entity changes from one accounting period to
another, any overlap between the old and new periods is counted as part of the
old accounting period, which will therefore be a long MRRT year (greater than
12 months). Any gap between the old and new accounting periods is treated as a
separate, short MRRT year (under 12 months). This ensures that every financial
year is matched by one, and only one, MRRT year.
15.12
Such ‘transitional’ MRRT years can be longer or
shorter than 12 months. MRRT amounts that are based on a 12 month period
(such as the low‑profit offset) are proportionately adjusted to reflect the
length of a transitional year.
15.13
All entities start their first MRRT year on 1 July
2012, the date from which the MRRT first applies. Entities using a substituted
accounting period in their first year will therefore have a short first MRRT
year.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Non‑cash
benefits
15.14
The MRRT includes provisions about how to treat
transactions that do not involve money. These provisions are necessary because
the MRRT law is generally written on the assumption that a quantifiable
monetary consideration is involved in a transaction.
15.15
In broad terms, the MRRT non‑cash benefit rules
convert non‑cash transactions into equivalent transactions denominated in money
to ensure that an exchange of non‑cash benefits gets the same treatment as
purchasing those benefits for money (and that a gift of non‑cash benefits is
treated in the same way as a gift of money that is then put to acquiring those
benefits). That ensures that there is neither an advantage nor a disadvantage
to using a non‑cash transaction. [Section 195‑5]
15.16
The non‑cash benefit rules deal with two broad
types of non‑cash transaction:
• barter
transactions, where non‑cash benefits are exchanged; and
• gift
transactions, where an entity provides or receives a non‑cash benefit for no
consideration.
Barter
transactions
15.17
A barter transaction involves an
entity providing a non‑cash benefit under an arrangement in which it also
receives a non‑cash benefit. In most cases, this would simply be an exchange
of non‑cash benefits between two entities but it also covers exchanges of non‑cash
benefits involving more entities. [Subsection 195‑10(1)]
Non‑cash
benefits
15.18
A non‑cash benefit is property or services in any form
except money [section 300‑1, definition of ‘non-cash benefit’].
It covers tangible and intangible property, including the property embodied by
an enforceable promise (although in practice a promise to provide something
that is proximately satisfied would be treated in the same way as the thing
actually provided). It also covers any service, including the service of
forgiving some or all of a debt or other enforceable obligation.
Promises
to pay money
15.19
The barter transaction rules extend to cover
promises to pay money more than 12 months in the future. That extension is not
necessary in the non‑cash benefit rules for income tax, which has separate
mechanisms to deal with the tax treatment of delayed monetary payments. It is
necessary in the MRRT context, which has no similar mechanism but nonetheless
needs to take into account the time value of money (at least when the timing
difference is sufficient to make the difference in values significant).
[Subparagraph
195‑10(1)(a)(ii)]
15.20
The provision does not provide a formula to convert
the promise to pay money into a present value, although something of that sort
would usually be involved in determining the market value of the promise. To
avoid the sort of complexity that can be involved in such calculations, the non‑cash
benefit rules provide an arbitrary 12 months exception similar to that provided
in the income tax law for ‘qualifying securities’ (see subsection 159GP(1) of
the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
(ITAA 1936)). The result is that promises to pay money within the next
12 months are treated in the same way as immediate payments of the
promised amount of money. [Subparagraph 195‑10(1)(a)(ii) and
subsection 195‑10(4)]
Treatment
of barter transactions
15.21
The barter rules act to treat an entity as
exchanging the non‑cash benefits it provides for an amount of money equal to
the market value of the benefits it receives. It is then treated as spending
that money to buy the benefits it receives. [Subsections 195‑10(2) and (3)]
Example 15.1:
Barter transaction
Great Southern Mining agrees with Chamarette
Excavations to provide Chamarette with five million tonnes of iron ore to allow
it to meet its supply contracts, in return for Chamarette’s agreement to
provide Great Southern with an equivalent amount of ore on demand in the
following year. This is a barter transaction: Great Southern is exchanging
five million tonnes of iron ore for a right to obtain five million tonnes
in the following MRRT year.
Great Southern is taken to receive an amount for
providing its iron ore equal to the market value of Chamarette’s promise to
provide ore in the following year. Great Southern is also taken to have used
that money to purchase the promise from Chamarette. The purchase of the promise
will have no MRRT consequences for Great Southern but some part of the sale
price it is taken to have received for its ore will be included in its mining
revenue.
Similarly, Chamarette will be taken to have sold its
promise to provide ore to Great Southern, for an amount equal to the market
value of the ore it receives from Great Southern, and to have used the money to
buy that ore. The purchase of the ore will have no MRRT implications for
Chamarette but the consideration for the promise to supply future ore will give
rise to an amount of mining revenue when it makes those future supplies to
Great Southern.
15.22
The money value for both sides of the transaction
is determined by reference to the value of what is received, not what is
provided. This deals with the unusual case where entities exchange things that
are not of equal value. If the money value could differ between the two sides,
one of the entities would be exposed to double taxation and the other might be
able to claim a double deduction.
15.23
If more than one benefit is provided or received as
part of the transaction, a money value would be put on the combined benefits.
That money value would be apportioned between the individual benefits in
proportion to their market values.
Example 15.2:
Multiple non‑cash benefits
Great Southern Mining enters into a barter transaction
with Dickinson Mining Equipment under which it gives Dickinson five of its old
mining trucks in return for two new trucks. Great Southern is taken to have
sold its five trucks for an amount equal to the market value of the two new
trucks. It would apportion that amount between the five old trucks to see how
much (if anything) to bring to account as mining revenue by way of a
recoupment. That would matter if the trucks had different values for MRRT
purposes (for example, if some of them had not yet been fully deducted because
they were starting base assets), or if they had different percentages of
upstream use, or if they were used in different projects.
Great Southern would also be taken to have spent that
money on acquiring the new trucks and would apportion that amount between the
two according to their market values for the purposes of working out its mining
expenditure.
15.24
The provisions also handle the possibility of money
forming part of the transaction. For example, one entity might provide one non‑cash
benefit in return for another non‑cash benefit plus cash. In such cases, the
money value the rules provide for would be apportioned dollar for dollar to the
cash and the remainder would be divided between the non‑cash benefits.
Example 15.3:
Barter transaction involving cash
Suppose that, in the previous example, Great Southern
gave five old trucks plus an amount of money for the two new trucks. The
market value of the two new trucks would be apportioned first to the cash on a
dollar for dollar basis. The remainder would be divided amongst the five old
trucks in proportion to their market values to work out their sale prices.
15.25
If a non‑cash benefit is a promise to provide
something later, the promise is what is being valued, not the thing that is
promised. The value of the promise will be affected by things other than the
value of the thing promised. For instance, it would take into account how far
into the future the promise will be satisfied and the risk of the promisor
defaulting.
15.26
The actual delivery of the thing promised does not
have a further MRRT effect (such as an amount of mining revenue or expenditure
in the year the thing promised is provided and received). All MRRT effects
will have been fully accounted for when the non‑cash rules converted the
benefits into money, in the same way as if money had actually been paid.
Gift
transactions
15.27
The MRRT law includes provisions for non‑cash gift
transactions largely for the sake of completeness. Although it is possible
that there could be some non‑cash gifts that are relevant to MRRT activities,
they would be fairly rare things.
15.28
The gift provisions work in a similar way to the
barter provisions after, of course, taking into account the one‑sided nature of
a gift.
Receiving
a non‑cash gift
15.29
If an entity receives a non‑cash benefit as a gift,
it is taken to have received money equal to the benefit’s market value at the
time it receives the benefit. It is also taken to have spent that money to
acquire that benefit. [Subsection 195‑15(1)]
15.30
The money would be treated under the MRRT as if it
had been paid and received in the same circumstances in which the benefit was
actually given and received. The receipt would seldom result in an MRRT effect
for the recipient, although it is conceivable that the particular circumstances
of some gifts could produce an effect. For example, if a State government were
to gift land to a miner instead of refunding mining royalties, the receipt
could produce a reduction of royalty credits or an increase in mining revenue
in the same way as a cash refund would.
Example 15.4:
Miner receives free carbon emission units
Lonergan Coal receives 20,000 free emission units for
its upstream operations from the Commonwealth as part of an industry assistance
package under a Clean Energy Package. The units can be used to offset the
company’s emission liabilities. Lonergan has to acquire 5,000 further emission
units on the market to meet its liability for emissions related to its upstream
operations.
The cost of the 5,000 emission units Lonergan
purchases is mining expenditure. It is taken to have received cash equal to
the value of the 20,000 emission units it received from the Commonwealth and to
have used that cash to acquire the 20,000 units. That ‘cost’ is also
Lonergan’s mining expenditure. The gift of the notional cash is an advance
recoupment of the notional expenditure, so is mining revenue for Lonergan. The
net result in this case is that Lonergan reduces its mining profit by the
amount of its actual expenditure on the 5,000 emission units.
15.31
The treatment of the consequent notional payment of
money to acquire the non‑cash benefit could produce an MRRT effect if an actual
purchase of the benefit would have done so. For example, if a farmer gifts a miner
some surplus blasting caps for use in its mining activities, the miner’s deemed
purchase could be mining expenditure in the same way as could an actual
purchase.
Giving
a non‑cash gift
15.32
If an entity provides a non‑cash benefit as a gift,
it is taken to have sold the non‑cash benefit at the time it provides it for
money equal to the benefit’s market value. It is also taken to have gifted
that money in the same circumstances as it gifted the non‑cash benefit. [Subsection 195‑15(2)]
15.33
There could be an MRRT effect arising from the
notional sale of the benefit that is taken to have occurred.
Example 15.5:
Miner gifts a mining vehicle
Friendly Mining gifts an old 4‑wheel drive vehicle to
the local wildlife refuge. It would be taken to have sold the vehicle for
money equal to its market value and to have gifted the money to the refuge. If
the vehicle had been used 50 per cent in Friendly’s upstream mining operation,
it would include half the notional amount in its mining revenue as a
recoupment, in the same way as if it had actually sold the vehicle. If a real
gift of money to the refuge in the same circumstances would have produced an
MRRT effect (for instance, as mining expenditure), the notional gift of money
produces the same effect.
15.34
The notional gift of the money would seldom produce
an MRRT effect. However, in some cases the circumstances of a gift by a miner
would be sufficiently related to upstream mining activities to qualify as
mining expenditure. That would be determined by reference to the circumstances
in which the miner made the non-cash gift.
Currency
translation
Translation
of foreign currency amounts to Australian dollars
15.35
A miner’s MRRT liability is calculated in
Australian dollars. Translation rules are required so amounts in foreign
currency are appropriately taken into account in calculating this liability.
15.36
The core translation rule provides that, for MRRT
purposes, an amount of foreign currency is translated into, or expressed in,
Australian dollars. This is similar to the core translation rules for income
tax purposes. [Subsection 185‑10(1)]
15.37
Foreign currency is defined as a currency other than
Australian currency. This is the same definition used for income tax
purposes. [Section 300‑1, definition of ‘foreign currency’]
15.38
The translation rule applies to amounts generally
and is intended to be interpreted broadly. An amount can include, but is not
limited to:
• an
amount of an expense;
• an
amount of an obligation;
• an
amount of a liability;
• an
amount of a receipt;
• an
amount of a payment;
• an
amount of consideration; or
• a
value.
[Subsection 185‑10(2)]
15.39
Foreign currency amounts need to be translated into
Australian dollars at the applicable exchange rate. The exchange rate that is
to be used is the exchange rate that would be applicable if the translation
were being done for the purposes of Subdivision 960‑C of the ITAA 1997. [Subsection
185‑10(3)]
15.40
In some cases, an amount taken into account for
MRRT purposes is the sum or the result of two or more other amounts. Any
amounts in foreign currency that are elements in the calculation of another
amount are translated before calculating the other amount. This is similar to
the approach taken for income tax purposes. [Subsections 185‑10(4) and 185‑15(6)]
15.41
The only exception is calculating an entity’s
profit for the purposes of the simplified MRRT method. The reason for this
exception is to not require the translation of the components of a miner’s
accounting profit. The accounting rules should determine that profit (which
may involve translating amounts according to accounting principles), with the MRRT
translation rules only applying to convert the final outcome into Australian
dollars (if necessary) on the last day of the MRRT year. [Subsections
185‑10(5), 185‑15(6) and 185‑25(1) (table item 7)]
Functional
currency rules
15.42
The functional currency rules in MRRT automatically
apply to an entity that has a valid choice in effect to use an applicable
functional currency for income tax purposes. The functional currency rules
apply to all of the entity’s mining project interests and pre‑mining project
interests while it is required to use an applicable functional currency for
income tax purposes. [Subsection 185‑15(1)]
15.43
The MRRT functional currency rules allow miners
that have made a valid choice under item 1 or item 2 in the table in
subsection 960‑60(1) of the ITAA 1997 to account for individual MRRT
related transactions using a unit of account (being the applicable functional
currency) other than Australian dollars. However, the net amount from those
transactions is translated into Australian dollars for the purposes of
accounting for MRRT.
How
are amounts translated using an applicable functional currency?
15.44
Broadly, when an entity is required to use an
applicable functional currency for MRRT:
• all
amounts that are not in the applicable functional currency are translated to
that currency rather than to Australian dollars; and
• the
instalment income, mining profit, pre-mining profit, mining allowances,
accounting profit for the simplified MRRT and rehabilitation tax offsets of the
entity are translated from the applicable functional currency to Australian
dollars at the end of the MRRT year.
15.45
This follows the approach used for income tax
purposes and potentially involves two translations. This is explained below.
First
translation rule
15.46
There are situations where an entity undertakes
transactions in a currency other than its applicable functional currency. For
the purposes of working out:
• the
instalment income of the entity
for an instalment quarter in the MRRT year;
• the
mining profit for each mining
project interest the entity has in the MRRT year;
• the
pre‑mining profit for each pre‑mining
project interest the entity has in the MRRT year;
• the
amount of an allowance component
relating to each mining project interest and pre‑mining project interest the
entity has in the MRRT year;
• whether
the entity may elect to use the simplified
MRRT method for the MRRT year; and
• the
amount of a rehabilitation tax offset
for the entity,
an amount that is not in the miner’s applicable functional
currency must first be translated into that currency, so that a consistent unit
of measurement is used to calculate the items. [Subsections
185‑15(2) and (3)]
15.47
The amounts that are subject to the first
translation rule (translation into the miner’s functional currency) include,
but are not limited to:
• an
amount of an expense;
• an
amount of an obligation;
• an
amount of a liability;
• an
amount of a receipt;
• an
amount of a payment;
• an
amount of consideration;
• a
value; or
• a
monetary limit or other amount set out in any Commonwealth law.
[Subsection 185‑15(4)]
15.48
The exchange rate for translating these amounts is
the same exchange rate that would be used if the translation was done for
income tax purposes [subsection 185‑15(5)].
For income tax purposes, the functional currency translation rules, including
the applicable exchange rates, follow the principles set out in the rules for
translating foreign currency amounts to Australian dollars (section 960‑80 of
the ITAA 1997).
Second
translation rule
15.49
For income tax purposes, a taxpayer’s taxable
income is calculated in the applicable functional currency and then translated
into Australian dollars. The same methodology has been adopted for the MRRT to
calculate:
• mining
profit;
• pre-mining
profit;
• the
amount of an allowance component that is applied to work out an MRRT allowance
for the MRRT year; and
• the
amount of a rehabilitation tax offset for the entity.
[Subsection 185‑15(7)]
15.50
These amounts are calculated in the applicable
functional currency and then translated into Australian dollars at the end of
the MRRT year. The exchange rate for this translation is the exchange rate
that would be used if the translation was done for income tax purposes. [Subsections
185‑15(7) and (8)]
15.51
Only so much of the allowance component that is
necessary to reduce the mining profit to nil can be an MRRT allowance in a
particular MRRT year. It is only that amount of the allowance component that
is applied to form the MRRT allowance for that MRRT year that is translated to
Australian dollars. Since the unused portions of any royalty credits, pre‑mining
losses, mining losses and starting base losses are simply an ‘amount’ in the
calculation of the MRRT allowance, they will stay in the applicable functional
currency and are uplifted in that currency.
Example 15.6:
Translating units from functional currency into Australia dollars
Langstraat Mining Co (Langstraat) has chosen to use
the Euro as its functional currency for the purposes of Subdivision 960‑D of
the ITAA 1997.
All amounts are
translated into the Euro in order to calculate Langstraat’s mining profit.
After translating these amounts, they are:
• mining
revenue of €600 million; and
• mining
expenditure of €120 million.
Langstraat also applies
these allowance components to work out its MRRT allowance for the year.
• royalty
credits of €150 million;
• unused
mining losses of €60 million (after uplift);
• starting
base losses of €120 million.
For the purposes of the example, assume the applicable
exchange rate is 1A$ = €0.75.
In accordance with the second translation rule, the
mining profit of €480 million (mining revenue minus mining expenditure) is
translated into A$640 million.
The allowance components
that are applied to calculate the MRRT allowances are translated into
Australian dollars in accordance with the second translation rule:
• Royalty
allowance A$200 million (150m/0.75)
• Mining
loss allowance A$80 million (60m/0.75)
• Starting
base allowance A$160 million (120m/0.75)
•
Total allowances = A$440 million
MRRT
Profit: A$200 million (mining profit minus
allowances)
MRRT Liability: A$45
million (MRRT profit × 0.225)
Foreign
resident operating through a permanent establishment
15.52
In some circumstances, a miner may be a foreign
resident that is carrying on the operations of its mining project interest or
pre-mining interest through a permanent establishment for which the miner has
chosen to use a functional currency. The MRRT functional currency rules apply
to that permanent establishment. [Section 185-20]
Special
translation rules
Translating
the amount of instalment income
15.53
The amount of instalment income for a quarter is
subject to the second translation rule and is translated from the entity’s
applicable functional currency into Australian dollars at the exchange rate
applicable on the last day of the instalment quarter. [Subsection 185‑25(1),
item 1 in the table]
Translating
the mining profit or pre-mining profit
15.54
The amount of mining profit or pre-mining profit is
translated from the entity’s applicable functional currency into Australian
dollars at the exchange rate applicable on the last day of the MRRT year. [Subsection 185‑25(1),
item 2 in the table]
Translating
the allowance component used for an MRRT allowance
15.55
Any allowance component applied in working out an
MRRT allowance in an MRRT year is translated from the entity’s applicable
functional currency into Australian dollars. Where this happens, these
amount(s) are translated into Australian dollars at the exchange rate
applicable on the last day of the MRRT year to which the allowance component relates.
[Subsection 185‑25(1),
item 3 in the table]
Translating
amounts already recognised for MRRT purposes in a different currency
15.56
There may be instances where an entity is required
to take into account an amount that has already been recognised in a previous
MRRT year (such as the decline in value of starting base assets). In these
cases, an entity will have to translate the amount if it is now accounting for
its MRRT obligations in a different currency. The amount is translated at the
applicable exchange rate on the first day of the current MRRT year. [Subsection 185‑25(1),
item 4 in the table, and subsection 185‑25(2)]
15.57
For example, where an entity switches from using
Australian dollars to an applicable functional currency, amounts that have been
taken into account in an earlier MRRT year will need to be translated into the
functional currency if they need to be taken into account in the current MRRT
year. This may also arise if an entity changes its applicable functional
currency to another applicable functional currency, or stops using a functional
currency.
Example 15.7:
Starting to use a functional currency
At the end of the 2014‑15 MRRT year, Black Coal Mining
Co has unused mining losses of $100 million. This amount had been recorded and
accounted for in Australian dollars as Black Coal has not made a functional
currency choice under section 960‑60 of the ITAA 1997 that applies in that MRRT
year.
As a result of a major corporate reorganisation in the
2015‑16 MRRT year, Black Coal has a new parent company, Salem Mining. Salem is
a foreign resident company based in the United States. Black Coal makes a
valid choice to use US dollars as its applicable functional currency under
section 960‑60 of the ITAA 1997 for the 2015‑16 income tax year.
As Black Coal has made a functional currency choice
for income tax purposes, it is required to use that applicable functional
currency for its corresponding MRRT year.
Black Coal will need to translate the amount of unused
mining losses carried forward from the 2014-15 year, that were previously
denominated in Australian dollars, into its applicable functional currency (US
dollars). It will need to make that translation using the exchange rate that
applied on the first day of the 2015‑16 MRRT year.
Transfer
or split of a mining project interest or pre‑mining project interest
15.58
Special translation rules apply if:
• there
is a transfer or split of a mining project interest;
• the
new miner recognises amounts for MRRT purposes in a currency that is different
to that being used by the original miner; and
• as
a result of the transfer or split, the new miner is required to translate an
amount.
15.59
Where this happens, the amounts are translated by
the new miner at the exchange rate applicable on the day the transfer or split
happens. [Subsection 185‑25(1), item 5 in the table]
15.60
An equivalent rule applies to the transfer or split
of a pre‑mining project interest. [Subsection 185‑25(1), item 6 in the
table]
Events
that happened before the current choice took effect
15.61
The need for a constant unit of account, combined
with the ability to choose an applicable functional currency, raises the
question of how to address an event that precedes the choice but is taken into
account after that choice takes
effect. For income tax purposes, a special translation rule deals with these
cases (subsection 960‑85 of the ITAA 1997). A similar rule applies for
the MRRT where an entity is required to translate an amount to the applicable
functional currency and:
• the
amount is attributable to an event that happened, or a state of affairs that
arose, before the current choice took effect; and
• the
amount has not previously been taken into account under the MRRT in relation to
a project interest or a pre‑mining project interest.
[Subsection 185‑25(3)]
15.62
The following two-stage translation process applies
if there is no previous choice in effect at the time of the event:
•
First, the amount is translated into Australian
dollars at the rate prevailing at the event time.
•
Second, the Australian dollar amount is translated
into the functional currency (if necessary) at the exchange rate prevailing at
the start of the current MRRT year.
[Subsection 185‑25(3),
item 1 in the table]
15.63
Where a previous functional currency choice has
been made, the same process applies, except the previous applicable functional
currency is substituted for Australian currency. [Subsection 185‑25(3), item 2 in the
table]
Example 15.8:
Events before a functional currency is used
Trojan Co has a starting base asset with a base value
of A$1 million at the beginning of its 2013‑14 MRRT year. It makes a valid
choice to use the US dollar as its applicable functional currency from the
start of the 2014‑15 income tax year. Since the base value of the asset is an
amount that is attributable to an event that happened before the functional currency rules for
MRRT applied, it is translated into US dollars at the applicable exchange
rate at the start of the 2014‑15 MRRT year.
Accounting
periods
15.64
The standard MRRT year follows a financial year,
running from 1 July in a calendar year to 30 June in the following calendar
year. This is the same as the standard income year used for income tax
purposes.
15.65
However, the income tax law allows taxpayers to use
accounting periods that vary from the standard year under section 18 of the
ITAA 1936. Historically, these ‘substituted accounting periods’ were
provided for taxpayers in agricultural businesses because the seasonal nature
of their activities could conflict with the timing of income tax obligations
arising under a standard year. Nowadays, substituted accounting periods are
more commonly used to allow a company operating in Australia to align its
accounting period with those of its foreign parents and associates, to simplify
the tasks involved in group accounting.
15.66
The MRRT law also provides for entities to use
substituted accounting periods. However, unlike the income tax model,
substituted accounting periods are not
optional under the MRRT. Entities that have a substituted accounting period
for income tax purposes must use the same substituted accounting period for
MRRT purposes. Ensuring that entities use the same accounting period for MRRT
and for income tax simplifies the interaction between MRRT and income tax. It
is not necessary for entities to track separately their expenses and revenue
that are relevant to both taxes if the accounting for both uses the same
period. [Sections 190‑5 and 190‑10]
15.67
Entities use a substituted accounting period once
they have applied for, and been granted leave by, the Commissioner of Taxation
(Commissioner) to use that period. The Commissioner publishes information
outlining the circumstances in which leave is likely to be given.
15.68
A number of exotic entities, such as venture
capital limited partnerships, have different accounting periods for income tax
purposes under section 18A of the ITAA 1936. These periods stop and start when
one of those entities changes its status, ensuring that an entity is of only
one type within each accounting period. The MRRT does not use those special
accounting periods because the MRRT taxes all entities in the same way.
Accordingly, the MRRT annual accounting period is not divided into sub‑periods
for MRRT purposes, which avoids the additional compliance costs associated with
such an approach.
15.69
An entity that uses a substituted accounting period
for MRRT purposes still accounts for its MRRT liability on an annual basis but
does so over the substituted accounting period rather than the standard MRRT
year. It still lodges its MRRT return and pays its MRRT liability by the first
day of the sixth month after the end of its MRRT year. It still pays quarterly
MRRT instalments by the 21st day after the end of each quarter but
its payment dates vary from those of an entity using a standard financial year.
Changing
accounting periods
15.70
Substituted accounting periods work just like
standard MRRT years as long as the period does not change. The accounting is
still done for a 12 month period; but a different 12 month period.
Complications occur only when an entity changes from one accounting period to
another. This could be when an entity changes from a standard accounting
period to a substituted accounting period, or vice versa, or when it changes
from one substituted accounting period to a different substituted accounting
period.
15.71
The complications arise because an accounting
period has to be 12 months long (see section 18 of the ITAA 1936). That means
that, when there is a change from one 12 month period to another, there will be
a period that either falls into both the old and the new accounting periods or
into neither of them.
15.72
There are no income tax provisions that provide an
explicit treatment for these situations. The Commissioner administers them by
using special assessments under section 168 to ensure that, for income tax
purposes, all amounts are properly accounted for and are not accounted for more
than once. That treatment is supported by the decision of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal in Norwich Superannuation
Services Pty Ltd v FC of T (99
ATC 2015; (1998) 40 ATR 1091).
15.73
In contrast to the income tax law, the MRRT law
provides explicit rules to deal with entities changing their accounting
periods. It does so either by adjusting the length of the old or new
accounting periods, or by creating an interim accounting period [subsection
190‑15(1)]. It also proportionately adjusts
amounts that require a 12 month accounting period to reflect the adjusted
period being longer or shorter than 12 months [sections
190‑20 and 190‑25].
Both
periods end in the same 1 December to 30 November period
15.74
If the old accounting period and the new accounting
period both end within the same
12 months from 1 December of one calendar year to 30 November of the following
calendar year, there will be an overlap between the accounting periods. In
that case, the old accounting period is extended to the end of the first of the
new accounting periods. That means the old accounting period comprises what
would have been the old and the
new accounting periods and so will be longer than 12 months. Accounting
periods after that transitional year are 12 months long (unless the entity
changes its accounting period again). This approach ensures that every
financial year is matched by one, and only one, MRRT year. [Subsection
190‑15(2)]
Example 15.9:
Overlap between old and new accounting periods
A miner changes from a standard accounting period
ending on 30 June 2014 to an accounting period ending on 30 September
2014. The new accounting period, which replaces the 2013‑14 financial year, is
called a ‘late balance period’ because it ends after
the end of the financial year.
The period from 1 October 2013 to 30 June 2014 falls
into both the old and the new accounting periods. Therefore, the old
accounting period is extended to the end of the new accounting period. That
means the accounting period that matches the 2013‑14 financial year will be
15 months long (running from 1 July 2013 to 30 September 2014).
Accounting periods after that will run for 12 months, from
1 October to 30 September.
Each
period ends in a different 1 December to 30 November period
15.75
If the new accounting period ends in a different 1 December to 30 November period
than the old accounting period, there can be either an overlap between the
periods or a gap between them. The approach taken to determine the length of
the transitional year depends on whether there is an overlap or a gap between
the old and new accounting periods. Again, the approach ensures there is one
MRRT year to match each financial year.
An
overlap between the old and new periods
15.76
If there is an overlap, it is allocated to the old
accounting period and taken away from the new accounting period. That means
the old accounting period will be 12 months long and the first of the new
accounting periods will be shorter than 12 months. [Subsection
190‑15(3)]
Example 15.10:
Overlap between old and new accounting periods
A miner changes from an accounting period ending on 31
August 2014 to one ending on 31 March 2015. The new accounting period, which
replaces the 2014‑15 financial year, is called an ‘early balance period’
because it ends before the end of
the financial year.
These accounting periods end in different 12 month
periods (because 1 December occurs between their end dates) but the
periods do overlap (the period from 1 April 2014 to 31 August 2014 falls into
both of them).
Therefore, the old accounting period ends on 31 August
2014, as usual, but the new accounting period is shortened to the seven months
from 1 September 2014 to 31 March 2015. Later accounting periods will be
12 month periods, from 1 April to 31 March.
A gap
between the old and new periods
15.77
If there is a gap, the old and new accounting
periods each run for 12 months as normal and the gap is treated as a separate
MRRT year. [Subsection 190‑15(4)]
Example 15.11:
Gap between old and new accounting periods
Solldt Mines Pty Ltd changes from an accounting period
ending on 30 November 2014 to one ending on 31 January 2016.
These accounting periods end in different 12 month
periods (because 1 December occurs (twice) between their end dates) but
this time the periods do not overlap. Instead, there is a gap between them:
December 2014 and January 2015 occur in neither period.
Therefore, Solldt’s old and new accounting periods run
for 12 months as normal and the two months between them are a separate MRRT year.
The old accounting period is a late balance period for the 2013‑14 financial
year. The new accounting period is an early balance period for the 2015‑16
financial year. The two months between is the accounting period for Solldt
that matches the 2014‑15 financial year.
Adjusting
amounts for long and short accounting periods
15.78
Many amounts under the MRRT law are designed to
work on an annual (12 months) basis. For example, a miner with a mining profit
of $50 million or less in a year has a low‑profit offset that reduces its MRRT
liability to nil for that year. Such amounts would not be calculated correctly
if they were based on an accounting period longer or shorter than 12 months.
With the low‑profit offset, for example, a miner with a transitional accounting
period of 18 months would be more likely to be over the $50 million profit than
if the period had been 12 months long and so could lose the benefit of the
offset. For a short transitional period, it would be easier to come under the
$50 million profit threshold.
