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Title: Jenik Radon


1
How to Negotiate the Right Mining Agreement
  • By
  • Jenik Radon
  • Columbia University

2
Background
  • Done right, natural resource extraction can be a
    boon for social and economic development
  • Success stories of Botswana, Chile and Norway
  • Negotiating the right contract is vital to a
    governments effort to reap the benefits of its
    natural resources.

3
How governments can develop their resources
  • 1. State companies, e.g. Saudi Arabia,
  • BRAZIL (SEMI)
  • 2. Private INTERNATIONAL MAJORs, e.g. US, Canada,
    UK,
  • 3. Combination of 1 2, e.g. Nigeria,
    Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan

4
Legal and Regulatory Approaches to Resource
Exploitation
  • Many developed countries use unilateral
    licensing/leasing approach
  • Many developing countries use consensual approach
    and prefer mining agreements
  • Political will of host country to develop
    resources is key and expressed through regulatory
    instruments, by contractual means, national
    policies and guidelines

5
How Mining Companies determine a host countrys
political will
  • First policy instrument to be consulted is Mining
    Code (MC)
  • MC addresses core issue of mineral exploration
    and exploitation rights such as property rights
    and form of agreements
  • MC has the force of law as opposed to soft
    guidelines
  • Majority of countries have MCs (E.g. Australia,
    Botswana, Brazil, Chile, Indonesia, Papua New
    Guinea)
  • Caveat MC can be outdated and therefore does not
    represent present political will any