15.79
To deal with such cases, amounts that count towards
thresholds like the $50 million profit are adjusted proportionately to reflect
the length of the accounting period. This is done by multiplying them by:
|
365
|
|
Days in the transitional accounting period
|
[Subsection 190‑20(1)]
15.80
The result is that the amounts are increased for the purposes of working out
whether a threshold is crossed in a short transitional accounting period and decreased for such purposes in a long
transitional accounting period. This ensures the miner is neither advantaged
nor disadvantaged when it changes its accounting period.
15.81
The amounts that are adjusted are those that count
towards working out:
• a
miner’s ‘group mining profit’, ‘share of group mining profit’ and ‘group MRRT
allowances’ for the purposes of working out what low‑profit offset the miner is
eligible for;
• whether
a miner’s ‘group production of taxable resources’ is under 10 million tonnes
for working out its eligibility to use the alternative valuation method; and
• a
miner’s profit for the purposes of determining its eligibility to use the
simplified MRRT method.
[Subsection 190‑20(1)]
Example 15.12:
Low‑profit offset in a transitional accounting period
New Valley Mining has a transitional accounting period
of 15 months for the 2013‑14 financial year, ending on 30 September 2014. In
that period, it makes a mining profit of $75 million and has MRRT allowances of
$10 million. The MRRT year of its affiliate, Old Ridge Mining, is the standard
2013‑14 financial year. Old Ridge makes a mining profit of $23 million and has
MRRT allowances of $3 million for that year.
New Valley would multiply its mining profit and its
MRRT allowances by 365/457 for the purposes of working out its eligibility for
the low‑profit offset. Old Ridge’s figures would not be adjusted because it is
using a 12 month accounting period. New Valley’s adjusted mining profit would
be $60 million ($75m × 365/457) and its adjusted MRRT allowances would be
$8 million ($10m × 365/457). The group’s mining profit would be $83
million ($60m + $23m) and the group’s MRRT allowances would be $11 million
($8m + $3m).
Applying the low‑profit offset formula, would produce
an offset for New Valley of $976,500 ($4.34m × .225) and an offset for Old
Ridge of $373,500 ($1.66m × .225).
Further adjustment for the low‑profit offset
15.82
In the case of the low‑profit offset, it is
necessary to adjust the amount of the offset before applying it. This
addresses the fact that, in calculating the offset, the mining profit is
increased for a short accounting period, or decreased for a long accounting
period, and therefore results in an annualised offset amount that is not
proportionate to the mining profit of the miner for the actual transitional
period.
15.83
The further adjustment multiplies the unadjusted
offset by:
|
Days in the transitional accounting period
|
|
365
|
to proportionately adjust the offset to the right
amount for the length of the actual accounting period being used. [Subsection
190‑20(2)]
Example 15.13:
Further adjustment for the low‑profit offset
Continuing the previous example, New Valley would
multiply its $976,500 offset figure by 457/365 to get a final offset of $1.22
million.
Old Ridge would not adjust its $373,500 offset figure
because Old Ridge is using a 12 month accounting period, so its offset and its
mining profit are already worked out for a 12 month period.
Special
adjustment for the simplified MRRT method
15.84
One of the eligibility tests for using the
simplified MRRT method is that:
• the
miner’s group profit (that is, the profits of the miner and its related
entities) is under $250 million for the year; and
• neither
the miner nor any of those related entities has a mining project interest whose
profits for the year are not at least four times its liability for mining
royalties for the year (after adjusting for any recoupment of royalties).
15.85
If the miner is in a transitional accounting
period, its group profit would be adjusted by the normal rule for annualising
transitional accounting period figures. A special adjustment ensures that the
same thing is done for the mining royalties (after adjusting for any
recoupment) by multiplying them by:
|
365
|
|
Days in the transitional accounting period
|
[Subsection 190‑20(3)]
Uplifts
for transitional accounting periods
15.86
The MRRT law uplifts the values of a number of
things from one year to the next. For example, an unused mining loss from one
year is uplifted by the long term bond rate plus 7 per cent (LTBR + 7 per
cent) for use in the next year.
15.87
In all such cases, the uplift factor for the year
following a transitional accounting period is indexed by:
|
Days in the transitional accounting period
|
|
365
|
That produces the same result as uplifting the amount
on a daily basis, thus properly reflecting the number of days in the
transitional period. [Section 190‑25]
Example 15.14:
Uplifting a loss from a transitional accounting period
Exoform Tunnelling makes
a mining loss of $4 million for its 2016‑17 MRRT year, which was a nine
month transitional accounting period ending on 30 March 2017. Exoform would
normally uplift that loss for use in 2017‑18 by multiplying it by the 2016‑17
LTBR + 7 per cent. Instead, it has to index that uplift
figure by 274/365. Assuming the long term bond rate in 2016‑17 was 5.5 per
cent, it would get an adjusted uplift factor of:
(0.055+1.07)
274/365
which comes to 1.09. Multiplying 2016‑17’s $4 million
loss by 1.09, would produce an uplifted loss of $4.37 million for Exoform to
use in 2017‑18.
Application and transitional provisions
Accounting periods
15.88
The MRRT only applies from 1 July 2012. That means
that all entities using a substituted accounting period when the MRRT commences
on 1 July 2012 have a short first MRRT year covering the period from 1 July
2012 until the end of their accounting period. [Schedule 4 to the Minerals Resource
Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011, item
10]
15.89
The adjustments applicable for transitional
accounting periods apply to entities where their first MRRT year is not a 12
month accounting period.
Outline of
chapter
16.1
This chapter explains:
• how
Division 215 of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 (MRRT Bill)
provides for groups of entities that have formed a consolidated group for
income tax purposes to also choose to consolidate for Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (MRRT) purposes. An MRRT consolidated group has lower compliance costs
because it is treated as a single entity for MRRT purposes; and
• how
the MRRT treats partnerships, trusts and unincorporated associations.
16.2
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the MRRT Bill unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Consolidated
groups
16.3
A group of entities that is a consolidated group or
a multiple entry consolidated (MEC) group for income tax purposes can choose to
consolidate for MRRT purposes. It must notify the Commissioner of Taxation
(Commissioner) of its decision to do so.
16.4
An MRRT consolidated group is treated as a single
entity, so that the group’s mining project interests are treated as being those
of the head company of the group and the group’s internal transactions are
usually ignored for MRRT purposes. However, the members of the group will be
jointly and severally liable for paying the head company’s MRRT liabilities if
the head company does not pay them.
16.5
An entity that joins an MRRT group (when the group
forms or because it is acquired by the group) transfers its mining project
interests and pre‑mining project interests to the head company of the group.
For MRRT purposes, when an entity leaves a consolidated group, the head company
transfers to it the interests (and parts of interests) the entity takes with
it.
16.6
Changes in a group’s head company, and certain
conversions from a MEC group to a consolidated group (and vice versa), lead to
rollovers under which the MRRT treatment that applied to the old head company
is inherited by the new head company, ensuring a continuity of treatment for
the group.
Partnerships,
trusts and unincorporated associations
16.7
The MRRT taxes partnerships, trusts and
unincorporated associations as entities. Because they are not legal persons,
the liability for paying amounts owed by a partnership, trust or unincorporated
association, and for satisfying their other MRRT obligations, is imposed on the
partners, the trustees, and the members of the association’s committee of
management respectively.
Detailed
explanation of new law
Consolidated
groups
16.8
Company groups have been able to consolidate for
income tax purposes since 2002. The broad effect of consolidating is that the
group is treated as a single entity, with all the assets and activities of the
group treated as belonging to the head company for income tax purposes, rather
than to the various group entities that actually own those assets or conduct
those activities. The effect is that intra‑group transactions are ignored for
income tax purposes, reducing the group’s tax compliance costs.
16.9
The MRRT consolidation rules achieve the same
thing, reducing a group’s compliance costs by treating the group as a single
entity for MRRT purposes. [Section 215‑5]
Effects
of consolidating for MRRT purposes
16.10
Subsidiary members of a consolidated group, or a
MEC group,
that has chosen to consolidate for MRRT purposes, are treated as being parts of the group’s head company (rather
than separate entities) for these MRRT purposes:
• working
out the mining project interests and pre‑mining project interests the entities
have;
• working
out the MRRT payable in relation to those interests;
• working
out the allowance components that arise for those interests for an MRRT year;
and
• working
out the entities’ instalment income for an MRRT instalment quarter.
[Section 215‑15]
16.11
This means that all the mining project interests
and pre‑mining project interests of the group are treated as being the
interests of the head company. If an interest is transferred between two
entities in the group, the transfer is ignored for MRRT purposes in the same
way it would be if any single entity reorganised the management of its
interests.
16.12
Any other transactions conducted within the group
are also ignored. For example, if one group entity provides another with
services on one of its mine sites, the MRRT will apply in the same way it would
if the head company had provided those services to itself from within its
organisation. No mining expenditure will be incurred in relation to that
transaction.
16.13
Of course, there could be mining expenditure from
the provision of those services. The salaries the service provider pays its
employees would be mining expenditure of the head company, as would the costs
of the assets the service company acquires from outside the group to use in the
group’s upstream mining activities.
16.14
Similarly, if taxable resources are supplied by one
entity in the group to another, the supply will be ignored in the same way it
would if the head company had moved its resources from its mining division to
its transport or processing division. No mining revenue will arise from such a
supply.
16.15
This does not mean that there can be no
consequences from internal group activities. An export of resources to an
overseas site owned by a group member would be an export rather than a supply,
just as it would be if a single entity exported resources to its own overseas
facilities.
16.16
Similarly, transferring a mining asset from a
mining project interest of one group member to a mining project interest of
another member would still result in adjusting the mining revenue and mining
expenditure of each of those interests, just as it would if those interests
were actually held by the same entity.
16.17
A group that chooses to consolidate for MRRT
purposes will be able to do some things that a group that does not consolidate
would not be able to do. For example, the group would combine project
interests held by different members of the group if those interests satisfy the
upstream integration test or the downstream integration test. Those things
could otherwise only happen to interests held by the same entity.
Example 16.1:
The ‘single entity’ rule
King Resources Co and Wills Steelworks Co are
subsidiaries of RO Burke Enterprises Pty Ltd. They have formed a
consolidated group for income tax purposes and choose to form one for MRRT
purposes.
King has a mining project interest that provides iron
ore to Wills, which transforms it into steel. The steel is supplied to a
customer in Australia. Due to the effect of the single entity rule, the mining
project interest and the steelworks operation are both treated as being those
of RO Burke. Therefore, a mining revenue event happens for the mining project
interest when the steel is supplied to the customer, not when the ore is
supplied to the steelworks. RO Burke has the MRRT liability for the mining
project interest, not King.
Example 16.2:
The ‘single entity’ rule
Lewis Coal Co and Clark Mining Co are subsidiaries of
Sacagawea Discoveries Pty Ltd. They have formed a consolidated group for
income tax purposes and choose to form one for MRRT purposes.
Lewis and Clark each has a mine. The coal from those
mines is blended to form the final product supplied to their Australian
customer. Sacagawea has made the downstream integration choice for the group,
so the two mines are treated as a single mining project interest Sacagawea
has. When the blended coal is supplied, there will be a mining revenue event
that will work out mining revenue for Sacagawea based on the proportion of the
consideration that is reasonably attributable to the form and location of the
coal when it was at its valuation point. The single entity rule means that
Sacagawea will have the MRRT liability for one mining project interest rather
than Lewis and Clark having separate liabilities for separate interests.
16.18
When a group consolidates for MRRT purposes, all
the mining project interests and pre‑mining project interests of the group’s
subsidiary members are treated as having been transferred to the head company
of the group. This is discussed further below. [Section 215‑20]
Choosing
to consolidate for MRRT purposes
16.19
A group can choose to consolidate for MRRT purposes
if it is an income tax consolidated group or MEC group. [Subsection
215‑10(1)]
16.20
It must also have previously notified the
Commissioner that it has consolidated for income tax purposes. This allows the
Commissioner to verify that the group is eligible to consolidate for MRRT
purposes. [Subsection 215‑10(2)]
16.21
After it chooses to consolidate for MRRT purposes,
the group’s head company (or provisional head company in the case of a MEC
group) must give the Commissioner notice of the choice in the approved form
within 21 days (or within such further time as the Commissioner allows). This
is different from the position for income tax law (where the choice is notified
with the year’s income tax return) because of the interaction of the MRRT
instalments system and the MRRT consolidation rules. [Subsection 215‑10(3)]
16.22
The choice has effect on the day it
was made and continues to have effect for as long as the group exists. [Subsection
215‑10(4)]
16.23
There are some cases where a group technically
ceases to exist because it is converted into a different sort of group. This
is the situation with a MEC group that becomes a consolidated group (see
section 703‑55 of the Income Tax Assessment
Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) and with a consolidated group that becomes a
MEC group (see section 719‑40 of the ITAA 1997). A choice to consolidate for
MRRT purposes, made before such a conversion, continues to have effect, despite
the group technically ceasing to exist in those cases, because the head company
of the group after the conversion inherits the history of things done by the
head company before the conversion. [Section 215‑55]
16.24
A choice to consolidate for MRRT purposes, once
made, cannot be unmade and cannot be altered. [Schedule 1 to the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT
(CA&TP) Bill), item 8, section 119‑10 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation
Administration Act 1953 (TAA 1953)]
Joining
and leaving a consolidated group
Joining
a group
16.25
Entities can join a consolidated group or MEC group
in two broad ways. They can join when the group forms or they can join when
the group acquires the entity some time after the group is formed. Complex
allocable cost amount calculations can be involved for income tax purposes when
an entity joins a consolidated group because the cost bases of the assets the entity
brings with it are reset to reflect the joining entity’s economic cost to the
group. Those calculations do not apply for MRRT purposes when an entity joins
a group.
16.26
Instead, the assets the joining entity brings with
it will become the assets of the head company because of the single entity rule.
The transfer of the assets will not give rise to mining revenue or expenditure
for either the head company or the joining entity so that, in effect, the head
company will inherit the joining entity’s MRRT treatment of the assets. [Sections
120‑15 and 215‑15]
16.27
When an entity joins a group (whether because the
group is formed or because the group acquires the entity), it is treated as
transferring its mining project interests and pre‑mining project interests to
the group’s head company. [Section 215‑20]
16.28
This attracts the operation of the mining project
transfer provisions, thus treating the interests in the head company’s hands as
a continuation of the interests in the hands of the joining entity. The effect
of this treatment is to allow the head company to access the allowance
components that come with the interests. Those provisions also transfer the
mining revenue and mining expenditure for the transfer year and all earlier
years to the head company, so that it acquires the MRRT liability for the
interest for the transfer year. The joining entity remains liable for MRRT
liabilities that arose in relation to the transferred interest before the
transfer year. [Division 120]
16.29
A special rule applies to the transfer of pre‑mining
losses. Such transfers are subject to a cap, based on the consideration paid
for the interest, to prevent entities acquiring interests just to access their
pre‑mining losses. When a consolidated group forms for MRRT purposes, there is
a notional transfer from each joining entity to the head company. If that
notional transfer were subject to that cap, no pre‑mining losses would be
transferred because no consideration is paid for the notional transfer. Therefore,
the cap does not apply to the notional transfer. [Subparagraph 95‑30(1)(a)(ii)]
16.30
However, the cap does apply if an entity joins a
group by being acquired. In that case, a real transfer, occurring on the
acquisition of the entity, precedes the notional transfer of the interests from
the entity to the head company. The cap would apply to the real transfer and
would be adjudged by reference to the consideration the group paid for the
joining entity. The cap would not apply to the notional transfer of the
interests to the group’s head company. [Sections 95‑25 and 95‑30]
Leaving
a group
16.31
When an entity leaves an MRRT consolidated group,
the head company is treated as transferring to the leaving entity the interests
(and part interests) it takes with it. This attracts the operation of the
mining project transfer rules (or the mining project split rules in the case of
part interests). [Sections 215‑25 and 215‑30]
16.32
Those rules treat the transferred interests in the
leaving entity’s hands as a continuation of the interests in the hands of the
head company. The effect of that treatment is to allow the leaving entity to
access the allowance components that come with the transferred interests.
Those rules also transfer the mining revenue and mining expenditure for the
transfer year and earlier years to the leaving entity, so that it acquires the
MRRT liability for the transferred interests for the transfer year. The head
company remains liable for MRRT liabilities that arose in relation to the
transferred interests before the transfer year. [Sections 120‑10 and 125‑10]
16.33
The assets the leaving entity takes
with it become its assets because the single entity rule stops applying when it
leaves the group. The transfer of the assets does not give rise to mining
revenue or expenditure for either the head company or the leaving entity so
that, in effect, the leaving entity inherits the head company’s MRRT treatment
of the assets. [Sections 120‑15, 125‑20 and 215‑15]
16.34
As with the joining case, there is an exemption
from the normal rule that would cap the amount of pre‑mining losses that are
transferred with an interest by reference to the amount of consideration paid
for the interest. The exemption deals with the fact that the leaving entity
will have paid no consideration for the interest. [Subparagraph
95‑30(1)(a)(ii)]
16.35
The cap should still apply in some form if an
entity leaves the group because another entity has acquired it. In that case,
a real transfer, occurring on the acquisition of the leaving entity follows the
notional transfer of the interests from the head company to the leaving entity.
The cap would apply to the real transfer and would be judged by reference to
the consideration paid for the leaving entity. The cap would not apply to the
earlier notional transfer of the interests from the head company to the leaving
entity. [Sections 95‑25 and 95‑30]
16.36
When an entity leaves a consolidated group, it
inherits the most recent MRRT instalment rate the Commissioner gave the group’s
head company. It would, of course, be free to choose a different instalment
rate in the normal way. [Section 215‑40]
Transferring
from one group to another
16.37
When an entity leaves one consolidated group and
joins another at the same time (that is, when one group acquires an entity from
another group), the entity is treated as leaving its old group first and then
joining its new group. This means that the mining project transfer rules (or
the mining project split rules in the case of part interests) transfer the old
group’s interests to the leaving entity before
transferring them from that entity to the head company of the group it has
joined. [Section 215‑35]
Roll‑over
rules
16.38
A number of ‘roll‑over’ rules apply under the
income tax consolidation provisions to deal with certain changes to a group.
Their broad effect is to ensure that the treatment the group had before the
change applies to the group after the change, so that there is a continuity of
treatment for the group. A number of rules achieve the same result for the
purposes of the MRRT.
Changing
the head company of a consolidated group
16.39
When the head company of a consolidated group
changes, the new head company can choose to treat the consolidated group as
continuing in existence (see subsection 124‑380(5) of the ITAA 1997). The
income tax consequence is that the group is taken not to have ceased to exist
and everything that happened in relation to the old head company is taken to
have happened instead to the new head company (see sections 703‑70 and 703‑75
of the ITAA 1997).
16.40
If a group makes the choice under subsection 124‑380(5)
of the ITAA 1997, identical results apply to the group for relevant MRRT
purposes as apply for income tax purposes. The group is taken to continue to
exist and the new head company inherits the relevant history from the old head
company, just as if the new head company had been the old head company at all
relevant times (for example, the new head company would be treated as having
been given the instalment rate that the Commissioner gave to the old head
company). The old head company becomes a subsidiary member of the group from
the time of the changeover. [Section 215‑45]
Changing
the head company of a MEC group
16.41
Whenever there is a change in the head company or
provisional head company of a MEC group, the income tax consequence is that
everything that happened in relation to the old head company is taken to have
happened to the new head company. This ensures the continuity of the group’s
treatment despite the change in its head company (see sections 719‑75 and
719‑90 of the ITAA 1997).
16.42
The same result applies under the MRRT law when
there is a change in the head company or provisional head company of a
MEC group. For the relevant MRRT purposes , the new head company (or
provisional head company) inherits the history from the old head company (or
provisional head company) just as if the new head company had been the old head
company at all relevant times. The old head company (or provisional head
company) becomes a subsidiary member of the group from the time of the
changeover. [Section 215‑50]
Group
conversions
16.43
When a MEC group converts into a consolidated group
under section 703‑55 of the ITAA 1997, and vice versa under section 719‑40 of
the ITAA 1997, the income tax consequence is that everything that happened to
the head company of the old group is taken to have happened to the head company
of the new group (whether it is the same company or a different company). This
ensures the continuity of the group’s treatment despite the change in the type
of group (see sections 719‑120 and 719‑125 of the ITAA 1997).
16.44
The same result applies for MRRT purposes when a
MEC group converts to a consolidated group, and vice versa. For the relevant
MRRT purposes, the head company of the new group inherits the history from the
head company of the old group just as if it had been the head company at all
the relevant times. [Section 215‑55]
Partnerships,
trusts and unincorporated associations
16.45
The MRRT law applies to partnerships, trusts and
unincorporated associations in the same way as it applies to any other entity.
16.46
‘Entity’ is a defined term in the income tax law
(see section 960‑100 of the ITAA 1997) and the MRRT law uses that
meaning. [Section 300‑1, definition of ‘entity’]
16.47
The income tax law taxes unincorporated
associations as entities. In broad terms, they are treated for income tax
purposes in the same way as companies.
16.48
Although the income tax law treats partnerships and
trusts as entities, it does not tax them as entities. A partnership’s taxable
income or tax loss is broadly worked out in the same way as that of any other
entity but the result (income or loss) is divided amongst the partners, who
include their share in working out their own taxable income or loss.
Similarly, the net income of a trust is divided amongst those beneficiaries who
are entitled to the trust income, and included in their own taxable income
calculation; with any remaining part of the net income being taxed to the
trustee.
16.49
The MRRT law works out an MRRT liability for each
mining project interest and pre‑mining project interest. The liability is
payable by the entity that has the interest at the end of the MRRT year.
Unlike the income tax law, it is not divided amongst the partners of a
partnership or the beneficiaries of a trust. Instead, it is payable by the
partnership or trust in the same way as any other partnership or trust expense
(including liabilities for indirect taxes such as the goods and services tax).
That MRRT liability is then taken into account by the partnership or trust in
working out its net income or loss for income tax purposes.
Entity
status
Partnerships
16.50
Although the MRRT law treats partnerships as
entities, they are not legal persons (unlike individuals and companies). Some
people may therefore doubt that MRRT liabilities are imposed on a partnership.
To put the issue beyond doubt, the MRRT law makes clear that the acts or
omissions of partners, when acting in their capacity as partners, are the acts
or omissions of the partnership. [Section 220‑5]
Example 16.3:
The acts of the partners are the acts of the partnership
Shelby and Victoria are operating a coal mine as
partners. Shelby enters into a contract with an overseas customer to supply it
with 3 million tonnes of coal. Entering into the contract on behalf of
herself and Victoria is an act Shelby takes as a partner and it is therefore
taken to be an act of the partnership. Payment to Shelby and Victoria for the
supply is taken to be payment to the partnership.
Victoria pays the state $15 million in royalties for
coal supplied by the partnership. The payment is made in her capacity as a
partner, so is taken to be a payment by the partnership, and generates a
royalty credit for the partnership.
Unincorporated
associations
16.51
Any doubt about the entity status of unincorporated
associations is dealt with by attributing to the association the acts and
omissions of the members of the committee of management of the association when
they act in that capacity. [Subsection 220‑10(1)]
Joint
ventures are not unincorporated associations
16.52
Some have argued that a joint venture could be an unincorporated
association, a term which is not defined in the income tax law. A ‘joint
venture’ is an arrangement under which two or more parties conduct a single
enterprise but do not share in its profits. Instead, they share in the output
of the enterprise. In the context of mining, a joint venture would involve the
joint venturers dividing the resources they jointly extract before each of them
sells its own share.
16.53
The MRRT law does not
treat joint ventures as entities; it treats each joint venturer as having its
own mining project interest or pre‑mining project interest, giving rise to a
separate MRRT liability. [Subsection 220‑10(2)]
Trusts
16.54
Like partnerships and unincorporated associations,
trusts are also not legal persons. A trust is a relationship between a trustee
and the objects of the trust in respect of particular property. But, unlike
partnerships and trusts, the income tax law makes clear that the legal person
who is acting as the trustee is an entity in its capacity as a trustee that is
separate from its status as an entity in its own capacity (see subsections 960‑100(2)
and (3) of the ITAA 1997). In other words, the trust and the trustee are
equated as an entity for income tax purposes and there is no room for doubt
about the status of the trust. Accordingly, there is no doubt that trusts are
entities for the purposes of the MRRT law and so no need for additional
provisions to remove any doubt.
Responsibility
for partnerships, trusts and unincorporated associations
16.55
Although the MRRT law works by imposing obligations
on partnerships, trusts and unincorporated associations as entities, these
obligations cannot be enforced against those entities because they have no
legal personality. That is, because they are not legal persons, they cannot be
sued and cannot be penalised.
16.56
To overcome this, taxation laws usually attach the
liability for not satisfying the obligations of these entities to someone who
is a legal person and is broadly responsible for the actions of the entity.
16.57
For a partnership, those legal persons are the
partners. For a trust, it is the trustee (or the trustees if there is more
than one), and for an unincorporated association, it is the members of the
association’s committee of management.
16.58
Provisions having that effect already exist for the
purposes of attaching liability for satisfying the obligations of partnerships
and unincorporated associations under indirect tax laws (such as the GST) and
under Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953 (see Division 444 of Schedule 1 to that
Act).
16.59
Those provisions are extended so that they also
apply for the purposes of the MRRT law. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
items 34 to 43, subsections 444‑5(1), (1A), (1B) and (2), 444‑10(1) to (3)
and (5), 444‑15(1), 444‑30(1) to (3), and 444‑70(1) and (2), and section
444‑1 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.60
In the case of unincorporated associations, the
existing provisions are amended to make explicit that, for the purposes of the
MRRT law, the members of the committee of management are jointly and severally
responsible for paying the MRRT liabilities of the association. This is
implicitly already the position for unincorporated associations but it is not
explicit as it is for, say, partnerships. The amendments put the point beyond
doubt. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 36, subsections 444‑5(1A)
and (1B) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Trustees
are responsible for MRRT obligations of trusts
16.61
Consistent with this approach, the law is also
amended to attach the liability for satisfying the MRRT obligations of a trust
to the trustees of the trust. The amendment reproduces, in modern language, a
provision that has a similar effect for the purposes of the MRRT law as section
254 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936
has for income tax purposes. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44,
section 444‑120 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.62
Any obligation imposed by the MRRT law on a trust
is imposed on the trustees of the trust. This covers obligations such as
lodging MRRT returns, answering requests for information from the Commissioner
and providing information to entities to which the trust transfers a mining
project interest. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44,
subsection 444‑120(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.63
The obligation attaches to any trustees from the
time the obligation arose until the time it is satisfied. This timing rule
means that responsibility for satisfying the obligation attaches to any new
trustee appointed before the obligation is satisfied. The obligation would also
remain with any previous trustee back to the time the obligation arose. This
ensures that there is always someone responsible for satisfying the obligations
of the trust and that a trustee cannot avoid responsibility by the simple
expedient of resigning. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44, subsection
444‑120(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.64
The trustees are also responsible for paying
amounts that are required to be paid under the MRRT law, such as the MRRT
itself, instalments of MRRT, and any penalty and interest charges that arise in
relation to the MRRT. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44, subsection 444‑120(2)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.65
If more than one trustee is liable for paying those
amounts, they are jointly and severally liable for paying them. That means
that the Commissioner could sue any of them for payment of the amount or could
sue them as a group. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44, subsection 444‑120(3)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.66
In suing for amounts owed by a trust, the
Commissioner is not limited to recovering against the personal assets of the
trustees. He or she can also take action directly against the trust assets. [Schedule
1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44, subsection 444‑120(4) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
16.67
Trustees who use their own assets to pay amounts in
relation to an obligation of the trust that they are required to satisfy are
entitled to be indemnified from the assets of the trust. This reflects the
fact that the liability arises in the proper performance of the trustee’s
obligations as trustee. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44, subsection
444‑120(5) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.68
Offences against the MRRT law that are ‘committed’
by the trust are taken to have been committed by the trustee. This reflects
the fact that the trustee is responsible for satisfying the trust’s
obligations, so that the failure to satisfy those obligations is the trustee’s
failing. [Schedule 1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44,
subsection 444‑120(6) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
16.69
Trustees who can prove that they
were not knowingly concerned in, or party to, an act or omission of the trust
that gave rise to an offence, and did not aid, abet, counsel or procure the act
or omission, have not committed an offence. However, they could, of course,
still be responsible for satisfying the obligation. [Schedule
1 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44, subsection 444‑120(7) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
Application
and transitional provisions
Consolidation
16.70
A group can make a decision to consolidate for MRRT
purposes at any time after it satisfies the pre-conditions (including the
requirement that it already be consolidated for income tax purposes).
Normally, the decision applies for the date on which the group makes that
choice.
16.71
However, as a transitional rule, a group can choose
to apply its consolidation decision back to the earlier of:
• when
it first satisfied the pre-conditions; and
• 2
May 2010.
That allows the group to be consolidated for MRRT purposes
during the period before 1 July 2012 when it undertook activities that affect
the operation of the MRRT from 1 July 2012. That can have substantial
compliance benefits for the group in accounting for its activities during that
pre-MRRT period. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 13]
16.72
The choice has to be made on 1 July 2012 (or within
such further time as the Commissioner allows) and notified to the Commissioner
within 21 days of being made. This ensures that, from the start of the MRRT on
1 July 2012, the Commissioner is in a position to take the pre-MRRT period into
account in applying the MRRT law to the group. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP)
Bill, item 13]
Consequential
amendments
Consolidation
Notes about the link between income tax and MRRT
consolidation
16.73
Some notes are added to the
consolidation provisions in the income tax law to alert readers to that fact
that a choice to consolidate a group for income tax purposes is a prerequisite
for it to consolidate for MRRT purposes. [Schedule 3 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill,
items 40 to 43, subsections 703‑50(1) and 719‑50(1) of the ITAA 1997]
Joint
and several liability
16.74
Under the income tax law, income tax liabilities
are imposed on the head company of a consolidated group or MEC group. However,
the members of the group are jointly and severally liable for paying those
liabilities if the head company does not pay them on time (see
Division 721 of the ITAA 1997).
16.75
The tax‑related liabilities for which the members
can be jointly and severally liable are listed in the table in subsection 721‑10(2)
of the ITAA 1997.
16.76
That table is amended so that the tax‑related
liabilities include liabilities arising under the MRRT law. The relevant MRRT
liabilities are:
• the
liability to pay MRRT itself;
• the
liability for shortfall interest charge on unpaid MRRT;
• the
liability for paying MRRT instalments; and
•
the general interest charge that applies when a
head company chooses too low an instalment rate.
[Schedule 3 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 44,
subsection 721‑10(2) of the ITAA 1997]
16.77
The members of a consolidated group or a MEC group
only become jointly and severally liable for those MRRT liabilities if the
group has chosen to consolidate for MRRT purposes. [Schedule
3 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 45, subsection 721‑10(4) of the ITAA 1997]
16.78
The result is that Division 721 applies to impose
joint and several liability in relation to MRRT liabilities on the members of a
group that has consolidated for MRRT purposes in the same way as it does for
the other liabilities listed in that table.
16.79
The provisions allocating group liabilities among
the members of a group when the head company fails to pay them allow for tax
sharing agreements to limit each member’s share of the group liability (see
sections 721‑25 to 721‑40 of the ITAA 1997). Those provisions also apply for
group liabilities under the MRRT law.
16.80
A pre-condition for those provisions applying to a
particular group liability is that the shares under the agreement represent a
reasonable allocation of the liability. In deciding whether the shares are
a reasonable allocation for income tax purposes, the amount of the
liability is reduced by any credit the head company is entitled to for its
income tax assessment for payments of income tax instalments (see
subsection 721‑25(1A)). When working out whether there is a reasonable
allocation of liability for MRRT, a similar provision also reduces the
liability by the amount of any credits the head company is entitled to for
paying MRRT instalments. [Schedule 3 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, items 46 and
47, subsections 721‑25(1AA), (1B), (2) and (3) of the ITAA 1997]
Outline of
chapter
17.1
The Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) contains two
general integrity measures:
• a
general anti‑profit shifting rule; and
• a
general anti‑avoidance rule.
17.2
Division 205 ensures that a miner’s liability to
pay MRRT is not reduced because things are done in relation to the miner’s
mining project interest or pre‑mining project interest that would not have been
done or would have been done differently had the miner been dealing wholly
independently with other entities.
17.3
Division 210 operates to deter avoidance schemes
that are designed to obtain MRRT benefits by taking advantage of the MRRT law
in circumstances other than that intended by the MRRT law. This ensures that
schemes that are artificial or contrived and undertaken with an objective of
reducing an entity’s MRRT liability, or increasing its MRRT offsets, can be
appropriately dealt with.
17.4
All legislative references throughout this chapter
are to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
Anti‑profit
shifting
17.5
The mining profit, allowance components and offset
amounts for a mining project interest are worked out as if the things which are
done in relation to the interest are the things which would have been done (or
not done) if the miner had been dealing wholly independently with the entities
with which it has commercial or financial relations.
17.6
If adjustments are made to amounts because of the
profit‑shifting rules, the Commissioner of Taxation (Commissioner) can make any
compensating adjustments that are fair and reasonable.
General anti‑avoidance
17.7
The general anti-avoidance rule applies to schemes
that seek to reduce the MRRT liability of an entity for a mining project
interest for an MRRT year or to increase a low profit offset or rehabilitation
tax offset.
17.8
The Commissioner can make any such scheme
ineffective if the scheme was entered into, or carried out, with a sole or
dominant purpose of getting an MRRT benefit, or of getting an MRRT benefit and
a reduction in a liability to pay any other Australian or foreign tax or mining
royalty.
17.9
The Commissioner can also make compensating
adjustments to reduce MRRT liabilities that are higher, or to increase offsets
that are lower, than they would be apart from the scheme.
Detailed
explanation of new law
General
profit‑shifting rule
When
the profit-shifting rule applies
17.10
A miner’s liability to pay MRRT must not be smaller
than what that liability would be if its commercial and financial relations
with other entities were on the same footing as they would have been had the
miner been dealing with those entities on a wholly independent basis.
17.11
When entities deal with each other on a wholly
independent basis, the conditions of their commercial and financial relations
are determined by market forces. When they do not deal with each other in that
manner, the MRRT liability of one or more of the parties may be distorted.
17.12
Whether two or more entities have dealt with each
other on a wholly independent basis is essentially a factual question which is
to be determined by assessing whether the conditions operating between them are
the conditions which would operate between independent entities in comparable
circumstances that were dealing wholly independently with one another. [Section
205‑10]
17.13
This comparison of the conditions
that apply in the entities’ commercial and financial relations with those which
operate in comparable circumstances between independent entities who deal with
one another wholly independently is commonly referred to as a ‘comparability
analysis’. [Subsection 205‑10(1)]
17.14
The comparability analysis employed in Division 205
borrows from the arm’s length principle used by member countries of the
Organisation for Economic Co‑operation and Development (OECD) in relation to
cross border transactions between resident and non‑resident taxpayers.
Commercial or financial relations
17.15
The comparability analysis focuses on the
conditions which operate in the commercial or financial relations between the
miner and one or more other entities. [Subsection 205-10(1)]
17.16
For these purposes, the ‘commercial or financial
relations’ that must be examined encompasses all aspects of the commercial and
financial relationships existing between the miner and the other entities,
express or implied.
17.17
The concept is extremely broad and would take in
any connections or dealings between the entities that relate to or could
otherwise affect the commercial or financial activities of one or all of the
entities. It could include a single transaction, a series of transactions, an
understanding, an arrangement, things to be done or things not to be done, and
practices, whether express or implied and whether or not legally enforceable. It
may involve unilateral actions or mutual dealings. It may comprise a strategy.
Example 17.1:
Commercial or financial relations
A miner acquires services from Service Co in carrying
on the upstream mining operations for its mining project interest. It also
sells coal from its mining project interest to Consumer Co. Service Co and
ConsumerCo are associates of each other.
In ascertaining whether the miner has dealt with each
of Service Co and Consumer Co on a wholly independent basis it would be
relevant to consider the connection that exists between Service Co and Consumer
Co and the impact that connection may have had on the dealings between each of
those entities and the miner.
Conditions
17.18
The ‘conditions’ that operate in the commercial or
financial relations between the miner and other entities include, but would not
be limited to, the price of any dealings between them, the margins or profits
earned by one or all of them, and the division of profits between them. [Paragraph
205-10(1)(a)]
17.19
For example, in simple cases it would include the
price at which resources are sold or acquired by the miner, the cost of plant
and equipment sold or acquired by the miner, and the fees charged by the miner
or another entity to provide services to the other entity or the miner.
17.20
In more complex cases, it may extend to include
factors that affect an entity’s relative financial strength, such as decisions
as to whether dividends should be paid and in what amounts, whether shares
should be issued and at what prices, whether loans should be advanced and at
what interest rates, and whether royalties should be paid and in what amounts.
It would also include decisions that could affect an entity’s liquidity, such
as the time at which an amount should be paid.
17.21
For the avoidance of doubt, the absence of a
condition, in either the miner’s financial or commercial relations or in the
situation being compared, is a difference in conditions with which the Division
is concerned. [Paragraph 205‑10(2)(b)]
Dealing
wholly independently
17.22
The question of whether parties are dealing with
each other on a wholly independent basis is essentially a question of fact. [Paragraph 205‑10(1)(b)]
17.23
The question is whether the parties have dealt with
each other as independent parties would normally do, so that the outcome of
their dealing is a matter of real bargaining: Trustee
for the Estate of the late AW Furse No 5 Will Trust v Federal Commissioner of
Taxation (1991) 21 ATR 1123 at 1132.
17.24
The relationship between the parties is relevant
but not determinative. Thus, parties that are related to each other may deal
independently with one another and parties that are not related to each other
might not deal independently with one another: Barnsdall
v FCT (1988) 81 ALR 173; Furse
21 ATR 1123 at 1132; RAL and FCT (2002)
50 ATR 1076 at [45]‑[51].
17.25
Circumstances in which parties that are unrelated
to each other are not dealing independently with one another includes where:
•
one of the parties submits the exercise of its will
to the discretion of the other, perhaps to promote the interests of the other:
Granby 129 ALR 503 at 507;
• one
party is indifferent to an outcome sought by the other party on a particular
aspect of their dealings: Collis v FCT (1996)
33 ATR 438 at 443; or
• the
parties collude, or act in concert, to achieve an ulterior purpose or result.
Example 17.2:
Parties not dealing independently with one another
Continuing the previous example, if the overall result
of the miner’s dealings with Service Co and Consumer Co is the product of real
bargaining but the price for the upstream services is higher than would
ordinarily be charged and the price for the resource is lower than would
ordinarily be charged, then the miner could not be said to be dealing wholly
independently with either Service Co or Consumer Co.
In this case, Service Co and Consumer Co, as related
parties, are only concerned with the overall outcome from their combined
dealings with the miner. They are indifferent to the allocation of that amount
between the services and the resources.
Comparable
circumstances
17.26
For the relations existing between independent
entities dealing wholly independently with one another to be considered
comparable with the commercial and financial relations between the miner and
one or more other entities, the economically relevant characteristics of the
situations being compared must be sufficiently comparable.
17.27
To be comparable means that none of
the differences (if any) between the situations being compared could materially
affect the condition or conditions being examined (for example, the price or
the margin). [Paragraph 205‑10(2)(a)]
17.28
This requires, amongst other things, a comparison
of the functions undertaken, the assets employed and the risks assumed by the entities
in the situations that are being compared. It also requires a comparison of
the characteristics and terms of the dealings (if any) that are being compared,
of the relevant markets being compared and of the business strategies being
pursued by the entities the subject of the comparison. [Subsection
205‑10(1)]
17.29
Where differences exist, a situation may be
considered comparable if reasonably accurate adjustments can be made to
eliminate the effects of such differences on the comparison.
17.30
In determining the degree of comparability,
including what adjustments are necessary to establish it, consideration must be
given to the range of options that would realistically be available to an
independent enterprise in comparable circumstances. That is because an
independent enterprise would consider the options available to it and, in
comparing one option to another, would consider any differences between the
options that would significantly affect the value of one option over the other.
Example 17.3:
Price comparability
Before purchasing a truck for $100,000 from Associate
Co, an independent enterprise carrying on comparable mining activities to Miner
Co in a nearby location would be expected to take into account the fact that it
could buy the same truck, on the same delivery and payment terms, for $90,000
from Trucking Co.
If, however, Trucking Co offers substantively
different terms for delivery and payment to those offered by Associate Co, for
example if delivery would be delayed by three months but payment would be on
order rather than delivery, then there would exist material differences between
the circumstances being compared and an adjustment would be required before the
price offered by Trucking Co could be compared to the price charged by
Associate Co.
17.31
Although ordinarily, the comparison will be between
the commercial or financial relations as they actually exist between the miner
and other entities and those which would reasonably be expected between
entities dealing wholly independently with one another, they may be some cases
in which it will be appropriate to disregard the miner’s characterisation of
those relations and re‑characterise them in accordance with their substance.
Example 17.4:
Reconstructing the actual transaction
Uraba Co grants Miner Co a call option that confers a
right on Miner Co (or its assignees) to require Uraba Co to sell it a
loading unit. Miner Co also grants Uraba Co a put option that confers on Uraba
Co a right to require Miner Co (or its assignees) to purchase the asset from
it. Subsequently, Miner Co exercises its call option and Uraba Co sells it the
loading unit.
For the purpose of finding a comparable dealing
involving independent entities it might be appropriate to characterise the sale
of the loading unit as being a sale under an agreement for sale that was
entered into when the options were issued (that is, rather than when the
options were exercised).
Methodologies
17.32
Once a comparability analysis has
been undertaken, it will inform the choice of methods for working out what the
miner’s mining profit, allowance components and offsets for the mining project
interest would have been (or could reasonably be expected to have been) if the
independent conditions had operated instead. [Subsection 205‑15(1)]
17.33
For these purposes, the miner must use the method
that produces the most appropriate and reliable measure of that amount having
regard to:
• the
functions performed, assets used and risks performed by the miner and each
other entity in their commercial or financial relations [paragraph
205‑15(1)(a)];
• whether
the method can reliably adjust for differences between the actual circumstances
and those that would apply between entities dealing wholly independently with
each other [paragraph 205‑15(1)(b)];
• the
availability of reliable information required to apply the particular method [paragraph
205‑15(1)(c)]; and
• the
OECD’s 18 August 2010 transfer pricing guidelines, or such other document
published by the OECD as the Commissioner determines to be a replacement for
those guidelines or otherwise to be a transfer pricing guideline [paragraph
205‑15(1)(d) and subsection 205‑15(2)].
17.34
The OECD transfer pricing guidelines provide a
framework for the application of the arm’s length principle. The OECD
guidelines are entitled OECD Transfer
Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations
(Guidelines).
17.35
Miners may have regard to the Guidelines, adapted
as appropriate in the context of the MRRT, in working out their mining profits,
allowance components and offset amounts.
17.36
The various methods outlined in the Guidelines are
set out below. However, these are not necessarily the only methods that could
be used. Other methods may be applied provided they accord with the arm’s
length principle (as explained in the Guidelines), are capable of practicable
application, and produce an arm’s length outcome that is a reasonable estimate
of what would have been the result if the dealings had been undertaken between
independent entities dealing wholly independently with one another.
Comparable
uncontrolled price method
17.37
The comparable uncontrolled price method compares the
price actually charged for property or services that have been transferred with
the price that would be charged for materially the same property or services by
the same supplier in a comparable dealing with an independent party or by
independent entities dealing wholly independently with each other in materially
comparable circumstances.
Example 17.5:
Resource comparable uncontrolled price method
An independent enterprise sells iron ore of a similar
type, quality and quantity at the same time and the same stage in the
production chain as those produced by the miner. Assuming no other material
difference, the price received by the independent iron ore producer would be
considered a comparable uncontrolled price
Cost
plus method
17.38
The cost plus method provides an estimate of an
independent price for property or services by adding an appropriate profit mark‑up
to the supplier’s direct and indirect costs. The profit mark‑up is ideally
determined by reference to the profit mark‑up earned by the same supplier in
comparable dealings with independent parties or by independent entities dealing
wholly independently with each other in materially comparable circumstances.
Example 17.6:
Cost plus for services
Crusher Co has contracted to provide crushing,
processing and blending services for the miner. An independent price for the
services provided by Crusher Co could be worked out by applying the same mark
up on Crusher Co’s costs as would reasonably be expected to be applied by an
independent service provider providing materially similar services in a
materially comparable market.
Resale
price method
17.39
The resale price method estimates an independent
price for property or services by taking the price at which the product is sold
to or by independent entities and reducing it by an independent margin. The
margin would be determined by reference to the resale price margins earned by
the same supplier in comparable dealings with independent parties or by
independent entities dealing wholly independently with each other in materially
comparable circumstances.
Example 17.7:
Resale price margin
The miner sells its coal to an associated entity which
then on‑sells the coal to unrelated purchasers. The associated entity does not
undertake any further processing of the resource. Rather, it takes on the
risks involved in transporting and distributing the resource into offshore
markets.
An independent price for the coal sold to the
marketing entity could be worked out by subtracting an independent resale price
margin from the price at which the marketing entity on‑sells the coal. The
independent resale price margin would be the margin which an independent
reseller would seek in order to cover its operating expenses and allow it an
appropriate profit (taking into account the functions it performed, the assets
it used and the risks it assumed).
Transactional
net margin method
17.40
The transactional net margin method is a transfer
pricing methodology based on comparisons at the net profit level between what
the taxpayer has achieved with that which independent parties dealing wholly
independently in relation to a comparable transaction or dealings would have
achieved.
17.41
Comparisons at the net profit level can be made on
a single transaction or in relation to an aggregation of dealings between the
taxpayer and one or more other entities.
17.42
The transactional net margin method examines the
net profit relative to an appropriate base (for example, costs, sales, assets)
that a taxpayer realises from an activity or transaction. The transactional
net margin method can be applied on a cost plus or a resale margin basis.
‘Profit plus appropriate costs’ can represent an arm’s length sales price for
the original transaction or value of the activity, while ‘revenue less a net
resale margin’, adjusted for other costs associated with the purchase of the
product, can be regarded as an arm’s length purchase price for the original
transaction.
Profit
split method
17.43
Profit split methods are transfer pricing methods
that identify the combined profit of two or more enterprises and then split
those profits between the enterprises on an economically valid basis that
approximates the division of profits that would have been anticipated and
reflected in an agreement between two enterprises dealing wholly independently
with one another.
17.44
The profit split method may be appropriate where
different activities make unique and valuable contributions. The profit split
method would not be used where one activity is relatively simple and does not
make a significant and unique contribution to outcomes as a whole.
Amounts
that must be returned
17.45
Having worked out what an amount
would have been if the independent conditions had operated between the miner
and the other entity or entities, the miner is required to use that amount for
the purpose of working out its mining profits, its allowance components, its
offsets, and the elements that make up those things. [Subsection
205‑10(3)]
17.46
The miner may have to adjust any amount that
directly or indirectly affects the calculation of its mining profit, its
allowance components or its offsets. For example, it may have to adjust the
following amounts:
• an
amount of expenditure that is included in a miner’s mining expenditure for a
mining project interest;
• the
consideration received or receivable by the miner for a supply of taxable
resources, or a thing produced using taxable resources;
• a
downstream cost taken into account in attributing part of the consideration for
a supply of resources to the resources’ condition and place when they were at
their valuation point; and/or
• an
amount that is taken into account in calculating the miner’s group profit for
simplified MRRT purposes.
Compensating
adjustments
17.47
If an amount is adjusted because of
the application of the transfer pricing rules, the Commissioner can determine
that it would be fair and reasonable to make other adjustments. These
adjustments may be to the same miner but for a different MRRT year or to a
different miner for that year or another year. [Section 205‑20]
Example 17.8:
Adjustment to the same miner for a different year
Assume the miner enters into an operating lease for
upstream rolling stock, for two years, from a related party. Under the lease
agreement, the rental payments are $15 million for the first year and $5
million for the second year. A comparability analysis shows the arm’s length
amounts are $10 million for each year. Division 205 would apply in the first
year to increase the miner’s mining profit by $5 million by limiting its
deduction for rent to $10 million.
In the circumstances, it would be fair and reasonable
for the Commissioner to reduce the miner’s mining profit for the second year by
$5 million by increasing its deduction for rent to $10 million.
Example 17.9:
Adjustment to a different miner
Miner A pays $10 million to acquire upstream mine
equipment from Miner B. Assume Miner B purchased the equipment for $6 million
and, at the date of the sale to Miner A, the arm’s length price for the
equipment is $8 million. Division 205 would increase Miner A’s mining profit
by $2 million by limiting its deduction for the equipment to $8 million.
In the circumstances, it would be fair and reasonable
for the Commissioner to reduce Miner B’s mining profit by $2 million by
reducing the amount recouped by Miner B on the sale of the equipment to Miner A
from $4 million to $2 million.
17.48
The adjustments can reduce mining profits or
increase an allowance component or an offset. [Paragraphs 205‑20(1)(b) and (2)(b)]
17.49
The adjustments would restore those
profits, components and offsets to what they would have been if the conditions
had been those that would have operated between entities dealing wholly
independently with each other. [Paragraphs 205‑20(1)(c) and (2)(c)]
The
Commissioner’s determination
17.50
The adjustments only arise if the Commissioner has
determined that they should. The determination must state what the relevant
profit, allowance component or offset should be, and what should be the
elements of the calculations of those amounts. [Subsection 205‑25(1)]
17.51
A determination is not limited to a single MRRT
year or to a single profit, allowance component or offset (although it could be
in a given case). It is possible for one determination to cover multiple
profits, allowance components and offsets, to cover more than one of those
things, to cover those things for more than one year, and to cover those things
for more than one mining project interest. [Subsections 205‑25(1) and (6)]
17.52
The Commissioner gives effect to a determination by
taking such action as he or she considers necessary. In most cases, such
action would be to amend one or more MRRT assessments. [Subsection
205-25(3)]
17.53
The Commissioner must provide an entity affected by
a compensating adjustment with a copy of the determination but a failure to
provide it does not mean that the determination is invalid. [Subsections 205‑25(4)
and (5)]
17.54
An entity can ask the Commissioner
to make a compensating adjustment determination if it relates to that entity or
to an interest it has. The Commissioner must provide the entity with notice of
his or her decision on each such request. If the Commissioner decides not to
grant the request, the entity can object against it in the normal way for
objecting to matters arising under taxation laws. [Subsections
205‑25(2) and (7)]
Pre-mining
project interest
17.55
The profit shifting rules apply to pre-mining
project interests in the same way that they apply to mining project interests.
[Divisions
140 and 205]
General anti‑avoidance
rule
17.56
The general anti-avoidance rule is designed to
protect the revenue against what is commonly considered to be tax avoidance and
arrangements that are not bona fide. When it applies, it negates the MRRT
benefit an entity obtains from a scheme.
When
the general anti-avoidance rule applies
17.57
The general anti-avoidance rule applies where an
entity has obtained an MRRT benefit from a scheme (an avoidance scheme) and it
is concluded that the scheme was entered into, or carried out, with a purpose
of getting an MRRT benefit from the scheme. [Division 210]
17.58
Three requirements must be satisfied for the
general anti‑avoidance rule to apply:
• there
must be a scheme;
• an
entity must obtain an MRRT benefit from the scheme. That is, there must be:
– a
reduction in MRRT liability for a mining project interest for an MRRT year; or
– an
increase in a low profit offset or rehabilitation tax offset;
and that benefit must not be attributable to making a
choice expressly provided for by a taxation law; and
• it
must be reasonable to conclude that, taking into account a list of relevant
factors, the scheme was entered into or carried out with the sole or dominant
purpose either of obtaining the MRRT benefit, or of obtaining that benefit
along with a reduction in any other liability to pay an Australian or foreign
tax or a mining royalty.
Requirement
1: There must be a scheme
17.59
Scheme has the same meaning as it does in the income tax
law:
• any
arrangement; or
• any
scheme, plan, proposal, action, course of action or course of conduct, whether
unilateral or otherwise.
[Section 300‑1,
definition of ‘scheme’]
Requirement
2: An entity must get an MRRT benefit from a scheme
17.60
An entity must get an MRRT benefit from a scheme.
An entity gets an MRRT
benefit when:
•
an MRRT liability of the entity for a mining
project interest for an MRRT year is (or could be expected to be) smaller than
it would be apart from the application of the scheme [paragraph 210‑15(1)(a)];
or
• the
entity has either a low profit offset or a rehabilitation tax offset where the
entity would not have had, or could not reasonably be expected to have had,
that offset apart from the application of the scheme [paragraph 210‑15(1)(b)].
17.61
A smaller MRRT liability includes a case where the
MRRT liability is zero or there is no MRRT liability for the year. [Subsection 210‑15(2)]
17.62
However the general anti-avoidance
rule does not apply to MRRT benefits to which the exception applies. The
exception is where the MRRT benefit that is obtained is attributable to making
a choice that is expressly provided for by a taxation law, other than a choice
relating to functional currency under Subdivision 960‑D of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. [Paragraph
210‑10(1)(b)]
17.63
The exception for choices does not extend to
choices relating to functional currency because an entity can choose to use
functional currency for income tax and MRRT purposes notwithstanding that it uses
a different currency for accounting purposes.
17.64
The exception for choices also does not extend to
schemes entered into or carried out for the purpose of creating the
circumstances necessary for the choice to be made. That is, for the exception
to apply, the choice must be one genuinely available to the entity, not one
that is only available because the scheme entered into or carried out was
designed to make the choice available. [Subsection 210‑10(3)]
The
connection between the MRRT benefit and the scheme
17.65
An entity gets an MRRT benefit from a scheme if an
MRRT benefit would not have arisen, or could not reasonably be expected to have
arisen, apart from the scheme or part of the scheme. [Subsection 210‑15(1)]
17.66
This involves an enquiry into what would have occurred
if the scheme or part of the scheme had not been entered into or carried out.
Requirement
3: The purpose test is met
17.67
The scheme, or part of the scheme, must have been
entered into or carried out with a particular sole or dominant purpose. That
purpose must be either:
• to
get the MRRT benefit the scheme provides; or
• to
get the MRRT benefit and to reduce a liability to pay any other Australian or
foreign tax or a mining royalty.
[Paragraph 210‑10(1)(c)
and subsection 210‑10(5)]
17.68
It is not enough that the purpose is an incidental
purpose; it must be the only purpose or the dominant purpose (that is, a
purpose that is more significant than any other purpose).
17.69
However, it is not necessary that getting the MRRT
benefit was the dominant purpose. It is enough that there was a purpose of
getting the MRRT benefit and that, taken together with all other purposes of
reducing liability to taxes (or to a mining royalty), there was a dominant
purpose of getting all those benefits.
17.70
This broad purpose test is unusual in taxation law
but is necessary because of the nature of the MRRT as a tax on profits. A
scheme might be entered into to reduce profits for the dominant purpose of
saving, say, income tax but have the collateral result of also reducing MRRT
because it is also dependent on the size of the profits. If a miner could
argue that its dominant purpose was to avoid income tax, there would be no way
to cancel the collateral MRRT benefit. In an extreme case, it might be
possible to argue that there was no dominant purpose because reducing profits
had the purpose of avoiding a wide range of profit-based taxes. That risk is
not limited to Australian profit-based taxes; it could also include such
foreign taxes. For that reason, the purpose test looks to whether there was a
dominant purpose of reducing taxes (or mining royalties, which are charges
rather than taxes) and at least a purpose of obtaining an MRRT benefit.
17.71
The purpose test is one of objective purpose. The
actual purpose of the entity that got the MRRT benefit, and the purpose of any
different entity that entered into or carried out the scheme, or part of the
scheme, is not relevant. What is relevant is what a reasonable observer would
conclude was the purpose of any entity that entered into or carried out the
scheme, or part of the scheme. [Paragraph 210‑10(1)(c)]
17.72
In reaching that conclusion, eight factors must be
taken into account. [Section 210‑20]
The
eight factors
17.73
The following matters are taken into account in
coming to a reasonable conclusion about the purpose or effect of the scheme or
part of a scheme:
• the
manner in which the scheme or part of the scheme was entered into or carried
out. The terms manner, entered into,
and carried out are terms that
allow various matters to be taken into account. The terms are not given any
restricted meaning. Manner would include consideration of the way in which,
and method or procedure by which, the particular scheme or part of the scheme
in question was established. The scheme or part of the scheme for these
purposes would be the particular means adopted by an entity to obtain the MRRT
benefit [paragraph 210‑20(a)];
• the
form and substance of the scheme or part of the scheme [paragraph
210‑20(b)];
• the
time at which the scheme was entered into and the length of the period during
which the scheme was carried out [paragraph 210‑20(c)];
• the
effect that the MRRT would otherwise have in relation to the scheme or part of
the scheme [paragraph 210‑20(d)];
• any
change in the entity’s financial position that results, or may reasonably be
expected to result, from the scheme or part of the scheme [paragraph
210‑20(e)];
• any
change that has resulted, or may reasonably be expected to result, from the
scheme in the financial position of an entity that has or had a connection or
dealing with the entity, whether the connection or dealing is or was of a family,
business or other nature [paragraph 210‑20(f)];
• any
other consequence for the entity, or an entity of a kind mentioned in the
previous paragraph, of the scheme having been entered into or carried out [paragraph
210‑20(g)]; and
• the
nature of the connection (whether business, family or other nature) between the
entity and such an entity [paragraph 210‑20(h)].
Limits
that are discounted
17.74
The fact that a scheme, or any part of the scheme,
is entered into or carried out outside of Australia does not limit the
application of the general anti-avoidance rule. [Subsection 210‑10(2)]
17.75
Nor is the operation of the general anti-avoidance
rule limited by anything in other parts of the MRRT law or in the International Tax Agreements Act 1953. [Subsection
210‑10(4)]
17.76
In particular, it is not limited by the operation
of subsection 4(2) of the International Tax
Agreements Act 1953, which would otherwise ensure that the MRRT law
was to be read subject to that Act. [Paragraph 210-10(4)(b)]
Negating
the effect of a scheme
17.77
If the general anti-avoidance rule applies, the
Commissioner can make the scheme ineffective for MRRT purposes. The
Commissioner does that by making a determination that negates the MRRT benefit
obtained by the entity under the scheme. [Section 210‑25]
17.78
There are two ways a Commissioner’s determination
can negate an MRRT benefit:
• It
can state that the entity’s MRRT liability for a mining project interest for an
MRRT year is, and at all times has been, a particular amount [paragraph
210‑25(1)(a)].
• It
can state that the entity’s low profit offset and/or its rehabilitation tax
offset is, and at all times has been, a particular amount [paragraph
210‑25(1)(b)].
17.79
The Commissioner gives effect to a determination by
taking such action as he or she considers necessary. In most cases, such
action would be to amend one or more MRRT assessments. [Subsection
210‑25(2)]
Determinations
compensating an entity or another entity
17.80
If a determination has been made against the entity
that got the MRRT benefit in relation to a scheme or part of a scheme, the
Commissioner can also make a determination that has the effect of compensating
an entity that is disadvantaged by the scheme or part of a scheme if he or she
considers it fair and reasonable that the disadvantage be negated or reduced. [Section
210‑30]
17.81
Three conditions must be satisfied before the
Commissioner can make such a determination that a particular entity should get
a compensating adjustment:
• the
Commissioner must have made a determination in relation to an entity’s MRRT
benefit [paragraph 210‑30(1)(a)];
• the
Commissioner must consider that entity or another entity gets an MRRT
disadvantage from the scheme [paragraph 210‑30(1)(b)];
and
• the
Commissioner must consider it fair and reasonable to negate or reduce that
MRRT disadvantage [paragraph 210‑30(1)(c)].
17.82
An MRRT disadvantage is an MRRT liability being higher, or
a low-tax or rehabilitation offset being lower, than it would be (or would
reasonably be expected to be) apart from the scheme. [Subsection
210‑30(2)]
17.83
There are two ways a Commissioner’s determination
can compensate for an MRRT disadvantage:
• it
can state that an entity’s MRRT liability for a mining project interest for an
MRRT year is, and at all times has been, a particular amount [paragraph
210‑30(3)(a)]; or
• it
can state that an entity’s low profit offset and/or rehabilitation tax offset
is, and at all times has been, a particular amount [paragraph
210‑30(3)(b)].
17.84
Statements relating to different compensating
adjustments, including for different MRRT years can be included in a single
determination. That can also be the same determination that cancels MRRT
benefits. [Section 210‑35]
17.85
The Commissioner must provide a copy of a determination
to each entity that is provided with a compensating adjustment under the
determination. Not satisfying this requirement does not affect the validity of
the determination. [Section 210‑40]
17.86
As with determinations to negate an MRRT benefit,
the Commissioner gives effect to a determination to compensate for an MRRT
disadvantage by taking such action as he or she considers necessary. Once
more, in most cases such action would be to amend one or more MRRT
assessments. [Subsection 210‑30(6)]
17.87
An entity can ask the Commissioner
in writing to make a compensating adjustment determination if it relates to
that entity or to an interest it has. The Commissioner must provide the entity
with notice of his or her decision on each such request. If the Commissioner
decides not to grant the request, the entity can object against it in the
normal way for objecting to matters arising under taxation laws. [Subsections
210-30(4) and (5)]
Pre-mining
project interests
17.88
The general anti-avoidance rule applies to pre-mining
project interests in the same way that it applies to mining project interests.
[Division
140]
Application
and transitional provisions
Application
17.89
The general anti-avoidance rule (see Division 210) applies
to schemes entered into on or after 2 May 2010, the MRRT announcement date.
This ensures that it covers all aspects of the MRRT, including those
arising before 1 July 2012. Examples include matters concerning the
determination of the base value of starting base assets and whether a
vertically integrated transformative operation existed at 2 May 2010.
[Schedule
4 to the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill), item 1]
17.90
The general anti-avoidance rule (see Division 210) also
applies to a scheme entered into before 2 May 2010 if, had the MRRT law been in
force at the time it was entered into, it would be reasonable to conclude that
the entity did so with a sole or dominant purpose of obtaining an MRRT benefit,
or of obtaining an MRRT benefit together with a reduction in a liability to pay
any other tax or mining royalty. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP)
Bill, item 11]
17.91
This ensures that Division 210 can apply to
avoidance schemes entered into prior to 2 May 2010 that also result
in an entity obtaining on MRRT benefit.
Starting base
schemes
17.92
The general anti-avoidance rule also applies to
schemes that increase the value of a starting base asset beyond what it would
be (or would reasonably be expected to be) apart from the scheme. In such
cases, it applies as if that result were an MRRT benefit. This is discussed in
more detail in Chapter 7. [Schedule 4 to the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill, item 12]
Do not remove section break.
Outline of
chapter
18.1
This chapter deals with the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax (MRRT) administrative provisions and the amendments to existing taxation
laws that are necessary to provide the administrative framework for the MRRT.
18.2
All legislative references in this chapter are to
the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011 (MRRT (CA&TP) Bill) unless otherwise indicated.
Summary of
new law
MRRT returns
and starting base returns
18.3
An entity must lodge an annual MRRT return that
deals with all of its mining project interests and pre‑mining project
interests. However, there may be circumstances in which the Commissioner of
Taxation (Commissioner) will not require an entity, or class of entities, to
lodge a return. MRRT returns will be lodged electronically.
18.4
In addition, some entities will need to give the
Commissioner a starting base return.
Assessments
18.5
The MRRT is a full self assessment system. The
Commissioner will generally accept an entity’s MRRT return at face value and an
assessment is deemed made when the Commissioner receives the return.
18.6
For the purposes of assessing MRRT, alternative
sets of assessment provisions have been drafted. The first set is drafted on
the basis that the Taxation Administration
Act 1953 (TAA 1953) includes indirect tax assessment provisions that
require modification for MRRT purposes. The second set is drafted on the basis
that the indirect tax assessment provisions do not receive Royal Assent in time
for the commencement of the MRRT. Both sets of provisions have been drafted in
generic terms so that they can be used by other taxation laws in the future.
Collection
and recovery
18.7
The MRRT will be supported by generic collection
and recovery rules that apply generally in relation to Commonwealth taxation
laws. This means that penalties can apply to outstanding MRRT obligations, and
interest is payable on outstanding MRRT liabilities. The Commissioner can
enforce collection of MRRT through the courts if necessary. Collection and
recovery is further supported by mechanisms requiring payers to withhold MRRT
from certain types of payments.
Instalments
18.8
An entity is liable to pay instalments of MRRT on a
quarterly basis if it has mining revenue or pre‑mining revenue or if it has a
positive instalment rate. The instalments provide the entity with a credit
against its MRRT liability for the year. This system ensures that an entity
does not have a significant MRRT payment due on assessment.
18.9
The amount of an entity’s quarterly instalment is
the product of the applicable instalment rate and the entity’s instalment
income for the quarter. The instalment income is, broadly, the consideration
for supplies of taxable resources the entity made in the quarter. Unlike the
calculation of MRRT liabilities, the consideration for supplies is not apportioned
and there is no deduction for mining expenditure. The accuracy of the result
instead depends on the instalment rate used.
18.10
The instalment rate will usually be the rate the
Commissioner gives the entity and that will usually be based on the entity’s
MRRT assessment for the previous year.
18.11
As with pay as you go (PAYG) instalments for income
tax, the entity can choose a different rate that it believes better reflects
its current trading conditions. The integrity of the system is protected by
imposing the general interest charge on shortfalls if the entity chooses a rate
that is too low.
18.12
When an entity transfers a mining project interest,
or part of one, it can claim a credit for the part of its earlier instalments
for the year that relates to the transferred interest. The entity to which the
interest is transferred increases its instalment income for the quarter in
which the transfer occurs to reflect the fact that it is liable to pay MRRT for
the whole year, including the part before the transfer.
Record
keeping
18.13
The effective administration of the MRRT requires
the Commissioner to have access to the information needed to determine an
entity’s MRRT payable.
18.14
Fundamental to this is a requirement that entities
keep records of their MRRT affairs.
18.15
The main elements of the MRRT record‑keeping rules
are:
• a
requirement to keep relevant records;
• a
requirement to keep the records in writing in English, or in a form that can be
readily converted into writing in English; and
• a
five‑year time limit for keeping the records.
18.16
The MRRT record‑keeping rules are similar to those
of other taxation law record‑keeping regimes.
Information
transfers
18.17
An entity that transfers a mining project interest
or a pre‑mining project interest (or part of either of them) to another entity
has 60 days in which to also provide that entity with the information it will
need to work out its MRRT liabilities for the transferred interest and to
satisfy its MRRT obligations.
18.18
If the acquiring entity needs further particulars
of the information provided to it after a mining project transfer or split (for
example, to enable it to answer enquiries from the Commissioner), it can ask
the original entity to provide those further particulars. That request must be
answered within 60 days.
Access powers
18.19
In order to administer the MRRT, and in particular
ensure compliance, the Commissioner has the power to access premises and
documents, and gather information that is held domestically and in foreign
jurisdictions.
Service
18.20
The Commissioner can serve documents on entities at
addresses provided by them, including electronic addresses. A document is
considered served when the Commissioner leaves or posts it.
Making
choices
18.21
The MRRT provides a mechanism for taxpayers to make
choices about a range of matters in the course of determining their MRRT liabilities.
18.22
Default rules apply to those choices, based on
these principles:
• Entities
should be able to make a choice up to the earlier of the day they lodge their
MRRT return for the first MRRT year for which the choice applies and the due
date for lodging that return.
• To
the extent an MRRT return evidences a choice, that return is sufficient
evidence of the choice.
• A
choice does not have to be notified to the Commissioner unless either the
Commissioner specifically asks for it or the entity does not have to lodge a
return.
• Entities
cannot revoke or vary their MRRT choices.
Rulings
18.23
The existing rulings system applies to the MRRT.
Therefore, the Commissioner can issue public rulings about any aspect of the
MRRT law. Entities can also apply for private rulings about how the MRRT laws
apply to their particular circumstances.
Annual report
18.24
The Commissioner must provide an annual report to
the Minister on the operation of the MRRT law.
Detailed
explanation of new law
MRRT returns
18.25
Returns are integral to self assessment. They
enable entities to inform the Commissioner of their tax position for a period.
18.26
Some conventions exist about the form and contents
of returns. They must be in the form approved by the Commissioner, and lodged
in a prescribed manner within a certain time limit. Failure to lodge a
required return can result in penalties.
Who
must give an MRRT return?
18.27
An entity that holds a mining project interest or
pre‑mining project interest during an MRRT year must give the Commissioner an
MRRT return for that year. The return must deal with all such interests the
entity had at any time during the year. [Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 117‑5(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.28
This means that an MRRT return is required even if
an entity is not liable to pay MRRT for the MRRT year. [Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 117‑5(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.29
It also means that an entity that transfers an
interest to another entity during an MRRT year will need to lodge an MRRT return
covering that interest. This allows the entity to obtain a credit for MRRT
instalments it paid, or amounts that were withheld, in respect of the interest.
18.30
However, there are some exceptions to the general
rule. Some entities are not required to furnish MRRT returns for an MRRT
year. This includes entities that have elected to use the simplified MRRT
method for the year (but such entities can lodge a return in order to get a
refund for paid MRRT instalments or amounts that were withheld). It also includes
entities that belong to a class that the Commissioner has exempted from
furnishing an MRRT return for an MRRT year. [Schedule 1, item 8,
subsections 117‑5(4) and (5) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.31
If an entity is required to lodge an MRRT return,
the due date is the first day of the sixth month after the end of the MRRT
year. The MRRT payable for the year is also due on that day. For entities
operating on the standard MRRT year ending on 30 June, the return and the
payment for the year are due on 1 December [Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 117‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
As with other tax laws, late lodgement results in penalties.
18.32
However, the Commissioner has discretion to defer
lodgement for both individual entities, and classes of entities. [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraphs 117‑5(3)(b) and (c), and subsection 117‑5(5) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
The
form and contents of the MRRT return
18.33
MRRT returns must be in the approved form. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 117‑10(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.34
The approved form for an MRRT return must require
an entity to provide information relating to its:
•
taxable mining profit for the MRRT year; and
•
MRRT payable for the MRRT year.
[Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 117‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.35
For these purposes a taxable mining profit for
a miner for an MRRT year means the sum of the mining profits less any
allowances for each of the mining project interests that the miner has for the
year. [Schedule 3, item 83, definition of ‘taxable mining profit’ in
subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997]
18.36
MRRT payable for a miner for an MRRT year means the sum
of the MRRT liabilities of each mining project interest the miner has for that
year, less the sum of any offsets that the miner has for that year. [Schedule 3,
item 72, definition of ‘MRRT payable’ in subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997]
18.37
Section 388‑50 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953, which
deals with approved forms, allows the Commissioner to require that a range of
other information be included in MRRT returns.
Additional
MRRT returns
18.38
The Commissioner can direct an entity to give a
further or fuller, or any other, MRRT return for an MRRT year or specified
period, whether or not it has already furnished an MRRT return for that period.
[Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 117‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953]
18.39
This enables the Commissioner to request a return
where, for example, the original return has been lost, has not been lodged, or
is otherwise unsatisfactory. It also enables the Commissioner to require a
return for part of an MRRT year. It is intended as a power for use in special
cases. For example, it might be used where an entity is engaged in aggressive
tax planning schemes, or is abandoning its Australian mining operations. It is
not intended that the Commissioner require entities to lodge multiple returns
for each MRRT year as a matter of course.
18.40
The Commissioner can also request returns from
entities acting in the capacity of agent or trustee for an entity. Typically,
this would be used for cases where those agents act for foreign residents. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 117‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Electronic
lodgement
18.41
Entities must lodge their MRRT returns
electronically, unless the Commissioner allows otherwise. [Schedule 1, item 8,
section 117‑25 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Returns
treated as being duly made
18.42
An MRRT return purporting to be made
by or signed by or on behalf of an entity is treated as having been duly made
by the entity or with the entity’s authority until the contrary is proved. [Schedule
1, item 8, section 117‑30 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.43
This rule allows the Commissioner to rely on the
contents of an MRRT return, and for the process of self assessment to reach its
natural conclusion; that is, it allows a return to become an assessment.
However, if an entity proves that a return was lodged without its authority,
then there is no return, and both the Commissioner and the entity must proceed
as such.
Assessments
and starting base assessments
Generic
assessment provisions
18.44
The MRRT (CA&TP) Bill contains two alternative
sets of provisions, both of which are designed to establish an assessment
regime for the MRRT. The reason for this is that new assessment provisions
were being written for indirect tax purposes (the indirect tax assessment
provisions) at the same time as the MRRT. The indirect tax assessment
provisions were being developed as generic assessment provisions that existing
and future taxation laws could use. The MRRT is the first of the additional
regimes to use these generic provisions.
18.45
However, the indirect tax assessment provisions
have yet to be introduced into the Parliament and there is a possibility that
they will not receive Royal Assent in time for the commencement of the MRRT.
Therefore, a set of generic assessment provisions, based on the MRRT, were
developed simultaneously. Whether this alternative set of provisions, or the
set that extends the indirect tax assessment provisions to also cover the MRRT
is used, depends on whether the proposed indirect tax assessment provisions
commence before 1 July 2012. [Clause 2, items 3 and 4 in the table]
18.46
The objective is an MRRT assessment system that is
substantively the same as the income tax assessment system (see Part IV of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (ITAA
1936)). Both the Commissioner and those entities subject to the MRRT will
essentially have the same rights and obligations in respect to the MRRT as they
have with respect to income tax.
18.47
The following explanation proceeds on the basis
that the MRRT version of the generic assessment provisions receives Royal
Assent before 1 July 2012 and that the proposed indirect tax assessment
provisions do not.
Assessments
18.48
An assessment crystallises the amount that an
entity is required to pay, or the amount the Commissioner is required to
refund.
18.49
An entity’s taxable mining profit
and the MRRT payable thereon is an assessable amount that is determined by
assessment. [Schedule 2, item 22, Subdivision 155‑A of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
18.50
The term assessable amount is new. It is an adaptable
term that can be leveraged by other tax regimes in the future. At this point
it means an entity’s taxable mining profit for an MRRT year and the MRRT
payable by the entity for that year in relation to that profit.
18.51
The ascertainment of the MRRT assessable amount
parallels the assessment process used in income tax. In income tax, an
assessment includes the ascertainment of taxable income and the tax payable
thereon. In MRRT, an assessment involves the ascertainment of a miner’s
taxable mining profit and the MRRT payable thereon. [Schedule
2, items 11, 12 and 22, section 155‑5 and subsection 155‑10(2) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953 and the definition of ‘assessment’ in subsection 995‑1(1) of the
ITAA 1997]
18.52
To ensure that the system is not overly rigid, the
Commissioner may treat part of a tax period as the whole tax period [Schedule
2, item 22, section 155‑25 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
This is equivalent to the Commissioner’s power to make special assessments
under section 168 of the ITAA 1936, and means that, for example, the
Commissioner can assess an entity that wishes to leave Australia prior to the
end of the MRRT year, or for part of a year, such as when an entity goes into
bankruptcy.
18.53
After an assessment is made, the Commissioner is
required to issue a notice of assessment of the assessable amount to the entity
as soon as practicable. Similarly, the Commissioner must also issue notices of
amended assessment in respect of amended assessments. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑10(1) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
MRRT
assessments under the proposed indirect tax assessment provisions
18.54
Should the proposed indirect tax assessment
provisions receive Royal Assent before 1 July 2012, the MRRT (CA&TP) Bill
amends those provisions to specify that an assessable amount includes an
entity’s taxable mining profit for an MRRT year and the MRRT payable by the
entity for that year in relation to that profit. [Schedule 2, items 2 and 3, paragraph 155‑5(2)(e)
and subsection 155‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.55
The MRRT (CA&TP) Bill also makes a number of
other minor amendments to those provisions to ensure that they work for MRRT
purposes. [Schedule 2, items 4 and 21, subsection 155‑30(1)
and the heading to Chapter 4 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Self
assessment
18.56
Under a full self assessment system, an entity
assesses its liabilities, and the Commissioner generally accepts the entity’s
assessment at face value. A present example of full self assessment is the
assessment of companies for income tax purposes, under which lodgement of a tax
return effectively serves as a notice of assessment. The process for assessing
MRRT is built on these foundations.
Self
assessment under the MRRT assessment provisions
18.57
The assessable amount — an entity’s taxable mining
profit for an MRRT year and the MRRT payable by the entity for that year in
relation to that profit — is treated as having been assessed by the
Commissioner on the day an entity lodges its MRRT return for an MRRT year
specifying the entity’s taxable mining profit and MRRT payable for the year. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsections 155‑15(1) and (2), paragraph 155‑15(3)(a)]
18.58
The MRRT return that is lodged by an
entity is deemed to be a notice of assessment signed by the Commissioner and
given to the entity on the day the return is given to the Commissioner. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑15(4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.59
However, it should be noted that self assessment
does not apply if, for some reason, the Commissioner has issued an assessment
on or before the day an entity required to lodge a return meets its obligation
to do so. For example, if the Commissioner issues a default assessment. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑15(5)]
Self assessment of MRRT under the proposed indirect
tax assessment provisions
18.60
Should the proposed indirect tax assessment
provisions receive Royal Assent before 1 July 2012, then the MRRT (CA&TP)
Bill amends those provisions with the effect described above. [Schedule
2, items 2 and 3, subsections 155‑15(1) and (2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Default
assessments
Default
assessments under the MRRT assessment provisions
18.61
A full self assessment system is built on
significant levels of trust. The community has demonstrated in the income tax
context that that trust is well placed. However, some entities fail to meet
their self assessment obligations. When this happens, the Commissioner needs
to step in.
18.62
Therefore, the general power to assess may apply where
an entity fails to lodge a return and the Commissioner wishes to assess an
assessable amount based on information available to him or her [Schedule
2, item 22, section 155‑5 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
This is the same as the Commissioner’s power to make default assessments under
section 167 of the ITAA 1936.
Default
assessments under the proposed indirect tax assessment provisions
18.63
The version of the assessment provisions in the
proposed indirect tax assessment provisions is identical to the MRRT version
and does not need an amendment to make it applicable for MRRT purposes.
Amending
assessments
18.64
Sometimes it is necessary to amend an assessment
because a mistake has been made. Amendments can be initiated by a taxpayer or
by the Commissioner. They can also be made to give effect to decisions made by
courts and tribunals.
Amending
assessments under the MRRT assessment provisions
18.65
The Commissioner can amend an assessment during the
period of review, which commences on the day the Commissioner
gives notice of the original assessment and expires four years after the day
after the notice of assessment is issued (unless extended). Where an
assessment is self assessed, the period of review will commence on the day the
return is lodged, regardless of whether the return is lodged early or late. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsections 155‑35(1) and (2) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.66
The period of review ensures that tax disputes have
finality and cannot extend indefinitely. The period of four years is
consistent with the timeframe applicable to amending the income tax assessments
of medium and large business taxpayers.
18.67
However, due to the complexity of some tax
disputes, it can be difficult to reach resolution within four years.
Therefore, there is scope for the period of review to be extended (including
more than once), but this can only be done by way of a Federal Court order or
with the entity’s consent. A Federal Court order can only be granted if the
Court is satisfied that the entity under examination has not played a role in
delaying the assessment process. This rule ensures that there is no incentive
for entities to stall an examination of its affairs. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsections 155‑35(4) to (6) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.68
The term ‘examination’ is a very broad concept and
takes its ordinary meaning; which includes audits, reviews, investigations or
enquiries.
18.69
There are also some circumstances in which the
Commissioner can amend an assessment after the period of review has expired. For
example, if an entity applies for an amendment within the period of review, the
Commissioner can amend outside the period of review to give effect to that
application [Schedule 2, item 22, section 155‑45 in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]. In addition, if an entity applies
for a private ruling within the period of review and the Commissioner issues
the ruling, an assessment can be amended outside the period of review in order
to give effect to the private ruling [Schedule 2, item 22, section 155‑50 in
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
18.70
Equally, the Commissioner can amend an assessment
at any time to give effect to certain types of declarations and
determinations. This would include a determination to make a compensating
adjustment under the general anti‑avoidance rule in the Minerals Resource Rent
Tax Bill 2011 (MRRT Bill) [Schedule 2, item 22, section 155‑55 in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]. That is, where an entity has been
involved in an MRRT avoidance scheme that has negatively impacted a second
entity’s MRRT liabilities, the Commissioner can compensate the second entity.
18.71
The Commissioner can also amend an assessment at
any time to give effect to the anti‑profit shifting rules in Division 205 of
the MRRT Bill [Schedule 2, item 22, section 155‑57 in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]. This power recognises the
complexity of these types of transactions, and the timeframes involved in
examining them. Moreover, the power is consistent with income tax law, where
the Commissioner has an unlimited timeframe to amend to give effect to transfer
pricing rules.
18.72
Importantly, the Commissioner retains a right to
amend an assessment at any time to curtail fraud or evasion [Schedule
2, item 22, paragraph 155‑60(c) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
This rule protects the integrity of the MRRT revenue base by ensuring that
serious non‑compliance is not rewarded.
18.73
The amendment of an assessment — for any of the
reasons outlined above — raises a question about the period of review for
amending an amended assessment. An amendment to an assessment gives rise to a
refreshed period of review for the particular that is amended. A separate
refreshed period of review exists for each amended particular. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑70(1) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.74
However, an amendment to give effect to:
• a
taxpayer‑initiated amendment;
• a
private ruling application;
• anti‑avoidance
compensating adjustment; or
• a
review, objection or fraud,
does not give rise to a refreshed period of review
because the Commissioner can make amendments for these purposes at any time. [Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑70(1) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.75
The refreshed period of review starts immediately after
the day the Commissioner gives the entity a notice of amended assessment for
the last amendment made to the particular during the period of review, and ends
four years after that day. The refreshed period of review cannot be extended.
[Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑70(2) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.76
If the period of review (applicable to the original
assessment) has lapsed, and the Commissioner wishes to amend an amended
assessment within the refreshed period of review, he or she can only amend in
respect to a particular covered by the refreshed period of review [Schedule
2, item 22, subsection 155‑70(2) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
A ‘particular’ is a constituent element that affects an increase or decrease in
the assessable amount.
18.77
An amended assessment can only be amended once in
relation to a particular during the refreshed period of review. However, an
entity has its rights to object under Part IVC of the TAA 1953. [Schedule
2, item 22, sections 155‑70 and 155‑90 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.78
Moreover, there may be more than one refreshed
period of review if different particulars are amended in the period of review.
The amendments giving rise to a refreshed period of review can be initiated
either by the Commissioner or on application by the entity. [Schedule
2, item 22, section 155‑70 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.79
Finally, it should be noted that the requirements
applying to assessments, such as the requirement that the Commissioner issue a
notice of assessment for each assessment, also apply to amended assessments. [Schedule
2, item 22, sections 155‑80 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Amending
MRRT assessments under the proposed indirect tax assessment provisions
18.80
Should the proposed indirect tax assessment
provisions receive Royal Assent before 1 July 2012, then the MRRT (CA&TP)
Bill amends those provisions to specify that assessments of MRRT can be
amended. [Schedule 2, items 5 to 7, 14 and 15, sections 155‑55,
155‑57 and 155‑95 in Schedule 1 of the TAA 1953, definitions of ‘original
assessment’ and ‘period of review’ in subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA
1997]
General
rules
18.81
A range of general rules are necessary for
consistency with the rest of the tax system, and to support self assessment;
these concern refunds of overpaid amounts, the validity of assessments, and the
rights of entities to have taxation decisions reviewed.
General
rules under the MRRT assessment provisions
18.82
First, if an amendment of an assessment results in
an entity’s tax‑related liability being reduced, the amount by which the
liability is reduced is treated as though it was never payable and the Commissioner
must apply that amount in accordance with the rules for running balance
accounts under Divisions 3 and 3A of Part IIB of the TAA 1953. [Schedule 2,
item 22, section 155‑75 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.83
Second, the validity of an assessment is not affected
by any non‑compliance with the provisions of any other taxation law [Schedule
2, item 22, section 155‑85 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
This rule is consistent with section 175 of the ITAA 1936 and has the effect of
ensuring that tax disputes focus on the issue that really matters. That is,
has the entity paid the appropriate amount of tax?
18.84
Third, the question of whether an entity has paid
the appropriate amount of tax requires a dispute settlement mechanism; as such,
assessments are reviewable taxation decisions under Part IVC of the
TAA 1953 [Schedule 2, item 22, section 155‑90 in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]. An entity that is dissatisfied
with an assessment has four years after notice of the original assessment is
issued to object against the assessment [Schedule 2, item 18, paragraph
14ZW(1)(bg) of the TAA 1953].
18.85
With respect to an amended
assessment, an entity may lodge an objection either within four years of the
notice of the original assessment, or 60 days after the relevant notice of amended
assessment was given, whichever is later. It should be noted that section 14ZV
of the TAA 1953 limits any objection to an amended assessment to the particular
or particulars that have been amended. [Schedule 2, item 20, paragraph 14ZW(1B)(b)
of the TAA 1953]
18.86
The fact that entities can have MRRT decisions
reviewed under Part IVC of the TAA 1953 means that, consistent with the
approach taken to other tax laws, decisions in relation to assessments are not
reviewable decisions under the Administrative
Decisions Judicial Review Act 1977 [Schedule
2, item 10, paragraph (e) of Schedule 1 of the Administrative
Decisions Judicial Review Act 1977].
Applicability
of the general rules to MRRT under the proposed indirect tax assessment
provisions
18.87
If the
proposed indirect tax assessment provisions receive Royal Assent before 1 July
2012, then additional amendments are made to the Administrative Decisions Judicial Review Act 1977
to ensure that MRRT decisions are not reviewable under that Act. [Schedule
3, items 1 and 2, paragraph (e) of Schedule 1 to the Administrative
Decisions Judicial Review Act 1977] They will
have objection rights under Part IVC [Schedule 2, items 6 and 7, section
155-90 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
Miscellaneous
consequential amendments under the MRRT assessment provisions
18.88
The Commissioner has a power to retain an amount
until an entity has given the Commissioner a notification that affects the
refund, or until he or she makes an assessment of the amount. A minor
amendment ensures that the Commissioner can retain an amount until he or she
makes or amends an assessment. [Schedule 2, item 17, subsection 8AAZLG(2)
of the TAA 1953]
Evidence
18.89
The Commissioner issues an extraordinarily large
number of documents to give force to decisions. As such, special evidentiary
rules exist to protect the validity of those documents and decisions. These
rules are consistent with section 177 of the ITAA 1936.
18.90
The purpose of these rules is similar to that
regarding the validity of an assessment; that is, these rules ensure that the
focus of a dispute about MRRT payable focuses on the key question: has the
relevant entity paid the appropriate amount of MRRT? These rules also ensure
that where an entity has a tax debt, the Commissioner can have that debt enforced
in a Court by producing the relevant assessment.
Evidence
rules under the MRRT assessment provisions
18.91
The amount included in an assessment will be
conclusive evidence of the assessment of the entity’s assessable amount, other
than in proceedings commenced under Part IVC of the TAA 1953, such as an
objection against the assessment. [Schedule 2, item 25, subsection 350‑10(1)
in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.92
In addition, the production of a:
•
Gazette notice purporting to be issued by the
Commissioner is conclusive evidence that the notice was so issued;
•
document, copy of a document, or an extract from a
document, issued under the hand of the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, a Deputy
Commissioner or delegate of the Commissioner for the purposes of a taxation law,
is conclusive evidence that the document was so issued;
• notice
of assessment is conclusive evidence that the assessment was properly made and
is correct, except in Part IVC proceedings; and
• a
determination under the MRRT anti‑avoidance or anti‑profit shifting rules is
conclusive evidence that the determination was properly made and is correct,
except in Part IVC proceedings.
[Schedule 2, item 25,
subsection 350‑10(1) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.93
The production of a certificate that is signed by
the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, a Deputy Commissioner, or a delegate
of the Commissioner, and which states that an amount is payable under a
taxation law, is prima facie evidence that the amount is payable from the time
stated in the certificate, and that the particulars stated in the certificate
are correct. [Schedule 2, item 25, subsection 350‑10(2) in Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
18.94
The production of a document that appears to be a
copy of, or extract from, an original document made or given by or to an entity
for the purposes of a taxation law, and is signed by the Commissioner, a Second
Commissioner, a Deputy Commissioner or a delegate of the Commissioner, is
evidence in the same way as the original would have been evidence. [Schedule
2, item 25, subsection 350‑10(3) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.95
Judicial notice must be taken of the
signature of the Commissioner, a Second Commissioner, a Deputy Commissioner or
a delegate of the Commissioner if the signature is attached to an official
document. [Schedule 2, part 2, item 19, section 350‑15 in
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Applicability of
the evidence rules to MRRT under the proposed
indirect tax assessment provisions
18.96
If the proposed indirect tax
assessment provisions receive Royal Assent before 1 July 2012, then amendments
are made to those provisions to ensure that they apply to MRRT‑specific
documents. [Schedule 2, items 8, 9, 13 and 16,
section 350‑5 and subsection 350‑10(1) in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953,
definitions of ‘Deputy Commissioner’ and ‘Second Commissioner’ in
subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997]
Starting
base returns and assessments
18.97
The MRRT starting base has been brought into the
assessment regime to ensure certainty with respect to starting base
allowances. This has benefits for miners and the Commissioner — it means that
disputes about starting base valuations cannot extend into the distant future.
18.98
Because of the necessity to assess the starting
base, it is also necessary that relevant entities furnish a starting base
return.
Starting
base returns
18.99
The starting base return is integral to the idea of
a starting base assessment, and an entity’s capacity to claim a starting base
allowance.
18.100
If an entity makes a starting base choice in
relation to its mining project interest or pre‑mining project interest, then
the entity must give the Commissioner a starting base return for the first MRRT
year. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 117‑20(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953]
18.101
The starting base return must relate to every
starting base asset (or thing that may become a starting base asset) relating
to the mining project interest, or pre‑mining project interest. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 117‑20(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
18.102
Generally, if an entity is required
to lodge a starting base return, it is due on the first day of the sixth month
after the end of its first MRRT year. However, where the project interest is
transferred after 1 July 2012 and before a choice is made, the transferee must
make the choice and lodge the starting base return by the same time the
transferor would have been required to if it had continued to have the
interest. Failure to lodge by this date will affect the validity of the
return. However, the Commissioner can extend the period for lodgement. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 117‑20(3) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
18.103
As is the case with the MRRT return,
the starting base return must be in the approved form, which requires the
provision of information relating to the base value of each starting base asset
an entity has and what would be the base value of notional starting base
assets. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 117‑20(4) and (5) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.104
The return needs to contain enough information to
disclose the total of base values, but it does not require that the base value
of each asset be recorded separately. As it will not be practical in many
circumstances to include asset by asset information in the starting base return
it is anticipated that the Commissioner will request summary information of
some classes of assets.
18.105
Where a miner has chosen the market value approach,
it is required to include the rights and interests that constitute the mining
project interest, any mining information, any improvements to land in the
project area and any goodwill in a single starting base asset. In addition,
the mining project interest itself may be made up of a number of constituent
interests that are combined because they are upstream integrated. In these
cases, the starting base return requires information about the base value of
the composite starting base asset, not necessarily the individual elements of
that asset.
Starting
base assessments
18.106
A starting base assessment crystallises the
starting base available for use in an entity’s first MRRT return.
18.107
In accordance with the assessment rules, the base
value of a starting base asset for the first MRRT year is an assessable
amount. This amount is treated as having been assessed on the day an entity
lodges its starting base return for that MRRT year. [Schedule
4, item 15]
18.108
In addition, all of the rules regarding
assessments, including those about:
• self
assessment;
• default
assessments;
• original
assessments;
• amending
and amended assessments;
• refunds
of overpaid amounts;
• the
validity of the assessment;
• objections
and judicial review; and
• evidence,
apply to the starting base assessment in the same way
as they apply to an assessment of an entity’s taxable mining profit and the
MRRT payable.
Collection
and recovery
18.109
In order to ensure that taxpayers meet their
liabilities under a self assessment system, the system is supported by a range
of collection and recovery provisions. The Commissioner can recover unpaid tax
(even where a dispute is pending), release taxpayers from their liabilities
because of hardship, apply penalties and interest, issue notices to third
parties owing money to or holding money for a taxpayer, issue departure
prohibition orders, and apply for mareva injunctions.
18.110
Further support comes in the form of withholding
provisions, which impose obligations on the payers of certain types of payments
to withhold tax on behalf of payees, and by requiring certain classes of
taxpayers to pay instalments during the tax year, and by a running balance
account that enables the Commissioner to offset credits and debits. The regime
also recognises that sometimes taxpayers overpay their liabilities, or pay them
early, and interest can be payable on such amounts.
Generic
collection and recovery rules
18.111
The following MRRT liabilities are tax‑related
liabilities for the purposes of the generic collection and recovery rules:
•
assessed MRRT;
•
shortfall interest charge on a shortfall in MRRT;
and
•
quarterly MRRT instalments.
[Schedule 1, items 9
and 10, subsection 250‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Withholding
tax
Withholding
from natural resource payments
18.112
Entities that are foreign residents may have MRRT
withheld from natural resource payments — that is, payments that are of a
nature described by section 12‑325 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953. [Schedule
1, item 4, paragraphs 12‑330(1)(b) and 12‑335(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953]
Crediting
withheld amounts
18.113
If an entity receives a natural
resource payment from which an amount has been withheld for MRRT purposes, then
the recipient of the natural resource payment is entitled to a credit equal to
the amount withheld. [Schedule 1, items 6 and 7, sections 18‑10 and 18‑49 in
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.114
Consequential amendments were made to the objects
of the PAYG withholding provisions, and the heading of the subdivision dealing
with the crediting of withheld amounts. [Schedule 1, items 3 and 5,
paragraph 11‑1(g) and Subdivision 18‑A in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Shortfall
interest charge
18.115
Existing provisions have been modified to make the
shortfall interest charge applicable to shortfalls in MRRT. [Schedule
1, items 11, 12 and 14 to 16, sections 280‑1, 280‑50 and 280‑170, paragraph 280‑105(1)(a),
subsection 280‑110(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.116
An entity will be liable to pay shortfall interest
charge on an additional amount of MRRT that it is liable to pay because the
Commissioner amends its assessment for an MRRT year [Schedule 1,
item 13, subsection 280‑101(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
Shortfall interest charge accrues for each day beginning on the day the
entity’s first assessment of MRRT for that year was due to be paid, or would
have been due if there had been any, and ending the day before the day on which
the Commissioner gave the entity notice of the amended assessment [Schedule 1,
item 13, subsection 280‑101(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
18.117
However, if an amended assessment reinstates all or
part of a liability in relation to a particular that had been reduced by an
earlier amendment, the period for the reinstated liability begins on the day on
which MRRT under the earlier amended assessment was due to be paid, or would
have been due to be paid if there had been any. [Schedule 1,
item 13, subsection 280‑101(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
General
interest charge
18.118
The general interest charge is payable on:
•
the late payment of assessed MRRT or shortfall
interest charge;
•
the late payment of MRRT instalments; and
•
any shortfall in MRRT instalments worked out on the
basis of a varied rate.
[Schedule 1, items 1 and 2, subsection 8AAB(4) of the TAA
1953]
Interest
on overpayments and early payments
18.119
The MRRT has been included as a relevant tax so
that interest can be paid on overpayments and early payments. [Schedule
3, items 86 to 89, subsection 3(1) and section 3C of the Taxation
(Interest on Overpayments and Early Payments) Act 1983]
Liability
to penalty
18.120
The administrative penalty provisions apply to the
MRRT. Such penalties apply when entities make false or misleading statements,
take positions that are not reasonably arguable, enter into schemes, and refuse
to provide documents to the Commissioner.
18.121
Minor amendments were required to ensure that
entities which take MRRT positions that are not reasonably arguable are subject
to higher administrative penalties when they have a shortfall in their MRRT
payable. [Schedule 1, items 17 to 23, sections 284‑30 and 284‑35,
paragraphs 284‑75(2)(a) and (b), subsections 284-80(1) and 284-90(1) in
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Instalments
18.122
The MRRT instalments system provides for paying
quarterly instalments towards the annual MRRT liability of entities with mining
project interests or pre‑mining project interests, in the same way that
companies pay instalments towards their income tax liability. Unlike income
tax, no entities will pay MRRT instalments annually or half‑yearly.
18.123
Like the PAYG instalments system for income tax,
MRRT instalments are intended to ensure the efficient collection of MRRT by
providing entities with a simple and convenient way to meet their annual MRRT
liability as their mining revenue is derived. A quarterly payment system
avoids the problems of large end‑of‑year MRRT debts and provides the
Commonwealth with revenue throughout the year. The instalments are not precise
calculations of ultimate liability but aim to get as close as possible to the
ultimate liability, within a system that is simple and convenient. [Schedule
1, item 8, section 115‑5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Liability
for instalments
18.124
Entities are liable to pay an MRRT instalment for
an instalment quarter if they have mining revenue, pre‑mining revenue, or an
instalment rate greater than nil, for the quarter. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑10(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.125
An instalment quarter is a period of three months in the
year. For an entity using a standard financial year, the quarters would be:
• First quarter: July, August and
September.
• Second quarter: October, November and
December.
• Third quarter: January, February and
March.
• Fourth quarter: April, May and June.
[Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 115‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.126
An entity using a substituted accounting period
would also usually have four three‑monthly quarters, although the months would
differ from the standard. When an entity changes accounting periods, the
transitional period could be longer or shorter than 12 months, leading to more
or fewer than four quarters in the year and a final quarter that could be
shorter than three months. [Schedule 1, item 8, section 115‑110 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953]
18.127
Each quarterly instalment is due on the 21st
day of the month after the end of the quarter. [Schedule 1, item 8, section 115‑25 of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.1:
Due date for instalment
For an entity using a standard MRRT year (1 July to 30
June), the instalment for the first quarter, which ends on 30 September, would
be due on 21 October.
18.128
As with most other late payments of tax, the
general interest charge applies on a daily basis if an MRRT instalment is not
paid on time. The general interest charge ensures that the Commonwealth is
compensated for late payments of tax and discourages entities from treating
Commonwealth tax debts as a form of interest‑free loan. [Schedule 1,
item 8, section 115‑30 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Credit
for instalments
18.129
An entity’s instalments payable for an MRRT year
are credited against its final MRRT liability, once an assessment is made
following the end of the MRRT year. The crediting process is handled through
the running balance account regime in Division 3 of Part IIB of the TAA 1953,
which offsets credits against a taxpayer’s tax liabilities and refunds any
excess credits. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑20(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.130
The amount of the credit is the total of the
entity’s instalments payable for the year, less any credits already claimed
because it transferred a mining project interest (or pre‑mining project
interest) or because it varied its instalment rate. In effect, the entity gets
a credit for the net amount of
its instalments payable for the year. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑20(2)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.131
An entity gets a credit for its instalments even if
it has not yet paid them. That ensures that there is no double collection of a
liability (once for the annual MRRT liability and again when the unpaid
instalment is collected). Unpaid instalments remain debts due to the
Commonwealth. [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraph 115‑20(2)(a), subsections
115‑20(1) and (3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
The
amount of an instalment
18.132
The MRRT instalment an entity is liable to pay for
a quarter is:
The entity’s MRRT
instalment income for the quarter × the entity’s applicable
instalment rate
[Schedule 1, item 8,
section 115‑35 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.2:
Amount of an instalment
Under Mines Pty Ltd has instalment income for a
quarter of $75 million and an applicable instalment rate of 7 per cent.
Its instalment for the quarter will be $75million × 0.07 =
$5.25million.
Instalment
income
18.133
The instalment income for a quarter is the sum of the
following amounts that arise because of mining revenue events that happen
during the quarter:
• consideration
for supplies of taxable resources or things produced using the taxable
resources;
• what
would be the consideration for supplies of taxable resources, or things
produced from taxable resources, that are exported before they are supplied; or
• what
would be the consideration for supplies of something produced from taxable
resources that is used instead of being supplied or exported.
[Schedule 1, item 8,
section 115‑40 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.134
The instalment income includes the gross
consideration arising from mining events in the quarter that will result in an
amount being included in mining revenue or pre‑mining revenue. It does not
include the mining revenue itself (which is the part of the gross consideration
that is attributed to the valuation point) and it does not include some other
amounts (such as recoupments of expenditure). This is done deliberately to
make it easier for entities to calculate their instalments. In most cases,
entities will only need to track the consideration for supplies of resources
during the quarter. The reduction of the gross consideration to produce an
instalment that is close to the eventual MRRT liability is achieved by the
application of the entity’s instalment rate.
Applicable
instalment rates
18.135
Three possible instalment rates could apply to an
entity:
• A
rate the Commissioner gives the entity.
• A
rate the entity chooses for the quarter.
• The
default instalment rate.
[Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 115‑45(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.136
If more than one possible rate applies, the rate
that the entity uses (the applicable
instalment rate) is (in this order):
• A
nil rate the Commissioner has given the entity.
• A
rate the entity has chosen for the quarter (or an earlier quarter in the same
MRRT year).
• A
rate the Commissioner has given the entity that is not a nil rate.
• The
default rate.
[Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 115‑45(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
The
Commissioner’s instalment rate
18.137
The Commissioner will usually give entities an
instalment rate based on their previous year’s MRRT liability. This is similar
to the system used for PAYG instalments. It assumes that the ratio between an
entity’s revenue and its expenditure and MRRT allowances will be fairly
consistent from year to year.
18.138
That assumption, however, may not always hold
true. For example, an entity might incur unusually large capital expenditure
in one year or the consideration for supplying taxable resources could vary
considerably relative to the entity’s costs from one year to the next.
Nevertheless, it is a reasonable basis on which to build a collection system
that is only intended to collect something close to the entity’s final MRRT
liability.
18.139
A rate the Commissioner gives an entity will apply
for the quarter in which it was given and will continue to apply until the
Commissioner gives the entity a new rate. It will apply even if it was given
some years ago (although the Commissioner’s usual practice is to provide a new
rate each year). [Schedule 1, item 8, item 3 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.140
The Commissioner usually works out the rate by
using a formula that determines the rate that would have produced instalments
for the previous MRRT year equal to the entity’s total MRRT liability. That
is:
The entity’s MRRT
liability for the previous MRRT year
The entity’s
instalment income for the previous MRRT year
[Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 115‑75(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.141
The ‘instalment income’ used in the formula does
not include amounts that related to mining project interests and pre‑mining
project interests that were transferred or split to another entity during the
previous MRRT year [Schedule 1, item 8, section 115‑105 of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]. If either part of the formula is
zero, the rate will be nil [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑75(4) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953].
18.142
If the entity did not have an MRRT
assessment for the previous MRRT year, the Commissioner would use the most
recently assessed MRRT year instead. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑75(3)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.3:
Commissioner’s instalment rate
In the 2014‑15 MRRT year, Like Mines Pty Ltd, an iron
ore miner, had an MRRT liability of $14.5 million. Its consideration for the
ore it supplied in that year was $207 million. The Commissioner would usually
provide Like Mines with a rate for the 2015‑16 MRRT year of
14.5m/207m = 7%.
18.143
The Commissioner can modify the MRRT liability used
to calculate the rate in order to reflect changes in the law after the MRRT
year (the ‘base year’) used for working out a rate. For example, if the law
were changed to allow expenditure to be deducted that had previously been
excluded expenditure, the entity’s MRRT liability for the base year would have
been lower. In working out a rate, the Commissioner can use the MRRT liability
that would have applied if the change in the law had applied for that year.
This ensures that the MRRT instalments system functions effectively relative to
the current state of the law with the intention that it neither over nor under
collects instalments. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑75(5)and section
115‑80 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.144
The Commissioner can also modify the MRRT liability
for the previous year to work out an entity’s instalment rate if the law has
not changed but, in the Commissioner’s opinion, is likely to be changed in time
to apply to relevant instalments. In that case, the Commissioner can only vary
the rate to reduce it. That
protects entities against paying instalments that are too high if the
anticipated law change does not eventuate. [Schedule 1, item 8, section 115‑80
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.145
The Commissioner may be aware of other circumstances
that would mean the rate calculated in the normal way would not be
appropriate. For example, the Commissioner might become aware that the entity
had made significant one‑off capital expenditure in the previous year. In all
such cases, the Commissioner can work out an instalment rate on a different
basis if, having regard to the entity’s circumstances, he or she considers it
reasonable to do so and if it would produce instalments that are closer to the
entity’s likely MRRT liability for the year. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑75(5)
and (6) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.146
If the Commissioner believes an entity is unlikely
to be liable to pay MRRT for an MRRT year, the Commissioner can give the entity
a nil rate. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑45(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.147
There are two differences between a nil rate and
any other rate the Commissioner gives an entity:
• A
nil rate is the applicable instalment rate even if the entity has chosen a
different rate [Schedule 1, item 8, item 1 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953];
• A
nil rate applies for the quarter in which it is given and for any later
quarters in the same MRRT year;
it does not apply to quarters after that MRRT year [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑45(4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
18.148
The Commissioner can give a whole
class of entities a nil rate if the Commissioner believes no member of the
class will be liable to pay MRRT for the year. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑45(3)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.149
A nil rate stops applying from the
quarter the Commissioner gives the entity a different instalment rate. Unlike
the nil rate, the entity could substitute its chosen rate for that replacement
Commissioner rate. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑45(1) and (5) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.150
If the Commissioner gives an entity a rate, he or
she must notify the entity in writing [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑45(2)
and 115‑75(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]. If
the Commissioner gives a class of entities a nil rate, the Commissioner does so
by legislative instrument and does not have to separately notify the entities
in that class [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑45(3) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953].
The
entity’s chosen instalment rate
18.151
An entity can choose a different instalment rate
for each quarter but can only choose one rate for a quarter and cannot change
it. [Schedule 1, item 8, section 115‑50 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.152
A rate an entity chooses for a quarter will continue
to apply for each later quarter in the MRRT year unless the entity chooses a
different rate for a later quarter. However, a rate an entity chose for a
quarter will not apply to a quarter in a
later MRRT year, even if a new rate is not chosen. The rate given
by the Commissioner (or the default rate if the Commissioner has never given
the entity a rate) would become the applicable rate in that later year. [Schedule
1, item 8, item 2 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953]
The
default instalment rate
18.153
If the Commissioner has not given the entity a
rate, and the entity has not chosen a rate, for a quarter, the applicable
instalment rate for the quarter will be the default rate. [Schedule
1, item 8, item 4 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953]
18.154
The default instalment rate for an entity that only
has instalment income relating to iron ore is 8 per cent [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 115‑85(1)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
The default instalment rate for an entity that only has instalment income
relating to other taxable resources (coal or gas) is 3 per cent [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 115‑85(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
18.155
For quarters after the 2012‑13 MRRT year, those
default rates can be changed by regulation. That allows the default instalment
rate to be altered quickly to reflect any global changes to profit levels in
the mining industry after the first MRRT year. After that first year, existing
miners will be given an annual rate by the Commissioner, so regulations
changing the default rate will only affect entities new to the MRRT and only
for their first MRRT year. Of course, those entities new to the MRRT will be
able to choose their own instalment rate in the usual way if the default rate
is not suitable for them. [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraphs 115‑85(1)(b) and
(2)(b) and subsection 115‑85(4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.156
If an entity has instalment income relating to iron
ore and to coal or gas, its
default instalment rate is an amalgam of the two prescribed rates. It would
multiply the iron ore default rate by the proportion of its instalment income
for the quarter that relates to iron ore and multiply the coal and gas default
rate by the proportion of the quarter’s instalment income that relates to coal
or gas. Adding the two results and rounding it to two decimal places would
give the entity its default instalment rate for that quarter. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑85(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.4:
Default rate for diverse interests
Merry Quest Co has several iron ore mines and one coal
mine. Eighty per cent of its instalment income for a quarter relates
to iron ore and the other 20 per cent relates to coal. The default rate for
iron ore for the quarter is still 8 per cent but the regulations have changed
the coal default rate to 2.5 per cent. Merry would work out its default rate
for the quarter as (8% × 80%) + (2.5% × 20%) = 6.9%
Consequences
of choosing an instalment rate
18.157
As with the PAYG instalments system, an entity can
choose to use a rate that is different from the rate the Commissioner has given
the entity (or the default rate if the Commissioner has not yet given the
entity a rate). That allows the entity to take into account the circumstances
it expects will affect its end of year MRRT liability.
18.158
An entity that uses the default rate, or a rate the
Commissioner has given it, has the security of knowing it cannot be liable for
the general interest charge if that rate results in instalments that are too
low. An entity that chooses its own rate must be careful to ensure its chosen
rate accurately reflects its expected MRRT liability for the year because the
general interest charge will apply if the entity chooses a rate that is too
low. As with PAYG instalments, there is a 15 per cent margin so that entities
are not penalised simply because their chosen rate is not
100 per cent accurate.
Credit
for earlier quarters when an entity chooses a low instalment rate
18.159
When an entity chooses a lower rate than it was
using in the previous quarter, it can claim a credit for instalments for
earlier quarters in the year. It can claim a credit even if it has not yet
paid those earlier instalments. It would remain liable to pay the original
instalment amounts (although, in practice, the credit and the liability would
usually be offset). [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑60(1) and (3) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.160
The entity does not have to claim a variation
credit through the instalments process. If it does not, it would get a full
credit for its instalments when an assessment is made at the end of the MRRT
year [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraph 115‑20(2)(a)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]. If it does claim
the credit through the instalments process, the credit for its instalments at
the end of the year will be correspondingly reduced to reflect the earlier
credit it claimed [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraph 115‑20(2)(b) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
18.161
A claim for a credit must be made in
the approved form and can only be made on or before the day the instalment is
due for the quarter That will usually be on or before the 21st day
after the quarter but could be later if the Commissioner has deferred the time
for paying the instalment (see section 255‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953). [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑60(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Amount
of the credit
18.162
The credit is equal to the difference between the
instalments for the earlier quarters in the year and what those instalments
would have been if they had used the new (lower) rate instead of the previous
higher rate. The amount of the credit is adjusted to reflect any credits
already claimed for the year. [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraph 115‑60(1)(d) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.5:
Claiming variation credits
In the first instalment quarter of its MRRT year,
Grayte Mines Pty Ltd has instalment income of $80 million and an applicable
instalment rate of 15 per cent that was given to it by the Commissioner.
It is liable to pay an instalment of $12 million for the quarter.
In the second instalment quarter, Grayte Mines has
instalment income of $75 million and chooses an instalment rate of 12 per
cent. It is liable to pay an instalment for the quarter of $9 million.
Because the rate is lower than the rate it used in the previous quarter, it can
also claim a variation credit.
The variation credit is the difference between its
instalment for the first quarter and what that instalment would have been if it
had used the 12 per cent rate. At 12 per cent, the first quarter’s
instalment would have been $9.6 million, so Grayte Mines can claim a credit of
the $2.4 million difference. It would still remain liable to pay $12
million for the first quarter instalment but it would be offset by the
$2.4 million credit if it remained unpaid.
In its third quarter, it again has instalment income
of $75 million and decides to use a rate of 10 per cent, for an instalment of
$7.5 million. Because Grayte Mines has again reduced its rate, it can again
claim a variation credit.
In this case, the credit is the difference between the
total instalments for the previous two quarters, less the credit it claimed in
the second quarter ($21m — $2.4m = $18.6m), and what those instalments
would have been using the new rate (($80m + $75m) × 10% =
$15.5m). Therefore, Grayte Mines can claim a variation credit of $3.1 million.
General
interest charge for choosing too low a rate
18.163
An entity that chooses its own instalment rate for
a quarter is liable to pay the general interest charge if the rate it chooses
is below 85 per cent of the year’s benchmark instalment rate. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑65(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.164
An entity’s benchmark instalment rate for an MRRT year is
the rate that would mean the year’s instalments added up exactly to the
entity’s MRRT liability for the year. It can only be worked out at the end of
the year, when the entity’s MRRT liability and total instalment income for the
year (excluding amounts that related to mining project interests and pre‑mining
project interests that were transferred or split to another entity during the
year) are determined. [Schedule 1, item 8, sections 115‑70 and 115‑105 of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.6:
Benchmark instalment rate
Bee Mines Pty Ltd has
instalment income of $60 million for each quarter of the 2014‑15 MRRT year.
Its MRRT liability for the year is $28.8 million, so its benchmark instalment
rate for 2014‑15 is:
18.165
Imposing the general interest charge when an entity
chooses too low an instalment rate is intended to discourage entities
inappropriately dropping their instalment rates to defer paying their MRRT
liability until their annual assessment is made. The Commissioner has a
discretion under section 8AAG of the TAA 1953 to remit general interest
charge. The Commissioner could use that discretion to remit the whole or part
of the general interest charge for an entity that took reasonable steps based
on the information available to it to ensure that the varied rate was accurate
relative to the entity’s expected MRRT liability for the year. The
Commissioner may also use that discretion to remit the general interest charge
if the entity had also made a reasonable effort to remedy a rate it realised
was too low when new information came to light.
18.166
The general interest charge for choosing an
instalment rate that is too low is imposed on the difference between what the
instalment was for the quarter and what it would have been if the entity had not varied its rate that was too low. If
the difference would have been less if the year’s benchmark instalment rate had
been used instead, then the charge is only imposed on that lesser difference. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑65(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.7:
General interest charge for choosing a low rate
Continuing the previous example, Bee Mines Pty Ltd was
given a rate of 10 per cent by the Commissioner in the 2013‑14 MRRT year and it
continues to use that rate into the first quarter of its 2014‑15 year. In the
second quarter, the Commissioner provides a new rate of 13 per cent.
Bee Mines decides to use a lower rate and chooses 10 per cent.
Bee Mines’ benchmark rate for 2014‑15 is 12 per cent.
If it chooses a rate lower than 85 per cent of that (that is, below 10.2 per
cent), it will be liable for the general interest charge. Its rate in the
first quarter was below 10.2 per cent but, as it was a rate given by the
Commissioner, the charge does not apply for that quarter. However, it does
apply in the second quarter because, even though the rate is still 10 per cent,
it is now using a rate it chose rather than a rate the Commissioner gave it
(because the Commissioner has now provided a rate of 13 per cent).
Its actual instalment for the second quarter is $6
million (10 per cent of $60 million). The instalment liability it would
otherwise have had (using the most recent Commissioner rate) would have been
$7.8 million (13 per cent of $60 million). However, using the benchmark
instalment rate, the instalment liability would have been only $7.2 million (12
per cent of $60 million). As that is lower, the liability for the general
interest charge is worked out on the difference from the liability using the
benchmark instalment rate. Bee Mines will therefore be liable to pay the
general interest charge on $1.2 million ($7.2m — $6m).
18.167
The amount on which the general interest charge is
imposed is increased to take into account any credits the entity has claimed
for the year (which effectively reduce the instalment rate for earlier
quarters). [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑65(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.168
There is a lower increase in the amount on which
the general interest charge is imposed if the credit claimed by the entity
related to a transfer of some or all of a mining project interest or pre‑mining
project interest. [Schedule 1, item 8, section 115‑105 of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]
18.169
The general interest charge for choosing too low an
instalment rate is worked out using the normal general interest charge rules. The
charge applies from the due date
for the instalment for the quarter for which the rate was reduced to the due date for paying the MRRT for
the year [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑65(3) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]. The Commissioner will give the
entity notice in writing of the amount of the charge and the entity will have
14 days after being given the notice to pay the charge [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑65(4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
If the charge is not paid within that 14 days, the general interest charge will
also apply to the unpaid amount and will continue to apply until the full
amount is paid [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑65(5) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953].
Special
rules for transferring or splitting a mining project interest
18.170
The MRRT uses an ‘inherited history’ approach,
under which annual liability for MRRT on a particular mining project interest
or pre‑mining project interest falls onto the entity holding it at the end of
the year. That approach has three broad categories of implications for the
instalment rules:
• implications
for earlier quarters’ instalments;
• implications
of acquiring an interest; and
• implications
of transferring an interest.
Implications
for earlier quarters’ instalments
18.171
An entity’s MRRT instalment for a particular
quarter is not affected by the
fact that a mining project interest or pre‑mining project interest is
transferred or split in a later
quarter of the year. This means that, in working out an entity’s MRRT
instalments for the quarter:
• the
entity’s instalment income remains its instalment income even though the MRRT
liability in relation to some or all of it will fall onto another entity
because the interest was transferred or split later in the year (although the
entity may be able to claim a credit after the transfer or split for some part
of the earlier instalments); and
• the
entity’s instalment income for the quarter is not increased because it acquires
a new interest after the end of that quarter (although there may be an increase
in the instalment income for the quarter in which the interest is acquired).
[Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 115‑90(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Implications
of acquiring an interest
18.172
An entity that acquires a mining project interest
or pre‑mining project interest during a quarter will count the instalment
income of that quarter that relates to that interest when working out its
instalment for the quarter. That instalment income could include amounts
relating to mining revenue events that occurred during the quarter but before
the transfer or split. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑90(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.173
The entity also increases its instalment income in
the instalment quarter in which it acquires the interest to reflect any
instalment income relating to its new interest for earlier quarters of the MRRT year. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑95(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.174
The amounts included for the earlier quarters are
the usual amounts of instalment income that relate to mining revenue events in those
quarters that will lead to an amount being included in the acquiring entity’s
mining revenue or pre‑mining revenue. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑95(2)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.175
In other words, the amounts that were, or would
have been, instalment income for the transferring entity for previous quarters
of the MRRT year become instalment income of the acquiring entity in the
instalment quarter in which the transfer occurs. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑90(2)
and section 115‑95 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.8:
Additional instalment income for an acquiring entity
Sedgley Sand Mining Pty Ltd decides to branch out into
iron ore mining and buys some hematite mines from Francis Freerange Mining Pty
Ltd in the third quarter of its MRRT year. Francis had made supplies from the
mine in the first and second quarters for consideration of $60 million and $75
million respectively. In the third quarter, Francis had made supplies for
consideration of $10 million and Sedgley made further supplies, for $55 million,
during the remainder of the quarter.
To the $55 million instalment income for its own
supplies in the third quarter, Sedgley would add amounts of $60 million, $75 million
and $10 million to reflect the amounts that arose in the year during the
Francis era. Sedgley’s total instalment income for the third quarter would be
$200 million.
Implications
of transferring an interest
18.176
An entity that transfers all or part of a mining
project interest or a pre‑mining project interest in a quarter (the original
entity) will not count the instalment income for the quarter relating to that
interest (or the part of the interest transferred) when working out its
instalment for the quarter. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑90(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.177
The original entity will also be entitled to a
credit once an assessment has been made at the end of the MRRT year for
instalments payable by it in relation to that interest (or the part of the
interest transferred) for quarters in the year before the transfer. [Schedule
1, item 8, section 115‑20 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.178
Some entities will not want to wait until the end
of the year to get that credit when they know their eventual MRRT liability
will be reduced because of the transfer or split. Accordingly, such entities
can claim an early credit through the instalments process. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 115‑100(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.179
The credit can only be claimed in the approved form
on or before the day the instalment is due for the quarter in which the
transfer occurs. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 115‑100(2) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
Amount
of the early credit
18.180
The credit is equal to the difference between:
• the
instalments the transferring entity was liable to pay for earlier quarters in
the MRRT year (reduced by credits claimed because of other transfers or because
of a reduction in the entity’s instalment rate); and
• the
instalments that would have been due for those earlier quarters if the entity
had not had the mining revenue events from the transferred interest (or part
interest).
[Schedule 1, item
8, subsection 115‑100(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Notification
requirements
Quarterly
instalment notices
18.181
An entity liable to pay an instalment for a quarter
must notify the Commissioner of the amount of its instalment income in the
approved form [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑15(1) and (2) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]. The
Commissioner can determine the content of an approved form and the manner in
which it is given to the Commissioner, including by electronic means (see
section 388‑50 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953).
18.182
The notification is due on or before the day the
instalment is due (that is, on or before the 21st day after the end
of the quarter). This information notifies the Commissioner of how an entity’s
instalment for the quarter was calculated and further allows the calculation of
any general interest charge that may be imposed if the entity chose an
instalment rate that was too low. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑15(1)
and (2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.183
The Commissioner can exempt taxpayers (or classes
of taxpayers) from having to provide this notification if the Commissioner has
given them a nil instalment rate. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsections 115‑15(3)
and (4) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Choosing
a new instalment rate
18.184
An entity that chooses an instalment rate for a
quarter must notify the Commissioner of that choice in the approved form. Once
again, the approved form could be electronic. The choice must be notified on
or before the day the instalment for that quarter is due. [Schedule
1, item 8, section 115‑55 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Consequential
amendments
18.185
A number of consequential amendments are made to
definitions in the income tax law to cover new terms added for the MRRT
instalments regime. [Schedule 3, items 49, 52 to 55, definitions of
‘applicable instalment rate’, ‘base year’, ‘benchmark instalment rate’,
‘instalment income’ and ‘instalment quarter’ in subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA
1997]
18.186
Amendments are also made to the TAA
1953 to update non‑operative lists of provisions that either apply the general
interest charge or create a tax‑related liability, to reflect the addition of
such provisions in the MRRT instalments regime. [Schedule 1, items 1, 2 and 10, subsection
8AAB(4) of the TAA 1953 and subsection 250‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Record keeping
18.187
Entities conducting mining or pre‑mining operations
are required to keep and retain records which are relevant to the operation of
the MRRT. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 123‑5(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.188
As with other taxes, the effective administration
of the MRRT requires the Commissioner to be able to ask taxpayers to provide
evidence supporting their self‑assessed liabilities or entitlements.
18.189
In addition, the design of the MRRT necessitates
that taxpayers be required to keep records which might no longer relate to
their own mining operations or MRRT liability.
18.190
For example, the seller of a mining project
interest or pre‑mining project interest is required to keep relevant records
which support the MRRT history of the interest, because, once this history is
inherited by the buyer of the interest, it is used in determining the buyer’s
MRRT liability.
18.191
Accordingly, these record‑keeping rules apply to
all taxpayers who have conducted mining or pre‑mining operations for the
purposes of the MRRT.
The
records which are to be kept
18.192
A taxpayer must keep records of
every act, transaction, event or circumstance relating to their mining or pre‑mining
operations that are relevant to working out their MRRT position, or that of
another entity. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 123‑5(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.193
In this context a relevant MRRT position includes:
•
the amount (if any) of the taxpayer’s MRRT
liability (or that of another entity) for an MRRT year; and
• the
amount of any offset to which the taxpayer or another entity is entitled under
the low profit offset or rehabilitation tax offset provisions.
[Schedule 1, item
8, paragraphs 123‑5(1)(a) and 123‑5(1)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.194
Accordingly, relevant records could include such
things as audited statements of mining revenue and expenditure, documents
detailing State royalty payments and evidence of the date when a mine ceased
commercial production.
18.195
An important issue for the MRRT is
the fact that the records you have to keep need not be relevant only to your
own mining operations or pre‑mining operations. If you have a loss (for
example) that you transfer to an associate, the record will be relevant to
applying the MRRT to that other entity’s mining operations. Or, you might
transfer a mining project interest to another entity, which will inherit the
relevant MRRT history for that interest from you. An entity will therefore
need to keep records that might no longer relate to its own mining operations
or MRRT liability.
18.196
If such records do not already
exist, the taxpayer is obliged to create them. If such records no longer
exist, the taxpayer must reconstruct them. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 123‑5(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.197
This circumstance might arise if,
for example, an earlier holder of the project interest failed to keep the
records they should have. This rule also covers cases where there was no
obligation to keep the records at the time (for example, records relating to
pre‑MRRT periods).
18.198
However, this rule is not intended
to allow taxpayers to fail to keep records with a view to reconstructing them
at some later time.
18.199
A taxpayer must also keep a record
of each choice, estimate, determination and calculation they have made under an
MRRT law, along with (in the case of estimates, determinations and
calculations) the basis and method used to arrive at each amount. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 123‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.200
This requirement is the same as the existing rules
for records relating to indirect tax laws, contained in paragraph 382‑5(4)(a)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953.
The
form in which records are to be kept
18.201
The records which a taxpayer is
required to keep must be in such a form as to enable the relevant MRRT position
(of either the taxpayer or another entity) to be readily ascertained. [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 123‑5(4)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.202
These records must be in English, or
readily accessible and easily convertible into English. [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 123‑5(4)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.203
The records can be kept
electronically or in hard copy form.
The
time for which records are to be kept
18.204
The records which a taxpayer is required to keep in
relation to the MRRT must be retained until the latest of the following:
• five
years after the conclusion of the matters which are the subject of the record;
• five
years after the taxpayer made or obtained the record; or
•
the end of the period of review for an assessment
of MRRT for an MRRT year (if the record is relevant to that assessment).
[Schedule 1, item 8, section 123‑10 of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]
18.205
This is in line with other requirements in the tax
law to retain records, generally for either five or seven years.
18.206
Requiring records to be kept until the end of any
relevant assessment period is designed to ensure that records that could be
used to verify the correctness (or otherwise) of an MRRT assessment are
available if necessary, in the event of an audit by, or a dispute with, the
Commissioner.
Example 18.9:
Keeping records of a royalty payment
On 1 May 2013, Buzz Coal Co makes a royalty payment to
a State Government in respect of coal extracted during the period 1 October to
31 December 2012. Buzz Coal Co receives a written receipt for this payment a
week later, on 8 May 2013. Buzz Coal lodges its return for the 2012‑13 MRRT
year on 1 November 2013.
The documentary receipt is a relevant record because
it records a transaction used in calculating Buzz Coal’s royalty allowance,
which in turn is a factor in determining its MRRT liability.
How long is Buzz Coal required to keep these records?
Buzz Coal must keep the records relating to this
royalty payment until the latest of these dates, which is 8 May 2018.
The
penalties for not keeping relevant records
18.207
It is an offence to fail to keep or retain a record
in accordance with the provisions discussed in this chapter. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 123‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.208
An entity does not commit an offence if the
Commissioner has notified it that it no longer needs to keep the record or if
the entity is a company that has been finally dissolved. [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraphs 123‑15(1)(c) and (d) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.209
The offence is one of strict liability within the
meaning of section 6.1 of the Criminal Code.
Broadly, this means that the intent of the taxpayer is not considered when
assessing whether an offence has occurred (although a defence of mistake of
fact may be available). This is consistent with similar offences elsewhere in
the tax law. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 123‑15(2) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.210
The penalty for failing to keep or retain a record
is 30 penalty units, which is currently equal to $3,300. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 123‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.211
Alternatively, an administrative penalty of 20
penalty units (currently $2,200) may apply, as a failure to keep an MRRT record
would also breach the general requirement to keep or retain relevant tax
records (see section 288‑25 of the TAA 1953). However, a taxpayer cannot be
subject to both of these penalties in respect of the same offence
(see section 8ZE of the TAA 1953).
18.212
However, a taxpayer is not penalised, under either
the tax law or the Criminal Code,
for not retaining a record beyond the time of either of the following
occurrences:
• the
Commissioner notifying them that they do not need to retain the record; or
• if
the taxpayer is a company, that company being finally dissolved.
[Schedule 1, item
8, subsection 123‑15(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Information
transfers
18.213
MRRT liabilities are worked out for mining project
interests and pre‑mining project interests rather than for entities. The MRRT
liability for an interest is met by the entity that has the interest at the end of an MRRT year, even if that entity
only acquired the interest during the year.
18.214
This will mean that an entity that acquires an
interest during a year will usually need information possessed by the entity
that transferred the interest. The MRRT information transfer provisions
require the original entity to supply the information so that the acquiring
entity is able to work out its MRRT liability relating to the acquired mining
project interest and to satisfy its MRRT obligations. [Schedule
1, item 8, section 121‑5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.215
An entity with a mining project interest or a pre‑mining
project interest must provide an information notice to any entity that acquires
the interest, or part of the interest, as a result of the interest being
transferred or split. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 121‑10(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.216
The entity must also provide the acquiring entity
with a further information notice when anything happens after the transfer or
split that affects the transferred interest. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 121‑10(3) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.10:
Further notice about post‑transfer occurrences
Smarter Mining Ideas Pty Ltd transfers its Farragut 5
mining project interest to On‑The‑Edge Investments. Later, Smarter Mining
sells some taxable resources it had extracted from the Farragut 5 mine before
the transfer. That supply of taxable resources from the interest will generate
mining revenue for whoever has the interest at the end of the MRRT year.
Therefore, Smarter Mining would have to notify On‑The‑Edge that a supply had
occurred and provide the information that On‑The‑Edge would need to work out
the related mining revenue.
Before it received the notification from Smarter
Mining, On‑The‑Edge had already transferred Farragut 5 to Schofield Mining
Properties. On‑The‑Edge would in turn have to provide Schofield with notice of
the information about Smarter Mining’s supply of resources from
Farragut 5.
18.217
A notice can always be provided in writing but, if
both parties are willing, it can be provided in any other form they wish. This
will often be electronically, and could even be orally. [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 121‑10(4)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.218
A notice must be given with 60 days of the transfer
or split. A notice of later occurring events must be provided within 60 days
of those events. [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraphs 121‑10(4)(b) and (c) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.219
The existing taxation offence provisions would
apply to an entity that did not provide a notice it was required to provide on
time (see section 8C of the TAA 1953). If it is convicted of the offence, the
court could order the entity to comply with the notice obligation (see section
8G of the TAA 1953). A failure to provide a notice on time could instead be
subject to an administrative penalty (see section 286‑75 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953). There may also be penalties for providing information that is false
or misleading.
What
should an information notice contain?
18.220
In broad terms, the information notice must provide
the new entity with all the information it needs to work out its MRRT liability
for the interest it has acquired and to comply with its related MRRT
obligations.
18.221
The information needed would include:
• the
amount of any allowance components that come with the interest [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]; and
• the
information necessary to work out future starting base losses for the interest [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953].
Example 18.11:
Information about future starting base losses
Little Big Horn Pty Ltd transfers a mining project
interest to Crazy Horse Mining Co. It has 60 days to provide Crazy Horse with
the values of the mining right and other starting base assets transferred with
the interest. This would include the valuation method chosen for those assets,
their base values at the start of the transfer year, the basis on which their
decline in value was being worked out, and their upstream usage histories
within the interest. It would also have to inform Crazy Horse of the amount of
the interest’s starting base losses carried over from the previous MRRT year.
It would also have to inform Crazy Horse of the base values, termination values
and usage histories of any assets that experienced a starting base adjustment
event in the transfer year, so that Crazy Horse could work out how much mining
revenue or mining expenditure to include in the year from those adjustment
events.
18.222
The information needed would include the amount of
the interest’s mining revenue, pre‑mining revenue, mining expenditure and pre‑mining
expenditure for the year. [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraphs 121‑10(2)(b) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.12:
Information about revenue and expenditure
Continuing the previous example, Little Big Horn would
have to provide Crazy Horse with details of the year’s mining revenue and
expenditure for the transferred interest because Crazy Horse would be liable to
pay MRRT for the year in relation to the interest and would need that
information to work out its liability. Crazy Horse may be able to work out its
mining revenue using the alternative valuation method, so Little Big Horn would
need to advise it of the tonnes of resources extracted in relation to the
interest for the year, so that Crazy Horse could determine whether it came
within the 10 million tonnes threshold for eligibility for that method.
18.223
The information needed would include information
about assets transferred with the interest that could give rise to future
revenue or expenditure (such as their original cost and assumptions that were
made about the extent of their upstream use in the interest). [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraphs 121‑10(2)(c) and (d) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Example 18.13:
Information about other assets
Continuing the previous example, Little Big Horn would
also have to provide Crazy Horse with information about the non‑starting base assets
transferred with the interest. If Crazy Horse later sold those assets, the
adjustment rules would require it to work out how much to include in the
interest’s mining revenue. If it changed the upstream usage of the assets, it
could include a further amount in revenue or expenditure as a result of a
mining adjustment. To work those things out, Crazy Horse would need to know
the original cost of the assets, the assumptions made when they were acquired
about the extent of their upstream usage in the interest, and any later
adjustments made to revenue and expenditure because of a change in their
upstream usage. Therefore, Little Big Horn would have to provide Crazy Horse
with that information about the transferred assets.
18.224
The information needed would also include:
• the
information needed to work out the amount of any rehabilitation offset for the
interest (including any amounts that have been deposited on trust or as a bond
to secure future rehabilitation of the site, any rehabilitation expenditure
incurred in the year, and the total amount of MRRT that has ever been paid in
relation to that interest) [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(b) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953];
• in
the case of a transfer of part of an interest, the transferee’s split percentage
[Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(c) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953];
and
• the
information needed to work out the instalment income of the transferee in the
transfer quarter (including instalment income related to the transferred
interest that it will inherit) [Schedule 1, item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(d) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953].
Substantiation
18.225
The entity to which an information notice is
provided may later need further particulars of the information provided. For
example, while it might be enough for the original information notice to
provide just a gross figure for the amount of the year’s mining revenue up to
the date of the transfer of the interest, the new entity may need to know how
that figure was arrived at if the Commissioner queries it.
18.226
In such cases, the new entity can request the
transferor to provide further particulars to justify the information given in
the original notice. In particular, the transferee can ask for an explanation
of how an amount in the original notice was calculated and to see the
underlying document or other information on which the original notice was
based. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 121‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.227
The transferor has 60 days to comply with a
request. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 121‑15(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.228
As with the original information notice, failing to
comply with any reasonable request for further particulars could be an offence
or be subject to an administrative penalty.
Consequential
amendments
18.229
The administrative penalty provisions are amended
to ensure that an entity that does not satisfy its obligation to provide an
MRRT information notice, or satisfy a request for further particulars, within
time is subject to the administrative penalty provisions. [Schedule
1, items 24 and 25, paragraph 286‑80(2)(a), subsection 286‑75(2AA) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
Access powers
18.230
In order to provide for the proper administration
of the tax system, including by reviewing the affairs of taxpayers, the
Commissioner can ask taxpayers to provide additional information. Normally the
Commissioner does this informally. However, there are occasions when it proves
more difficult to access required information. For such cases, the
Commissioner is given the power to access premises and documents, and gather
information, whether held domestically or in foreign jurisdictions.
18.231
The existing access powers the Commissioner has in
relation to indirect tax laws and the administration of taxation laws are
extended to also apply to the MRRT law. [Schedule 1, items 28 to 31, sections 353‑15
and 353-17, subsection 353-10(1) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Commissioner’s
power
18.232
For the purpose of the administration or operation
of the MRRT, the Commissioner can provide any entity with a notice requiring it
to provide information, evidence or documents. [Schedule 1, item
28, section 353‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.233
This means that the Commissioner can obtain
information, evidence, or documents from governments and government bodies. Such
powers are important to the administration of tax laws, as demonstrated by the
following examples.
Example 18.14
Mr Diligent, an Australian Taxation Office (ATO)
auditor, is examining Outback Mining’s MRRT affairs. Mr Diligent has concerns
about the veracity of a document that had been submitted by Outback Mining in
the course of the audit. In particular, Mr Diligent thought Outback Mining may
have claimed that its royalty payments to a State government were higher than
they in fact were. Mr Diligent approached Mr Conscientious, an official from
the relevant State department, and asked if he could obtain information about
Outback Mining’s royalty payments. Mr Conscientious replied that he would be
happy to help, but because of a combination of statutory and commercial
confidentiality requirements, the department would be unable to provide the
information unless the Commissioner required it under a formal notice. Mr
Diligent duly issues a notice to the State department requiring it to provide
the relevant information. The State department complied.
Example 18.15
Mr Meticulous, an ATO auditor, is examining the
affairs of a number of entities that are closely held and operated by Mr
Difficult in order to determine the entities’ goods and services tax (GST)
liabilities. Mr Meticulous has sought information from the entities, but
Mr Difficult has thus far lived up to his name. He also informed
Mr Meticulous that even if he wanted to cooperate, all of the relevant
business records had been seized by a Commonwealth agency in relation to an
investigation into non‑tax matters. Mr Meticulous had heard about Mr
Diligent’s experience as detailed in Example 18.14, and thought that approach
would work in his case. Mr Meticulous approaches and subsequently issues the
Commonwealth agency with a notice requiring provision of the relevant
information. The Commonwealth agency complied.
Access
to premises
18.234
The Commissioner can access premises for the
purpose of administering the MRRT. [Schedule 1, items 29 and 30, section
353‑15 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Offshore
information notices
18.235
The Commissioner can request the provision of
information that is held offshore for the purpose of administering the MRRT. [Schedule
1, item 31, section 353‑17 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Service
18.236
In order to deal with full self assessment
taxpayers, the Commissioner may need to serve documents from time to time.
Although full self assessment taxpayers do not actually receive notices of
assessment, the Commissioner may need to serve documents to amend assessments,
deal with outstanding liabilities, and participate in legal proceedings.
Address
for service
18.237
For the purposes of the MRRT law, the Commissioner
can serve documents at a physical address or postal address in Australia, or at
an electronic address an entity has provided as its address for service for the
purposes of an MRRT law. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 125‑1 of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.238
Where an entity has provided the Commissioner with
more than one address, the Commissioner can serve documents at the address
considered reasonable in the circumstances. [Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 125‑1(2) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.239
Where an entity has not provided the Commissioner
with an address, documents can be served at the address the Commissioner
reasonably believes to be the entity’s address for service for the purposes of
an MRRT law. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 125‑1(3) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.240
The Commissioner can serve a document in the manner
specified by section 28A of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901, or, where the entity is being served
electronically, by sending it to that email address or other electronic
address. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 125‑1(4) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]
18.241
A document served by the Commissioner is taken to
be given at the time the Commissioner leaves or posts it. This is designed to
override section 29 of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 and to ensure that there is no room for
confusion about when documents are served. [Schedule 1, item 8,
subsection 125‑1(5) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.242
This provision also overrides paragraphs 9(1)(d)
and 9(2)(d) of the Electronics Transactions
Act 1999 to the effect that if the entity has provided the
Commissioner with an electronic address for service, the Commissioner does not
need to seek the entity’s permission to serve notice electronically. [Schedule
1, item 8, subsection 125‑1(6) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Making
choices
18.243
A choice made by an entity under an
MRRT law must be made in accordance with the general rules described below,
except to the extent that a more specific rule in the MRRT law applies. [Schedule
1, item 8, section 119‑15 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.244
This approach balances the benefits of simplicity
and consistency in these matters with the recognition that variations from the
general rules are appropriate in some cases.
18.245
Each of the following is an example of a choice
under the MRRT which may be available to a taxpayer, depending on their
circumstances:
• Whether
the book value or market value approach is used to value starting base assets.
• The
order in which transferred mining losses that arose at the same time are
applied.
• Whether
to use the simplified MRRT method.
• Whether
to consolidate for MRRT purposes.
18.246
The general rules for MRRT choices cover three
matters.
• The
time by which a choice must be made.
• The
manner in which a choice must be recorded, and in certain cases communicated to
the Commissioner.
• The
irrevocability of a choice.
When
a choice must be made
18.247
In order to be valid, a taxpayer must make a choice
about a matter by a certain time.
18.248
If the taxpayer is required to lodge an MRRT return
for the first MRRT year for which the choice applies, then the choice must be
made by the earlier of the day they lodge that MRRT return and the due date for
lodging that return. [Schedule 1, item 8, subparagraph 119‑5(1)(a)(i) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.249
If the taxpayer is not required to lodge an MRRT
return for that MRRT year, the choice must be made by the day such a return
would have been due. [Schedule 1, item 8, subparagraph 119‑5(1)(a)(ii) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.250
Generally, the Commissioner has the
ability to provide the taxpayer with more time to make a valid choice. [Schedule
1, item 8, paragraph 119‑5(1)(b) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.251
This provides the Commissioner with broad
discretion to take into account circumstances which would otherwise prevent a
taxpayer from making a choice by the required time.
18.252
For example, the Commissioner may provide
additional time to make a choice to a taxpayer who is temporarily incapacitated
after an accident, or to a taxpayer who lives in an area badly affected by a
natural disaster around the time the choice would normally have been made.
18.253
A similar discretion already exists in other
similar rules in the tax law (for example, in subsection 148(4) of the ITAA
1936).
How
a choice is made and communicated
18.254
The way a taxpayer prepares their
MRRT return for an MRRT year will generally be sufficient evidence of the
choice(s) they have made. [Schedule 1, item 8, subsection 119‑5(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953]
18.255
This is consistent with the
standard approach to choices applying elsewhere in taxation laws. Under the
self‑assessment system, the Commissioner has no need to see the records for all
choices taxpayers make.
18.256
However, there are some circumstances in which a
taxpayer must provide the Commissioner with the details of certain choices they
have made. These circumstances are:
• if
the taxpayer is not required to lodge an MRRT return for that MRRT year;
• if
the MRRT law expressly requires further information to be provided to the
Commissioner; or
• if
the Commissioner requests the information.
[Schedule 1, item
8, subsection 119‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.257
The first of these cases cover situations where a
taxpayer’s choice could not be identified because there is no MRRT return to
examine. The second is an expression of the principle that any specific rules
in the MRRT law take precedence over the general rules for choices to the
extent there is any conflict between them. The ability for the Commissioner to
request further information about the choices a taxpayer makes is a standard
provision used throughout the tax law.
MRRT
choices are irrevocable
18.258
A choice made under the MRRT law is
irrevocable. [Schedule 1, item 8, section 119‑10 of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]
18.259
This requirement is largely
dictated by the features of the MRRT, in particular by the way in which the
MRRT history of a mining project interest (or a pre‑mining project interest) is
transferred to a new entity acquiring the interest.
18.260
For example, in working out the
amount of a transferred royalty allowance, an entity can choose the order in
which to apply royalty credits that arise at the same time. After choosing to
apply royalty credits from one of its mining project interests (rather than
from others), a taxpayer may then sell one of its other interests (with the
unapplied royalty credit attached). If the original taxpayer were to be
permitted to revisit their earlier choice and unwind the decision about which
royalty credit to apply, the purchaser would be at risk of losing the royalty
credit they paid for.
18.261
Making choices made under the MRRT
law irrevocable prevents this sort of unfair and unreasonable outcome.
18.262
However, the irrevocability of a
choice only applies to a choice that was made. In some cases, choices an
entity did not make because it was operating under a mistake of fact about its
ability to make the choice, cannot later be made because of timing restrictions
on when a choice has to be made. When there is such a case, the Commissioner
could exercise the discretion to allow further time to make that choice. In
such cases, the Commissioner would decide whether to exercise the discretion
after taking into account matters such as the law requiring the choice to be
made and whether the need to make the further choice arise because of the
Commissioner’s advice or actions.
Example
18.16: Allocating losses when mining profits increase
Revisao Mining has three mining project interests: A
and B make losses and C makes a mining profit in the 2012 MRRT year. In that
year, Revisao chooses to transfer losses from A to reduce the profits of C to
nil.
After auditing Revisao, the Commissioner amends its
2012 assessment to include further mining profits in interest C. Revisao is
required by the MRRT law to transfer further losses to the extent of those
extra mining profits. Where the losses come from is a new choice; Revisao is not remaking its previous loss transfer
choice. Because the law requires the further losses to be transferred, the
Commissioner exercises the discretion to allow Revisao the extra time to make
that choice. There are further transferable losses both in A and in B.
Therefore, Revisao can choose how much of those losses are transferred from A
and how much from B.
18.263
The irrevocability of a choice
only applies to the extent that it was validly made in the first place. If any
part of a choice was invalid, that part was never made, and so undoing it does
not breach the rule about choices being irrevocable. To the extent that there
is an alternative about what part of a choice was invalid, the entity would be
able to decide which parts of the original choice were valid and which were
not.
Example
18.17: Allocating losses when mining profits decrease
The Commissioner amends the 2014 assessment of
Disfaccia Resources to reduce the mining profits of its Union mine. Disfaccia
had transferred 2014 losses to the Union mine from both its Vista and its
Wishfish mines.
To the extent that Union’s profits have been reduced,
the original choice to transfer losses to it was invalid. Disfaccia can decide
the extent to which it did not validly transfer losses from Vista and
Wishfish. It decides to treat all the invalidly transferred losses as coming
from Vista. Those losses would be restored to Vista and uplifted, just as if
they had not been ‘transferred’ in the first place.
Rulings
18.264
The Commissioner provides a range of advice and
guidance to taxpayers to explain his or her view on how the law applies. These
products include manuals and fact sheets, as well as rulings.
18.265
The rulings system enables taxpayers to self assess
tax positions with enhanced certainty.
18.266
A ruling provides taxpayers with the Commissioner’s
views about how particular tax laws apply in certain situations. Public
rulings address priority technical issues. Private rulings explain how the law
applies, or would apply, in a particular situation.
18.267
The Commissioner is generally bound by the position
taken in a ruling.
18.268
A minor amendment extends the rulings system to the
MRRT law. [Schedule 1, item 32, paragraph 357‑55(faa) of Schedule
1 to the TAA 1953]
18.269
However, entities cannot apply for an oral ruling
about MRRT provisions. In the general course of things, such rulings can only
be sought by individuals seeking quick answers to simple questions about income
tax. [Schedule 1, item 33, subsection 360‑5(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953]
18.270
Where an entity is dissatisfied with
a private ruling that relates to MRRT, it can object to the ruling either
within four years of the due date for the relevant MRRT return, or 60 days
after the ruling was made, whichever is later. [Schedule 2, item 1 and 19, subsections
14ZW(1AB) and (1AC) of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Annual report
18.271
The Commissioner must prepare an annual report on
the working of the MRRT law, including a report on any breaches or evasions of
the MRRT law the Commissioner knows
about. The report must be given to the Minister as soon as practicable after
30 June in each year. The Minister must table the report in each House of the
Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after receiving the report. [Schedule
1, item 27, section 352‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
18.272
A consequential amendment is made to the guide
about the Commissioner’s accountability in respect to indirect tax laws so that
it now covers the MRRT. [Schedule 1, item 26, section 352‑1 of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Do not remove section break.
Outline of
chapter
19.1
This chapter explains any consequential amendments
arising as a result of the Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011 that are not
explained in earlier chapters.
19.2
All legislative references in this chapter are to
the Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2011 unless otherwise indicated.
Consequential
amendments
Provision
ensuring coverage in the Crimes (Taxation
Offences) Act 1980
19.3
A consequential amendment extends
the Crimes (Taxation Offences) Act 1980
so that fraudulent evasion and involvement in certain tax evasion schemes
related to a Minerals Resource Rent Tax (MRRT) can give rise to criminal
offences. These amendments ensure that the Act operates in the same way for
MRRT as it does for the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT). [ Schedule
3, items 3 to 6, Part II (note), Part XI and subsection 3(1) of the Crimes
(Taxation Offences) Act 1980]
Wording and
defined terms changes
19.4
The MRRT introduces a number of concepts and
defined terms which are new to Australian taxation law. It also uses some
terms that were already in use in different contexts with potentially different
meanings.
19.5
Hence, a number of entries have been included and
modifications made to the Dictionary definitions in the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997)
to ensure that terms are defined consistently in the income tax law and the
MRRT law. In many cases the Dictionary definitions point to definitions in the
MRRT law. [ Schedule 3, items 48 to 87, definitions of ‘allowance
component’, ‘applicable instalment rate’, ‘arm’s length consideration’, ‘base
value’, ‘base year’, ‘benchmark instalment rate’, ‘hold’, ‘instalment income’,
‘instalment of MRRT’, ‘instalment quarter’, ‘long term bond rate’, ‘miner’,
‘mining and quarrying operations’, ‘mining expenditure’, ‘mining loss’, ‘mining
profit’, ‘mining project interest’, ‘mining project split’, ‘mining project
transfer’, ‘mining revenue’, ‘mining revenue event’, ‘MRRT’, ‘MRRT allowance’,
‘MRRT law’, ‘MRRT liability’, ‘MRRT payable’, ‘MRRT return’, ‘MRRT year’, ‘pre‑mining
expenditure’, ‘pre‑mining project interest’, ‘pre‑mining revenue’,
‘rehabilitation tax offset’, ‘split percentage’, ‘starting base asset’,
‘starting base return’, ‘start time’, ‘taxable mining profits’, ‘taxable
resource’ and ‘termination value’ in subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997]
19.6
The amendments make some corresponding
adjustments to use defined terms in other parts of the income tax law. [ Schedule
3, items 10 to 31 and 33 to 38, subparagraphs 40‑80(1)(c)(i), 40‑735(1)(a)(i)
and 40‑840(1)(c)(i), paragraphs 40‑80(1)(a), 40‑630(1)(b), (1A)(b), (1B)(b) and
(3)(b), 40‑650(3)(a), 40‑730(1)(a), 40‑740(1)(a) to (c) and (e), 40‑860(1)(a)
and (3)(a) and (c) and 40‑870(1)(a) and (2)(a), subsections 40‑70(3), 40‑72(1)
and (3), 40‑95(10) (items 1 to 3 in the table), 40‑102(4) (item 9 in the table),
40‑630(1) (note), 40‑730(1) and (7), 40‑730(4), 40-735(4), 40‑740(2) and 40‑860(2),
and sections 40‑40 (item 8 in the table) and 40‑725 of the ITAA 1997]
19.7
Definitions of ‘Deputy
Commissioner’ and ‘Second Commissioner’ are added to the income tax law and
existing uses of those terms are marked with an asterisk to indicate that they
are defined. [Schedule 2, items 13, 16, 23, 24
and 26 to 28, definition of ‘Deputy Commissioner’ and ‘Second Commissioner’
in subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997, subsection 255‑5(2) and
paragraphs 255‑45(1)(b), 355‑30(2)(a), 355‑55(1)(c) and 357‑100(b) in
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953]
Interaction
with income tax law
Income
tax deductions
19.8
Payments of MRRT and payments of MRRT instalments
are deductions under the income tax law. This is the same income tax treatment
as payments of PRRT and PRRT instalments (see section 40‑750 of the ITAA
1997). [ Schedule 3, item 32, subsection 40‑751(1) of the ITAA 1997]
Example 1.1:
Timing of deductions for MRRT payments
Richardson Resources Co has a standard 1 July to 30
June accounting period. It pays its MRRT instalments for the four quarters of
the 2012‑13 MRRT year on the due dates (21 October 2012,
21 January 2012, 21 April 2013 and 21 July 2013). It can deduct the
first three of those instalment payments for its 2012‑13 income year because
the payments are made in that income year. It can deduct the final instalment
for the 2013‑14 income year in which the payment is made.
19.9
The deductions arise for the payments, but not for
the credits that become attributable to those payments when the MRRT assessment
is made. This ensures that the payments do not produce double deductions. [ Schedule
3, item 32, subsection 40‑751(2) of the ITAA 1997]
19.10
The non‑operative index of deduction provisions is
amended to include the deductions for payments of MRRT. [ Schedule
3, item 8, section 12‑5 of the ITAA 1997]
Assessable
income
19.11
Payments of MRRT are deductible for income tax
purposes, so refunds or other recoupments of MRRT payments are assessable
income. This is the same treatment as that for recoupments of PRRT.
19.12
As deductions for MRRT payments are provided for by
Division 40 of the ITAA 1997, the existing recoupment rules apply to
recoupments of MRRT (see subsection 20‑30(1) of the ITAA 1997, item 1.9 in
the table). [ Schedule 3, item 32, subsection 40‑751(1) of the ITAA
1997]
Example 1.2: Timing of assessment
of recoupments
Continuing the previous example, Richardson Resources
Co is assessed as having an MRRT liability for the 2012‑13 MRRT year that is
below the total of the four MRRT instalments it has paid for that year, so it
is entitled to a refund of the excess. If the Commissioner of Taxation
(Commissioner) pays that refund to Richardson in 2013‑14, or applies it in that
year against another of Richardson’s tax liabilities, it would be included in
its assessable income of the 2013‑14 income year.
19.13
Rehabilitation offsets that cannot be used to
reduce another MRRT liability are refunded to the miner. As with credits for
closing‑down expenditure under the PRRT, refunded rehabilitation offsets are
assessable income in the income year in which the Commissioner pays the amount
to the miner. [ Schedule 3, item 9, section 15‑85 of the ITAA 1997]
19.14
The non‑operative index of
assessable income provisions is amended to include the assessment of refunds of
MRRT rehabilitation credits. [ Schedule 3, item 7, section 10‑5 of the ITAA 1997]
Long term bond rate
19.15
Previously ‘long term bond rate’ (LTBR) was defined
in the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax
Assessment Act 1987. As the LTBR is also relevant for uplifting
allowance components under the MRRT, the definition has been updated and moved
into the Dictionary definitions in the ITAA 1997.
19.16
The definition has been updated to
reflect the terminology currently used by the Reserve Bank of Australia. That
terminology is apt to allow for the calculation of the LTBR for any period, not
just a 12‑month period. [ Schedule 3, item 56, definition of ‘long term bond
rate’ in section 995‑1 of the ITAA 1997]
19.17
A consequential amendment has also been made to
section 250‑105 of the ITAA 1997. [ Schedule 3, item 39, subsection 250‑105(1)
of the ITAA 1997]
Example
1.3: Calculation of LTBR
Shaun is required to calculate the LTBR for the 12‑month
period from 1 July 2012 — 30 June 2013. Shaun adds up all the daily assessed
Australian Government bond capital market yields in respect of 10 year non‑rebate
Treasury bonds that have been published by the Reserve Bank Australia. There
have been 261 daily assessed yields published by the Reserve Bank Australia for
that 12‑month period. The average of these published yields is 4.765258 per
cent.
Therefore, the LTBR for this 12‑month period is 4.7653
per cent (rounding up as the 5th decimal place is more than 5).
Minerals Resource Rent Tax Bill 2011
|
|
|
|
Section 1-10
|
4.47
|
|
Section 10‑1
|
9.85, 12.8
|
|
Section 10‑5
|
12.9
|
|
Section 10‑10
|
6.10, 7.9
|
|
Section 10-15
|
8.9
|
|
Section 15‑5
|
9.19, 10.14
|
|
Subsection 15-5(1)
|
3.34, 10.18, 10.74, 10.75
|
|
Subsection 15‑5(2)
|
3.36, 3.62
|
|
Subsection 15-5(3)
|
3.35
|
|
Subsection 15‑5(4)
|
3.46, 10.18, 10.74, 10.75
|
|
Subsection 15‑5(5)
|
3.50, 3.51, 11.73
|
|
Subsection 15‑5(6)
|
3.44
|
|
Section 15‑10
|
3.54
|
|
Subsection 15‑15(1)
|
3.55
|
|
Subsection 15‑15(2)
|
3.58
|
|
Paragraph 15‑20(a)
|
3.61, 3.62
|
|
Paragraph 15-20(b)
|
3.63
|
|
Subsection 20‑5(1)
|
3.72
|
|
Paragraph 20‑5(1)(a)
|
6.17, 9.22
|
|
Paragraph 20‑5(1)(b)
|
6.18, 9.23
|
|
Paragraph 20‑5(1)(c)
|
3.83, 6.17, 6.18, 9.22, 9.23
|
|
Paragraph 20‑5(1)(d)
|
3.79, 6.18, 9.23
|
|
Subsection 20‑5(2)
|
3.75
|
|
Subsection 20‑5(3)
|
3.77
|
|
Section 25‑5
|
4.7
|
|
Section 30‑5
|
4.6, 4.7
|
|
Section 30-10
|
4.13
|
|
Section 30-15
|
4.15, 4.19
|
|
Subsection 30-15(1)
|
4.60
|
|
Paragraph 30‑15(1)(a)
|
4.16, 4.22
|
|
Paragraph 30-15(1)(b)
|
4.17, 4.31, 4.35
|
|
Paragraph 30-15(1)(c)
|
4.18, 4.42
|
|
Subsection 30‑15(2)
|
4.44
|
|
Subsection 30-20(1)
|
4.23
|
|
Paragraph 30-20(2)(a)
|
4.26
|
|
Paragraph 30-20(2)(b)
|
4.25
|
|
Subsection 30-25(1)
|
4.46
|
|
Subsection 30-25(2), item 1 in the table
|
4.61
|
|
Subsection 30‑25(2), item 2 in the table
|
4.54, 4.66
|
|
Subsection 30‑25(2), item 3 in the table
|
4.54, 4.67
|
|
Subsection 30-25(3)
|
4.49, 4.54, 4.78, 4.88, 4.104
|
|
Paragraph 30-25(3)(a)
|
4.80
|
|
Subsection 30-25(4)
|
4.50, 4.89, 4.90
|
|
Paragraphs 30-25(4)(a)
|
4.93
|
|
Paragraph 30-25(4)(b)
|
4.97
|
|
Paragraphs 30-25(4)(c)
|
4.93
|
|
Paragraph 30-25(4)(d)
|
4.100
|
|
Subsection 30-25(5)
|
4.51, 4.122
|
|
Paragraph 30-25(5)(a)
|
4.125
|
|
Subparagraph 30-25(5)(a)(i)
|
4.131
|
|
Subparagraph 30-25(5)(a)(ii)
|
4.132
|
|
Subparagraph 30-25(5)(a)(iii)
|
4.134
|
|
Paragraph 30-25(5)(b)
|
4.142
|
|
Subsection 30-25(6)
|
4.72
|
|
Subsection 30-25(7)
|
4.73
|
|
Section 30-30
|
4.81
|
|
Subsection 30‑30(1)
|
4.68
|
|
Paragraph 30‑30(2)(a)
|
4.69
|
|
Paragraph 30‑30(2)(b)
|
4.70
|
|
Subsection 30‑30(3)
|
4.75
|
|
Section 30-35
|
4.29, 4.40
|
|
Section 30‑40
|
4.143, 10.39, 10.57, 10.109
|
|
Subsection 30‑40(1)
|
4.144
|
|
Paragraph 30‑40(1)(c)
|
4.145
|
|
Subsection 30-40(2)
|
4.146
|
|
Section 30‑45
|
4.143, 4.148, 6.32
|
|
Section 30-50
|
4.143, 4.149, 4.151
|
|
Section 30-55
|
4.143, 4.152
|
|
Section 30-60
|
4.11
|
|
Section 30-65
|
4.154
|
|
Section 30-70
|
4.62
|
|
Section 30‑75
|
4.10
|
|
Division 35
|
6.55, 10.57, 10.109, 12.21
|
|
Subsection 35-5(2)
|
5.7
|
|
Section 35‑10
|
5.8, 11.38
|
|
Subsection 35‑10(2)
|
5.9
|
|
Section 35‑15
|
5.19, 9.30, 11.38
|
|
Section 35-20
|
4.71, 9.30, 11.38
|
|
Subsection 35‑20(1)
|
9.32
|
|
Subparagraph 35‑20(1)(b)(i)
|
9.30
|
|
Subparagraph 35‑20(1)(b)(ii)
|
9.30
|
|
Subsection 35-20(2)
|
5.30, 5.31
|
|
Paragraph 35‑20(2)(f)
|
11.55
|
|
Paragraph 35‑20(2)(h)
|
11.55
|
|
Section 35‑25
|
5.6
|
|
Subdivision 35-B
|
5.7
|
|
Section 35‑35
|
7.46
|
|
Subsection 35‑40(2)
|
5.52
|
|
Subsection 35-40(4)
|
5.52
|
|
Subsection 35-40(5)
|
5.53
|
|
Section 35-50
|
5.54
|
|
Paragraph 35-50(a)
|
5.59
|
|
Paragraph 35-50(b)
|
5.60
|
|
Paragraph 35-50(c)
|
5.60
|
|
Subsection 35-55(1)
|
5.62
|
|
Subsection 35-55(2)
|
5.65
|
|
Section 35-60
|
5.68
|
|
Section 35-65
|
5.73
|
|
Paragraph 35-65(a)
|
5.75
|
|
Paragraph 35-65(b)
|
5.76
|
|
Subsection 35-70(1)
|
5.78
|
|
Paragraph 35-75(a)
|
5.82
|
|
Paragraph 35-75(b)
|
5.83
|
|
Paragraph 35-75(c)
|
5.83
|
|
Paragraph 35-75(d)
|
5.84
|
|
Section 35‑80
|
5.85
|
|
Subsection 40‑5(1)
|
3.86
|
|
Paragraph 40‑5(2)(a)
|
3.91
|
|
Paragraph 40‑5(2)(b)
|
3.91
|
|
Subsection 40‑5(3)
|
3.94
|
|
Subsection 40‑5(4)
|
3.96, 4.77
|
|
Subsection 45-5(1)
|
8.7, 8.8
|
|
Subsection 45‑5(2)
|
8.9
|
|
Subsection 45-10(1)
|
8.11, 8.13, 8.14, 8.15
|
|
Subsection 45‑10(2)
|
8.12
|
|
Section 50-5
|
3.29
|
|
Section 50-10
|
3.29
|
|
Section 50-15
|
3.29
|
|
Section 60‑10
|
6.9, 6.11
|
|
Paragraph 60‑20(1)(b)
|
6.26, 6.28
|
|
Subsection 60‑20(2)
|
6.20
|
|
Section 60‑30
|
4.148
|
|
Subsection 60‑30(1)
|
6.30
|
|
Paragraph 60‑30(1)(a)
|
6.31
|
|
Subsection 60‑30(2)
|
6.32
|
|
Section 65‑10
|
6.9, 6.11, 6.37
|
|
Section 65‑15
|
6.11
|
|
Subsection 65‑20(1)
|
6.38, 9.56
|
|
Paragraph 65‑20(1)(b)
|
14.82
|
|
Section 70‑10
|
6.9, 6.11
|
|
Section 70‑15
|
6.11
|
|
Section 70‑20
|
6.46
|
|
Subsection 75‑20(1)
|
11.38
|
|
Section 70‑25
|
3.59, 12.10
|
|
Subsection 70‑35(7)
|
6.56, 12.21
|
|
Subsection 70-35(8)
|
6.57
|
|
Subsection 70-35(9)
|
6.58
|
|
Section 75‑10
|
6.9, 6.11
|
|
Section 75‑15
|
6.11
|
|
Section 80‑10
|
6.9, 6.11, 7.9
|
|
Section 80‑15
|
6.11, 7.9
|
|
Section 80‑20
|
7.10
|
|
Section 80‑25
|
7.11
|
|
Subsection 80‑25(1)
|
7.12, 7.17
|
|
Subsection 80‑25(2)
|
7.12, 7.29
|
|
Paragraph 80‑25(2)(b)
|
7.35, 7.37
|
|
Paragraph 80‑25(3)(a)
|
7.21
|
|
Paragraph 80‑25(3)(b)
|
7.23, 7.65
|
|
Paragraph 80‑25(4)(a)
|
7.18
|
|
Paragraph 80-25(4)(b)
|
7.17
|
|
Subsection 80‑25(5)
|
7.15
|
|
Subsection 80‑30(1)
|
7.19
|
|
Paragraph 80‑30(1)(d)
|
7.16
|
|
Subsection 80-30(2)
|
7.35
|
|
Section 80-35
|
7.22, 7.107
|
|
Paragraph 80‑35(1)(c)
|
7.108
|
|
Subsection 80‑35(2)
|
7.108
|
|
Subsection 80‑40(1)
|
7.41, 7.47
|
|
Subsection 80‑40(2)
|
7.42, 7.45, 7.47
|
|
Subsection 80‑40(3)
|
7.42, 13.44
|
|
Subsection 80‑40(4)
|
7.45, 13.44
|
|
Subsection 80‑40(5)
|
7.46
|
|
Subsection 80‑40(6)
|
7.68
|
|
Section 80‑45
|
7.48
|
|
Subsection 80‑45(1), paragraph (a) of the
definition of ‘uplift factor’
|
7.50
|
|
Subsection 80‑45(1), paragraph (b) of the
definition of ‘uplift factor’
|
7.50
|
|
Section 80‑50
|
7.51
|
|
Section 85-5
|
7.56
|
|
Subsection 85‑5(1)
|
7.54, 7.58
|
|
Paragraph 85‑5(1)(a)
|
7.52
|
|
Paragraph 85‑5(1)(b)
|
7.53
|
|
Subsection 85‑5(2)
|
7.52
|
|
Subsection 85‑5(4)
|
7.59
|
|
Subsection 85-5(5)
|
7.58
|
|
Paragraph 85‑10(1)(a)
|
7.60, 7.62
|
|
Paragraph 85‑10(1)(b)
|
7.61
|
|
Paragraph 85‑10(1)(c)
|
7.62
|
|
Subsection 85‑10(2)
|
7.62
|
|
Section 85‑15
|
7.52
|
|
Division 90
|
10.65, 10.117, 11.79
|
|
Section 90‑5
|
7.66
|
|
Section 90‑10
|
7.70
|
|
Subsection 90‑15(1)
|
7.74
|
|
Subsection 90‑15(1), subparagraph (a)(i)
of the definition of ‘remaining effective life’
|
7.75
|
|
Subsection 90‑15(1), subparagraphs (a)(ii) and
(iii) of the definition of ‘remaining effective life’
|
7.80
|
|
Subsection 90‑15(1), paragraph (b) of the
definition of ‘remaining effective life’
|
7.82, 7.108
|
|
Subsection 90‑15(2)
|
6.72, 7.20, 7.80, 7.82, 7.108
|
|
Subsection 90‑15(3)
|
7.20, 7.79
|
|
Subparagraph 90‑25(1)(a)(i)
|
7.83
|
|
Subparagraph 90‑25(1)(a)(ii)
|
7.83
|
|
Paragraph 90‑25(1)(b)
|
7.84
|
|
Subsection 90‑25(3)
|
7.85
|
|
Paragraph 90‑25(3)(a)
|
7.63
|
|
Subsection 90‑25(5)
|
7.85
|
|
Subsection 90‑25(6)
|
7.86
|
|
Subsection 90‑25(7)
|
7.86
|
|
Section 90‑30
|
7.87
|
|
Section 90‑35
|
7.88
|
|
Section 90-40
|
7.101
|
|
Subsection 90‑40(1)
|
7.88
|
|
Subparagraph 90‑40(1)(a)(i)
|
7.89
|
|
Subparagraph 90‑40(1)(a)(ii)
|
7.89
|
|
Paragraph 90‑40(1)(b)
|
7.90
|
|
Subsection 90-40(3)
|
7.95
|
|
Section 90‑45
|
7.94
|
|
Section 90-50
|
7.102
|
|
Subsection 90-55(1)
|
7.103, 7.104
|
|
Subparagraph 90-55(1)(a)(i)
|
7.105
|
|
Subparagraph 90‑55(1)(a)(ii)
|
7.105
|
|
Subsection 90-55(2)
|
7.105
|
|
Subsection 90-55(4)
|
7.103
|
|
Subsection 90-55(5)
|
7.103
|
|
Subsection 90-55(6)
|
7.106
|
|
Subsection 90-55(7)
|
7.109
|
|
Section 90-60
|
7.111
|
|
Section 90‑65
|
7.110
|
|
Section 95‑10
|
6.9, 6.11, 6.66
|
|
Section 95‑15
|
6.11
|
|
Subsection 95‑15(1)
|
6.71, 7.20
|
|
Section 95‑20
|
9.62
|
|
Subsection 95‑20(1)
|
6.68, 6.69
|
|
Subsection 95‑20(2)
|
6.68
|
|
Subsection 95‑20(3)
|
6.69
|
|
Subsection 95‑20(5)
|
6.70
|
|
Section 95-25
|
6.75, 16.30, 16.35
|
|
Paragraph 95‑25(2)(b)
|
6.76
|
|
Paragraph 95-25(2)(c)
|
6.77
|
|
Paragraph 95-25(2)(d)
|
6.77
|
|
Subsection 95‑25(3)
|
6.76
|
|
Section 95-30
|
6.75, 16.30, 16.35
|
|
Paragraph 95-30(1)(a)
|
6.78
|
|
Subparagraph 95‑30(1)(a)(ii)
|
16.29, 16.34
|
|
Paragraph 95-30(1)(b)
|
6.79
|
|
Subsection 95-30(2)
|
6.80
|
|
Section 100‑10
|
6.9, 6.11, 6.81
|
|
Section 100‑15
|
6.11
|
|
Subsection 100‑15(1)
|
6.82
|
|
Subsection 100‑15(2)
|
6.83
|
|
Subsection 100‑20(1)
|
9.68
|
|
Paragraph 100‑20(1)(a)
|
6.84
|
|
Paragraph 100‑20(1)(b)
|
6.84, 14.82
|
|
Paragraph 100‑20(1)(c)
|
6.84
|
|
Section 100‑25
|
6.85
|
|
Division 115
|
3.52
|
|
Section 115‑10
|
9.43
|
|
Subsection 115-10(1)
|
9.45, 9.46, 9.47, 9.48
|
|
Paragraph 115‑10(1)(a)
|
9.15, 9.49
|
|
Paragraph 115‑10(1)(b)
|
9.50
|
|
Paragraph 115‑10(1)(c)
|
9.50
|
|
Paragraph 115‑10(1)(d)
|
9.50
|
|
Paragraph 115‑10(1)(e)
|
9.50
|
|
Subsection 115-10(3)
|
9.51
|
|
Section 115‑15
|
9.53, 9.58, 9.65, 9.71
|
|
Subsection 115‑15(1)
|
9.79
|
|
Subsection 115‑15(2)
|
9.80
|
|
Section 115‑20
|
9.50, 9.55
|
|
Paragraph 115‑20(b)
|
9.57
|
|
Section 115‑25
|
9.50, 9.59
|
|
Subparagraph 115‑25(a)(ii)
|
9.64
|
|
Paragraph 115‑25(b)
|
9.63
|
|
Section 115‑30
|
9.50, 9.66
|
|
Subparagraph 115‑30(a)(ii)
|
9.70
|
|
Paragraph 115‑30(b)
|
9.69
|
|
Section 115‑35
|
9.72
|
|
Paragraph 115‑35(a)
|
9.50, 9.74
|
|
Paragraph 115‑35(b)
|
9.50, 9.75
|
|
Section 115‑40
|
9.48, 9.83, 9.84
|
|
Section 115‑45
|
9.86
|
|
Subsection 115‑45(1)
|
9.87
|
|
Subsection 115‑45(2)
|
9.88
|
|
Subsection 115‑45(3)
|
9.89
|
|
Subsection 115‑45(4)
|
9.90, 9.91
|
|
Subsection 115‑45(5)
|
9.90, 9.91
|
|
Section 115‑50
|
9.90, 9.91, 9.92, 9.93, 9.94
|
|
Subsection 115‑50(2)
|
9.95
|
|
Subsection 115‑50(3)
|
9.95
|
|
Subsection 115‑50(4)
|
9.96
|
|
Section 115‑55
|
9.63, 9.101, 9.102
|
|
Paragraph 115‑55(1)(b)
|
9.103
|
|
Paragraph 115‑55(2)(b)
|
9.103
|
|
Subsection 115‑55(3)
|
9.104
|
|
Section 115‑60
|
9.69, 9.101, 9.102
|
|
Paragraph 115‑60(1)(b)
|
9.103
|
|
Paragraph 115‑60(2)(b)
|
9.103
|
|
Subsection 115‑60(3)
|
9.104
|
|
Section 115‑65
|
9.99
|
|
Division 120
|
3.52, 16.28
|
|
Section 120‑10
|
16.32
|
|
Subsection 120‑10(1)
|
10.20, 10.32, 10.33, 10.58
|
|
Subsection 120-10(2)
|
10.20, 10.22, 11.74
|
|
Subsection 120‑10(3)
|
10.13
|
|
Subsection 120‑10(4)
|
10.22, 10.27
|
|
Paragraph 120‑10(4)(a)
|
10.34, 10.35
|
|
Paragraph 120‑10(4)(b)
|
10.34, 10.35, 10.39
|
|
Paragraph 120-10(4)(c)
|
10.28
|
|
Paragraph 120-10(4)(d)
|
10.28
|
|
Subsection 120‑10(5)
|
10.44, 10.45
|
|
Subsection 120-10(6)
|
10.49
|
|
Section 120-15
|
10.64, 16.26, 16.33
|
|
Subsection 120‑15(1)
|
10.60
|
|
Subsection 120‑15(2)
|
10.59, 10.61
|
|
Subsection 120‑15(3)
|
10.59, 10.61
|
|
Subsection 120-15(4)
|
10.62
|
|
Section 120‑20
|
10.52, 10.58
|
|
Subsection 120‑20(2)
|
10.53
|
|
Section 120‑25
|
3.49, 10.18, 10.37, 10.43, 10.56
|
|
Subsection 120-25(2)
|
10.44, 10.49, 10.51
|
|
Division 125
|
3.52
|
|
Section 125‑10
|
16.32
|
|
Subsection 125‑10(1)
|
10.76, 10.82, 10.110
|
|
Subsection 125‑10(2)
|
10.76, 10.77, 11.74
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(3)(a)
|
10.67
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(3)(b)
|
10.67, 10.69
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(3)(c)
|
10.68, 10.69
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(3)(d)
|
9.16, 10.68, 10.69
|
|
Subsection 125‑10(4)
|
10.78, 10.84, 10.85, 10.110
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(4)(a)
|
10.87
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(4)(b)
|
10.87
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(4)(c)
|
10.88
|
|
Paragraph 125‑10(4)(d)
|
10.88
|
|
Subsection 125‑10(5)
|
10.97, 10.98
|
|
Subsection 125-10(6)
|
10.102
|
|
Subsection 125‑10(7)
|
10.97, 10.104
|
|
Section 125‑15
|
10.81
|
|
Section 125‑20
|
10.111, 10.116, 16.33
|
|
Subsection 125‑20(1)
|
10.112
|
|
Subsection 125‑20(2)
|
10.111, 10.113
|
|
Subsection 125‑20(3)
|
10.111, 10.113
|
|
Subsection 125-20(4)
|
10.114
|
|
Section 125‑25
|
10.120
|
|
Section 125‑30
|
10.105, 10.110
|
|
Section 125-35
|
3.49
|
|
Paragraph 125-35(1)(a)
|
10.74
|
|
Paragraph 125-35(1)(b)
|
10.75
|
|
Division 130
|
3.53
|
|
Subsection 130‑10(1)
|
11.11
|
|
Paragraph 130‑10(1)(a)
|
11.13
|
|
Paragraph 130‑10(1)(b)
|
11.15
|
|
Paragraph 130-10(1)(c)
|
11.25, 11.61
|
|
Subsection 130‑10(2)
|
11.13
|
|
Subsection 130‑10(3)
|
11.17
|
|
Subsection 130‑10(4)
|
11.14
|
|
Section 130-15
|
11.28, 11.79
|
|
Paragraph 130‑15(a)
|
11.33
|
|
Paragraph 130‑15(b)
|
11.34
|
|
Subsection 130‑20(1)
|
11.23, 11.62
|
|
Subsection 130‑20(2)
|
11.24
|
|
Division 135
|
3.53
|
|
Section 135‑5
|
11.25, 11.58
|
|
Section 135‑10
|
11.63, 11.66
|
|
Subsection 135‑10(1)
|
11.64
|
|
Subsection 135‑10(2)
|
11.67
|
|
Section 135-15
|
11.63, 11.69, 11.74
|
|
Section 135‑20
|
11.63
|
|
Subsection 135‑25(1)
|
11.75
|
|
Subsection 135‑25(2)
|
11.76
|
|
Division 140
|
17.55, 17.88
|
|
Section 140‑5
|
12.9, 12.11
|
|
Section 140‑10
|
12.8, 12.9
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(a)
|
12.12
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(b)
|
12.12
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(c)
|
12.14
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(d)
|
12.14
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(e)
|
12.14
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(f)
|
12.12
|
|
Paragraph 140‑10(2)(g)
|
12.12
|
|
Section 140‑15
|
12.15
|
|
Section 140‑20
|
12.16
|
|
Section 140‑25
|
12.18
|
|
Subsection 140‑25(2)
|
12.19
|
|
Division 145
|
10.124
|
|
Subsection 145‑10(1)
|
10.128, 10.136, 11.94
|
|
Subsection 145‑10(2)
|
10.126
|
|
Section 145‑15
|
10.129
|
|
Subsection 145-15(1)
|
10.128, 10.136
|
|
Subsection 145-15(2)
|
10.136
|
|
Subsection 145‑15(3)
|
10.130
|
|
Section 145‑20
|
10.133
|
|
Section 145‑25
|
10.134
|
|
Section 145‑30
|
10.135, 11.100
|
|
Paragraph 145‑30(1)(b)
|
10.136
|
|
Division 150
|
10.124
|
|
Subsection 150‑10(1)
|
10.141, 10.152
|
|
Paragraph 150‑10(2)(a)
|
10.137
|
|
Paragraph 150‑10(2)(b)
|
10.137
|
|
Paragraph 150‑10(2)(c)
|
10.138
|
|
Subsection 150-15(1)
|
10.141, 10.142, 10.152
|
|
Subsection 150-15(2)
|
10.141, 10.152
|
|
Subsection 150‑15(3)
|
10.143
|
|
Subsection 150‑15(5)
|
10.149
|
|
Subsection 150‑15(6)
|
10.149
|
|
Subsection 150‑15(7)
|
10.149
|
|
Section 150‑20
|
10.147
|
|
Section 150‑25
|
10.150
|
|
Section 150‑30
|
10.148
|
|
Section 150-35
|
10.151, 11.100
|
|
Paragraph 150‑35(1)(b)
|
10.152
|
|
Section 155‑5
|
11.85
|
|
Section 155‑10
|
11.87
|
|
Subsection 155‑10(1)
|
11.88, 11.94
|
|
Subsection 155‑10(2)
|
11.89
|
|
Paragraph 155‑10(2)(a)
|
11.92
|
|
Paragraph 155‑10(2)(b)
|
11.93
|
|
Subsection 155‑10(3)
|
11.91
|
|
Section 155‑15
|
11.87, 11.94
|
|
Section 155‑20
|
11.95
|
|
Section 155‑25
|
11.97
|
|
Subsection 155-25(2)
|
11.99, 11.100
|
|
Division 160
|
4.9, 5.38, 10.66, 10.118
|
|
Subsection 160‑10(1)
|
13.8, 13.9
|
|
Subsection 160‑10(2)
|
13.12
|
|
Subsection 160‑10(3)
|
13.9
|
|
Subsection 160‑15(1)
|
13.15
|
|
Subsection 160‑15(2)
|
13.17
|
|
Subsection 160‑15(3)
|
13.18
|
|
Division 165
|
4.9
|
|
Paragraph 165‑5(1)(a)
|
13.21
|
|
Paragraph 165‑5(1)(b)
|
13.22, 13.23
|
|
Paragraph 165‑5(1)(c)
|
13.24
|
|
Subsection 165‑5(2)
|
13.25
|
|
Paragraph 165-5(2)(a)
|
13.53
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(1)
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(2)
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(3)
|
13.30
|
|
Paragraph 165‑10(3)(b)
|
13.37
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(4)
|
13.39
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(5)
|
13.34
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(6)
|
13.35
|
|
Subsection 165‑10(7)
|
13.29
|
|
Section 165‑15
|
13.42
|
|
Section 165-20
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165‑25(1)
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165‑25(2)
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165‑25(3)
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165‑25(4)
|
13.28
|
|
Section 165‑30
|
13.28
|
|
Subsection 165-35(1)
|
13.45
|
|
Subsection 165-35(2)
|
13.45
|
|
Subsection 165-35(3)
|
13.52
|
|
Section 165-40
|
13.46
|
|
Paragraph 165-40(1)(a)
|
13.47
|
|
Paragraph 165-40(1)(b)
|
13.48
|
|
Paragraph 165-40(2)(a)
|
13.48
|
|
Subsection 165-40(3)
|
13.50
|
|
Subsection 165-40(4)
|
13.49
|
|
Section 165‑45
|
13.51
|
|
Subsection 165-55(1)
|
13.54, 13.55
|
|
Paragraph 165‑55(2)(a)
|
13.54, 13.55
|
|
Subparagraph 165-55(2)(b)(i)
|
13.54
|
|
Subparagraph 165-55(2)(b)(ii)
|
13.55
|
|
Subsection 165-55(3)
|
13.57
|
|
Subsection 165-55(4)
|
13.57
|
|
Subsection 165-55(5)
|
13.54, 13.55, 13.57
|
|
Section 165-60
|
13.58
|
|
Subsection 170‑5(1)
|
14.10
|
|
Subsection 170‑5(2)
|
14.15
|
|
Paragraph 170‑5(3)(a)
|
14.14
|
|
Paragraph 170‑5(3)(b)
|
14.13
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(1)
|
14.18
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(2)
|
14.25
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(3)
|
14.28
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(4)
|
14.31
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(5)
|
14.36
|
|
Paragraph 170‑10(5)(a)
|
14.40
|
|
Paragraph 170‑10(5)(b)
|
14.43
|
|
Paragraph 170‑10(5)(c)
|
14.45
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(6)
|
14.49
|
|
Paragraph 170‑10(6)(a)
|
14.50
|
|
Paragraph 170‑10(6)(b)
|
14.50
|
|
Paragraph 170‑10(6)(c)
|
14.51
|
|
Subsection 170‑10(7)
|
14.21
|
|
Section 175‑5
|
14.58
|
|
Subsection 175‑10(1)
|
14.64
|
|
Subparagraph 175‑10(1)(b)(i)
|
14.76
|
|
Subparagraph 175‑10(1)(b)(ii)
|
14.77
|
|
Paragraph 175‑10(2)(a)
|
14.59
|
|
Paragraph 175‑10(2)(b)
|
14.60
|
|
Subsection 175‑15(1)
|
14.66, 14.68, 14.69, 14.71
|
|
Paragraph 175‑15(1)(b)
|
14.70
|
|
Subsection 175‑15(2)
|
14.70
|
|
Subsection 175‑15(3)
|
14.72
|
|
Section 175‑20
|
14.63
|
|
Section 175‑25
|
14.85, 14.86
|
|
Section 175‑30
|
14.85
|
|
Paragraph 175‑35(1)(a)
|
14.88
|
|
Paragraph 175‑35(1)(b)
|
14.88
|
|
Subsection 175‑35(2)
|
14.89
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(1)
|
14.90
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(2)
|
14.91, 14.94
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(3)
|
14.91, 14.94
|
|
Paragraph 175‑40(3)(a)
|
14.90
|
|
Paragraph 175‑40(3)(d)
|
14.93
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(4)
|
14.92
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(5)
|
14.91
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(6)
|
14.96
|
|
Subsection 175‑40(7)
|
14.90
|
|
Subsection 175‑45(1)
|
14.99, 14.100
|
|
Subsection 175‑45(2)
|
14.101
|
|
Section 180‑5
|
7.98
|
|
Subsection 180‑5(1)
|
7.97, 7.99
|
|
Section 180‑10
|
7.100
|
|
Subsection 185‑10(1)
|
15.36
|
|
Subsection 185‑10(2)
|
15.38
|
|
Subsection 185‑10(3)
|
15.39
|
|
Subsection 185‑10(4)
|
15.40
|
|
Subsection 185‑10(5)
|
15.41
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(1)
|
15.42
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(2)
|
15.46
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(3)
|
15.46
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(4)
|
15.47
|
|
subsection 185‑15(5)
|
15.48
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(6)
|
15.40, 15.41
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(7)
|
15.49, 15.50
|
|
Subsection 185‑15(8)
|
15.50
|
|
Section 185-20
|
15.52
|
|
Subsection 185‑25(1)
|
15.41, 15.53, 15.54, 15.55, 15.56, 15.59, 15.60
|
|
Subsection 185‑25(2)
|
15.56
|
|
Subsection 185‑25(3)
|
15.61, 15.62, 15.63
|
|
Section 190‑5
|
15.66
|
|
Section 190‑10
|
15.66
|
|
Subsection 190‑15(1)
|
15.73
|
|
Subsection 190‑15(2)
|
15.74
|
|
Subsection 190‑15(3)
|
15.76
|
|
Subsection 190‑15(4)
|
15.77
|
|
Section 190‑20
|
15.73
|
|
Subsection 190‑20(1)
|
15.79, 15.81
|
|
Subsection 190‑20(2)
|
15.83
|
|
Subsection 190‑20(3)
|
15.85
|
|
Section 190‑25
|
15.73, 15.87
|
|
Division 195
|
6.55, 12.21
|
|
Section 195‑5
|
15.15
|
|
Subsection 195‑10(1)
|
15.17
|
|
Subparagraph 195‑10(1)(a)(ii)
|
15.19, 15.20
|
|
Subsection 195‑10(2)
|
15.21
|
|
Subsection 195‑10(3)
|
15.21
|
|
Subsection 195‑10(4)
|
15.20
|
|
Subsection 195‑15(1)
|
15.29
|
|
Subsection 195‑15(2)
|
15.32
|
|
Division 200
|
3.30
|
|
Subsection 200‑10(1)
|
8.22
|
|
Subsection 200‑10(2)
|
8.24
|
|
Subsection 200‑10(3)
|
8.24
|
|
Subsection 200‑10(4)
|
8.25
|
|
Section 200‑15
|
8.26
|
|
Division 205
|
4.54, 4.63
|
|
Section 205‑10
|
17.12
|
|
Subsection 205‑10(1)
|
17.13, 17.15, 17.28
|
|
Paragraph 205-10(1)(a)
|
17.18
|
|
Paragraph 205‑10(1)(b)
|
17.22
|
|
Paragraph 205‑10(2)(a)
|
17.27
|
|
Paragraph 205‑10(2)(b)
|
17.21
|
|
Subsection 205‑10(3)
|
17.45
|
|
Subsection 205‑15(1)
|
17.32
|
|
Paragraph 205‑15(1)(a)
|
17.33
|
|
Paragraph 205‑15(1)(b)
|
17.33
|
|
Paragraph 205‑15(1)(c)
|
17.33
|
|
Paragraph 205‑15(1)(d)
|
17.33
|
|
Subsection 205‑15(2)
|
17.33
|
|
Section 205‑20
|
17.47
|
|
Paragraph 205‑20(1)(b)
|
17.48
|
|
Paragraph 205‑20(1)(c)
|
17.49
|
|
Paragraph 205‑20(2)(b)
|
17.48
|
|
Paragraph 205‑20(2)(c)
|
17.49
|
|
Subsection 205‑25(1)
|
17.50, 17.51
|
|
Subsection 205‑25(2)
|
17.54
|
|
Subsection 205-25(3)
|
17.52
|
|
Subsection 205‑25(4)
|
17.53
|
|
Subsection 205‑25(5)
|
17.53
|
|
Subsection 205‑25(6)
|
17.51
|
|
Subsection 205‑25(7)
|
17.54
|
|
Division 210
|
17.57
|
|
Paragraph 210‑10(1)(b)
|
17.62
|
|
Paragraph 210‑10(1)(c)
|
17.67, 17.71
|
|
Subsection 210‑10(2)
|
17.74
|
|
Subsection 210‑10(3)
|
17.64
|
|
Subsection 210‑10(4)
|
17.75
|
|
Paragraph 210-10(4)(b)
|
17.76
|
|
Subsection 210‑10(5)
|
17.67
|
|
Subsection 210‑15(1)
|
17.65
|
|
Paragraph 210‑15(1)(a)
|
17.60
|
|
Paragraph 210‑15(1)(b)
|
17.60
|
|
Subsection 210‑15(2)
|
17.61
|
|
Section 210‑20
|
17.72
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(a)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(b)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(c)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(d)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(e)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(f)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(g)
|
17.73
|
|
Paragraph 210‑20(h)
|
17.73
|
|
Section 210‑25
|
17.77
|
|
Paragraph 210‑25(1)(a)
|
17.78
|
|
Paragraph 210‑25(1)(b)
|
17.78
|
|
Subsection 210‑25(2)
|
17.79
|
|
Section 210‑30
|
17.80
|
|
Paragraph 210‑30(1)(a)
|
17.81
|
|
Paragraph 210‑30(1)(b)
|
17.81
|
|
Paragraph 210‑30(1)(c)
|
17.81
|
|
Subsection 210‑30(2)
|
17.82
|
|
Paragraph 210‑30(3)(a)
|
17.83
|
|
Paragraph 210‑30(3)(b)
|
17.83
|
|
Subsection 210-30(4)
|
17.87
|
|
Subsection 210-30(5)
|
17.87
|
|
Subsection 210‑30(6)
|
17.86
|
|
Section 210‑35
|
17.84
|
|
Section 210‑40
|
17.85
|
|
Division 215
|
9.20
|
|
Section 215‑5
|
16.9
|
|
Subsection 215‑10(1)
|
16.19
|
|
Subsection 215‑10(2)
|
16.20
|
|
Subsection 215‑10(3)
|
16.21
|
|
Subsection 215‑10(4)
|
16.22
|
|
Section 215‑15
|
16.10, 16.26, 16.33
|
|
Section 215‑20
|
16.18, 16.27
|
|
Section 215‑25
|
16.31
|
|
Section 215‑30
|
16.31
|
|
Section 215‑35
|
16.37
|
|
Section 215‑40
|
16.36
|
|
Section 215‑45
|
16.40
|
|
Section 215‑50
|
16.42
|
|
Section 215‑55
|
16.23, 16.44
|
|
Section 220‑5
|
16.50
|
|
Subsection 220‑10(1)
|
16.51
|
|
Subsection 220‑10(2)
|
16.53
|
|
Division 225
|
11.28
|
|
Paragraph 255‑5(a)
|
9.17
|
|
Paragraph 255‑5(b)
|
9.17, 9.21
|
|
Paragraph 255‑5(c)
|
9.17, 9.24
|
|
Section 225‑10
|
11.40
|
|
Subsection 225-10(1)
|
11.41
|
|
Subsection 225-10(2)
|
11.41
|
|
Subsection 225‑10(4)
|
11.48
|
|
Section 225‑15
|
10.119
|
|
Paragraph 225‑15(1)(a)
|
11.49
|
|
Paragraph 225‑15(1)(b)
|
11.49, 11.54
|
|
Subparagraph 225‑15(1)(b)(i)
|
11.55
|
|
Subparagraph 225‑15(1)(b)(ii)
|
11.55
|
|
Paragraph 225‑15(1)(c)
|
11.49
|
|
Subsection 225‑15(2)
|
11.49
|
|
Subsection 225‑15(3)
|
11.50
|
|
Paragraph 225‑15(3)(a)
|
11.52
|
|
Paragraph 225‑15(3)(b)
|
11.52
|
|
Subsection 225‑15(4)
|
10.122, 11.50
|
|
Paragraph 225‑20(1)(a)
|
11.97
|
|
Subsection 225‑25(1)
|
11.46
|
|
Subsection 225‑25(2)
|
11.46
|
|
Subsection 225‑25(3)
|
11.46
|
|
Section 250‑5
|
7.38
|
|
Section 250‑10
|
7.38
|
|
Subsection 250‑10(2)
|
7.108
|
|
Section 250-15
|
7.14
|
|
Division 255
|
10.139
|
|
Section 255‑5
|
10.72
|
|
Paragraph 255‑5(a)
|
9.19
|
|
Section 255‑10
|
9.39, 10.72
|
|
Paragraph 255‑10(a)
|
9.17, 9.19
|
|
Paragraph 255‑10(b)
|
9.17, 9.21
|
|
Paragraph 255‑10(c)
|
9.17
|
|
Paragraph 255‑10(d)
|
9.17, 9.37
|
|
Section 255‑15
|
9.30
|
|
Subsection 255‑15(1)
|
9.32
|
|
Section 255‑20
|
9.37, 9.38
|
|
Subsection 255‑20(3)
|
9.40, 10.42, 10.43, 10.95, 10.96
|
|
Section 300-1
|
3.56
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘accounting standard’
|
7.64
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘allowance component’
|
3.27, 10.29
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘arrangement’
|
10.15, 10.70
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘auditing standard’
|
7.64
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘Australia’
|
3.65
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘consolidatable group’
|
6.70
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘entity’
|
16.46
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘exploration or
prospecting’
|
5.33
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘foreign currency’
|
15.37
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘installed ready for
use’
|
7.27
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘market value’
|
7.91
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘mining,
quarrying and prospecting information’
|
7.18
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘MRRT rate’
|
3.26
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘non-cash benefit’
|
15.18
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘recoupment’
|
6.29
|
|
Section 300‑1, definition of ‘scheme’
|
17.59
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Consequential Amendments
and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011
Commencement
|
|
|
|
Clause 2, item 3 of the table
|
18.45
|
|
Clause 2, item 4 of the table
|
18.45
|
|
Clause 2, item 8 of the table
|
5.85
|
Schedule 1:
Amendments of the Taxation Administration
Act 1953 not related to assessments
|
|
|
|
Items 1 and 2, subsection 8AAB(4) of the TAA 1953
|
18.118, 18.186
|
|
Item 3, paragraph 11‑1(g) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.114
|
|
Item 4, paragraph 12‑330(1)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.112
|
|
Item 4, paragraph 12‑335(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.112
|
|
Item 5, Subdivision 18‑A (heading) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.114
|
|
Item 6, section 18‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.113
|
|
Item 7, section 18‑49 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.113
|
|
Item 8, Division 115 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
3.29
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.123
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑10(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.124
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.125
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.181, 18.182
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑15(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.181, 18.182
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑15(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.183
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑15(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.183
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑20 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.177
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑20(1) of
Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.129, 18.131
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑20(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.130
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑20(2)(a) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.131, 18.160
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑20(2)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.160
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑20(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.131
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑25 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.127
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑30 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.128
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑35 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.132
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑40 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.133
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑45(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.135, 18.136, 18.149
|
|
Item 8, item 1 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.147
|
|
Item 8, item 2 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.152
|
|
Item 8, item 3 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.139
|
|
Item 8, item 4 in the table in subsection 115‑45(1)
of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.153
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑45(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.146, 18.150
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑45(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.148, 18.150
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑45(4) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.147
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑45(5) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.149
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑50 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.151
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑55 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.184
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑60(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.159
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑60(1)(d) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.162
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑60(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.161
|
|
Item 8, subsections 115‑60(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.159
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑65(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.163
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑65(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.166, 18.167
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑65(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.169
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑65(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.169
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑65(5) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.169
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑70 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.164
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑75(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.150
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑75(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.140
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑75(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.142
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑75(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.141
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑75(5) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.143, 18.145
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑75(6) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.145
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑80 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.143, 18.144
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑85(1)(a) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.154
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑85(1)(b) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.155
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑85(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.154
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 115‑85(2)(b) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.155
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑85(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.156
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑85(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.155
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑90(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.171
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑90(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.172, 18.175, 18.176
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑95 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.175
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑95(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.173
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑95(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.174
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑100(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.178, 18.180
|
|
Item 8, subsection 115‑100(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.179
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑105 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.141, 18.164, 18.168
|
|
Item 8, section 115‑110 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.126
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑5(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.27
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑5(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.28
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.31
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 117‑5(3)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.32
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 117‑5(3)(c) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.32
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑5(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.30
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 117‑5(4)(a) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
8.29
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑5(5) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.30, 18.32
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑10(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.33
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.34
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.38, 18.40
|
|
Item 8, section 117‑20 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
7.56, 7.98
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑20(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.100
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑20(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.101
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑20(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
7.65, 18.102
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑20(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.103
|
|
Item 8, subsection 117‑20(5) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.103
|
|
Item 8, section 117‑25 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.41
|
|
Item 8, section 117‑30 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.42
|
|
Item 8, Division 119 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
(TAA 1953)
|
8.25, 11.14
|
|
Item 8, subparagraph 119‑5(1)(a)(i) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.248
|
|
Item 8, subparagraph 119‑5(1)(a)(ii) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.249
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 119‑5(1)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.250
|
|
Item 8, subsection 119‑5(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.254
|
|
Item 8, subsection 119‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
14.61, 18.256
|
|
Item 8, section 119‑10 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
7.58, 7.98, 14.62, 16.24, 18.258
|
|
Item 8, section 119‑15 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.243
|
|
Item 8, Division 121 in Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
10.36, 10.55, 10.91, 10.107
|
|
Item 8, section 121‑5 of Schedule 1 to the TAA 1953
|
18.214
|
|
Item 8, subsection 121‑10(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.215
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.221
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.221, 18.222, 18.224
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(c) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.223, 18.224
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 121‑10(2)(d) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.223, 18.224
|
|
Item 8, subsection 121‑10(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.216
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 121‑10(4)(a) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.217
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 121‑10(4)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.218
|
|
Item 8, paragraphs 121‑10(4)( c) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.218
|
|
Item 8, section 121‑12 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
5.81
|
|
Item 8, subsection 121‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.226
|
|
Item 8, subsection 121‑15(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.227
|
|
Item 8, subsection 123‑5(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.187, 18.192
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 123‑5(1)(a) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.193
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 123‑5(1)(b) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.193
|
|
Item 8, subsection 123‑5(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.196
|
|
Item 8, subsection 123‑5(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.199
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 123‑5(4)(a) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.202
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 123‑5(4)(b) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.201
|
|
Item 8, section 123‑10 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.204
|
|
Item 8, subsection 123‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.207, 18.210
|
|
Item 8, paragraph 123‑15(1)(c) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.208
|
|
Item 8, paragraphs 123‑15(1)(d) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.208
|
|
Item 8, subsection 123‑15(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.209
|
|
Item 8, subsection 123‑15(3) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.212
|
|
Item 8, subsection 125‑1(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.237
|
|
Item 8, subsection 125‑1(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.238
|
|
Item 8, subsection 125‑1(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.239
|
|
Item 8, subsection 125‑1(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.240
|
|
Item 8, subsection 125‑1(5) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.241
|
|
Item 8, subsection 125‑1(6) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.242
|
|
Item 9, subsection 250‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.111
|
|
Item 10, subsection 250‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.111, 18.186
|
|
Item 11, section 280‑1 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.115
|
|
Item 12, section 280‑50 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.115
|
|
Item 13, subsection 280‑101(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.116
|
|
Item 13, subsection 280‑101(2) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.116
|
|
Item 13, subsection 280‑101(3) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.117
|
|
Item 14, paragraph 280‑105(1)(a) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.115
|
|
Item 15, subsection 280‑110(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.115
|
|
Item 16, section 280‑170 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.115
|
|
Items 17, section 284‑30 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.121
|
|
Item 18, section 284‑35 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.121
|
|
Item 19, paragraph 284‑75(2)(a) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.121
|
|
Item 20, paragraph 284‑75(2)(b) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.121
|
|
Item 21, subsection 284-80(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.121
|
|
Items 21 to 23, subsection 284-90(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
18.121
|
|
Item 24, subsection 286‑75(2AA) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.229
|
|
Item 25, paragraph 286‑80(2)(a) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.229
|
|
Item 26, section 352‑1 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.272
|
|
Item 27, section 352‑10 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.271
|
|
Item 28, section 353‑10 of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.232
|
|
Item 28, subsection 353-10(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.231
|
|
Item 29, section 353‑15 (heading) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.231, 18.234
|
|
Item 30, subsection 353-15(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.231, 18.234
|
|
Item 31, section 353‑17 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.231, 18.235
|
|
Item 32, paragraph 357‑55(faa) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.268
|
|
Item 33, subsection 360‑5(1) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.269
|
|
Item 34, section 444‑1 of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 35, subsection 444‑5(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 36, subsection 444‑5(1A) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59, 16.60
|
|
Item 36, subsection 444‑5(1B) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59, 16.60
|
|
Item 37, subsection 444‑5(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 38, subsection 444‑10(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 38, subsection 444‑10(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 39, subsection 444‑10(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 40, subsection 444‑10(5) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 41, subsection 444‑15(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 42, subsection 444‑30(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 42, subsection 444‑30(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 42, subsection 444‑30(3) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 43, subsection 444‑70(1) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 43, subsection 444‑70(2) of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
16.59
|
|
Item 44, section 444‑120 of Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
16.61
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(1) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
16.62, 16.63
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(2) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
16.64
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(3) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
16.65
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
16.66
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(5) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
16.67
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(6) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
16.68
|
|
Item 44, subsection 444‑120(7) of Schedule 1
to the TAA 1953
|
16.69
|
Schedule 2: Amendments
related to assessments
|
|
|
|
Item 1, subsection 14ZW(1AB) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.270
|
|
Item 1, subsection 14ZW(1AC) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.270
|
|
Item 2, paragraph 155‑5(2)(e) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.54
|
|
Item 3, subsection 155-15(1) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.54, 18.57, 18.60
|
|
Item 4, subsection 155-30(1) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.55
|
|
Item 5, section 155-55 in Schedule 1 of the TAA
1953
|
18.80
|
|
Item 5, section 155-57 in Schedule 1 of the TAA
1953
|
18.80
|
|
Items 6 and 7, section 155-90 in Schedule 1 of the
TAA 1953
|
18.87
|
|
Item 8, section 350-5, in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.96
|
|
Item 10, paragraph (e) of Schedule 1 of the ADJR
Act
|
18.86
|
|
Item 11, definition of ‘assessable amount’ in subsection
995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
18.51
|
|
Item 12, definition of ‘assessment’ in subsection
995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
18.51
|
|
Item 13, definition of ‘Deputy Commissioner’ in
subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
18.96
|
|
Item 14, definition of ‘original assessment’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
18.80
|
|
Item 15, definition of ‘period of review’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
18.80
|
|
Item 16, definition of ‘Second Commissioner’ in
subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
18.96
|
|
Item 17, subsection 8AAZLG(2) of the TAA 1953
|
18.88
|
|
Item 18, paragraph 14ZW(1)(bg) of the TAA 1953
|
18.84
|
|
Item 19, subsection 14ZW(1AB) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.270
|
|
Item 19, subsection 14ZW(1AC) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.270
|
|
Item 20, paragraph 14ZW(1B)(b) of the TAA 1953
|
18.85
|
|
Item 21, the heading to Chapter 4 in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.55
|
|
Item 22, Subdivision 155‑A of Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.49
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑5 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.51, 18.62
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑10(1) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.53
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑10(2) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.51
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑15(2) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.57, 18.60
|
|
Item 22, paragraph 155‑15(3)(a) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.57
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑15(4) of Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.58
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑15(5) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.59
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑25 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.52
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑35(1) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.65
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑35(2) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.65
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑35(4) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.67
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑35(6) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
18.67
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑45 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.69
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑50 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.69
|
|
Item 22, section 155-55 in Schedule 1 of the TAA
1953
|
18.70
|
|
Item 22, section 155-57 in Schedule 1 of the TAA
1953
|
17.71
|
|
Item 22, paragraph 155‑60(c) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.72
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑70 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.77, 18.78
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑70(1) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.73, 18.74
|
|
Item 22, subsection 155‑70(2) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.75, 18.76
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑75 in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.82
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑80 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.79
|
|
Item 22, section 155‑85 in Schedule 1 to the TAA
1953
|
18.83
|
|
Item 22, section 155-90 in Schedule 1 of the TAA
1953
|
18.77, 18.84
|
|
Item 23, subsection 255-5(2) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
19.7
|
|
Item 24, paragraph 255-45(1)(b) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
19.7
|
|
Item 25, subsection 350-10(1) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.91, 18.92
|
|
Item 25, subsection 350‑10(2) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.93
|
|
Item 25, subsection 350‑10(3) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.94
|
|
Item 25, section 350‑15 in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
18.95
|
|
Item 26, paragraph 355-30(2)(a) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
19.7
|
|
Item 27, paragraph 355-55(1)(c) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
19.7
|
|
Item 27, paragraph 355-70(1)(c) in Schedule 1 to
the TAA 1953
|
19.7
|
|
Item 28, paragraph 357-100(b) in Schedule 1 to the
TAA 1953
|
19.7
|
Schedule 3:
Amendment of other Acts
|
|
|
|
Item 1, paragraph (e) of Schedule 1 of the ADJR Act
|
18.87
|
|
Items 3 and 4, subsection 3(1) Crimes (Taxation Offences) Act 1980
|
19.3
|
|
Item 5, Part II (note) of the Crimes (Taxation Offences) Act 1980
|
19.3
|
|
Item 6, Part XI of the Crimes (Taxation Offences) Act 1980
|
19.3
|
|
Item 7, section 10‑5 of the ITAA 1997
|
19.14
|
|
Item 8, section 12‑5 of the ITAA 1997
|
19.10
|
|
Item 9, section 15‑85 of the ITAA 1997
|
19.13
|
|
tem 10, table item 8 in section 40-40 of the ITAA
1997
|
19.6
|
|
tem 11, subsection 40-70(3) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Items 12 and 13, subsection 40-72(1) of the ITAA
1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 14, subsection 40-72(3) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 15, paragraph 40-80(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 16, subparagraph 40-80(1)(c)(ii) of the ITAA
1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 17, table items 1, 2 and 3 in subsection
40-95(10) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 18, table item 9 in subsection 40-102(4) of
the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 19, paragraph 40-630(1)(b) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 20, paragraph (a) of the note in subsection
40-630(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 21, paragraph 40-630(1A)(b) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 21, paragraph 40-630(1B)(b) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 21, paragraph 40-630(3)(b) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 22, paragraph 40-650(3)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 23, section 40-725 of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 24, subsection 40-730(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 25, paragraph 40-730(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 26, subsection 40-730(7) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 27, subparagraph 40-735(1)(a)(i) of the ITAA
1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 28, subsection 40-735(4) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 29, paragraph 40-740(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 30, paragraph 40-740(1)(b) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 30, paragraph 40-740(1)(c) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 30, paragraph 40-740(1)(e) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 31, subsection 40-740(2) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 32, subsection 40‑751(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.8, 19.12
|
|
Item 32, subsection 40‑751(2) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.9
|
|
Item 33, subparagraph 40-840(1)(c)(ii) of the ITAA
1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 34, paragraph 40-860(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 35, subsection 40-860(2) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 36, paragraph 40-860(3)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 37, paragraph 40-860(3)(c) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 38, paragraph 40-870(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 38, paragraph 40-870(2)(a) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.6
|
|
Item 39, subsection 250‑105(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.17
|
|
Items 40 and 41, subsection 703-50(1) of the ITAA
1997
|
16.73
|
|
Items 42 and 43, subsection 719-50(1) of the ITAA
1997
|
16.73
|
|
Item 44, subsection 721‑10(2) of the ITAA 1997
|
16.76
|
|
Item 45, subsection 721‑10(4) of the ITAA 1997
|
16.77
|
|
Item 46, subsection 721-25(1AA) of the ITAA 1997
|
16.80
|
|
Item 47, subsection 721-25(1B) of the ITAA 1997
|
16.80
|
|
Item 47, subsection 721-25(2) of the ITAA 1997
|
16.80
|
|
Item 47, subsection 721-25(3) of the ITAA 1997
|
16.80
|
|
Item 48, definition of ‘allowance component’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 49, definition of ‘applicable instalment rate’
in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 50, definition of ‘arm’s length consideration’
in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 51, definition of ‘base value’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 52, definition of ‘base year’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 53, definition of ‘benchmark instalment rate’
in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 54, definition of ‘instalment income’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 55, definition of ‘instalment quarter’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 56, definition of ‘long term bond rate’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 57, definition of ‘miner’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 58, definition of ‘mining and quarrying
operations’ in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 59, definition of ‘mining expenditure’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 60, definition of ‘mining loss’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 61, definition of ‘mining operations’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 62, definition of ‘mining profit’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 63, definition of ‘mining project interest’ in
subsection 995‑1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 64, definition of ‘mining project split’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 65, definition of ‘mining project transfer’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 66, definition of ‘mining revenue’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997 in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 67, definition of ‘mining revenue event’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 68, definition of ‘MRRT’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 69, definition of ‘MRRT allowance’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 70, definition of ‘MRRT law’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 71, definition of ‘MRRT liability’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 72, definition of ‘MRRT payable’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 73, definition of ‘MRRT return’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 74, definition of ‘MRRT year’ in subsection
995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 75, definition of ‘pre-mining expenditure’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 76, definition of ‘pre-mining project
interest’ in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 77, definition of ‘pre-mining revenue’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 78, definition of ‘rehabilitation tax offset’
in subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 79, definition of ‘split percentage’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 80, definition of ‘starting base asset’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 81, definition of ‘starting base return’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 82, definition of ‘starting base return’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 83, definition of ‘taxable mining profit’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 84, definition of ‘taxable resource’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 85, definition of ‘termination value’ in
subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997
|
19.5
|
|
Item 86, subsection 3(1) of the T(IOEP) Act 1983
|
18.119
|
|
Items 87, 88 and 89 section 3C of the T(IOEP) Act
1983
|
18.119
|
|
Item 92, section 35‑80
|
5.85
|
Schedule 4:
Application and transitional provisions
|
|
|
|
Item 1
|
17.89
|
|
Item 2
|
4.30
|
|
Item 3
|
4.147
|
|
Item 4
|
4.151
|
|
Item 5
|
5.67
|
|
Item 6
|
6.20
|
|
Subitem 7(1)
|
9.106
|
|
Subitem 7(2)
|
9.41
|
|
Item 8
|
10.17, 10.73, 10.153
|
|
Item 9
|
10.125, 10.154
|
|
Item 10
|
15.88
|
|
Item 11
|
17.90
|
|
Item 12
|
7.113, 17.92
|
|
Item 13
|
16.71, 16.72
|
|
Subitem 14(1)
|
10.155
|
|
Subitem 14(2)
|
10.156
|
|
Item 15
|
18.107
|
Imposition Bills
|
|
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — General) Bill 2011, section
3
|
3.31
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax (Imposition
— General) Bill 2011, section 4
|
3.26
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — General) Bill 2011, section
5
|
3.33
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Customs) Bill 2011, section
3
|
3.31
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Customs) Bill 2011, section
4
|
3.26
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Customs) Bill 2011, section
5
|
3.33
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Excise) Bill 2011, section
3
|
3.31
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Excise) Bill 2011, section
4
|
3.26
|
|
Minerals Resource Rent Tax
(Imposition — Excise) Bill 2011, section
5
|
3.33
|
Do not remove section break.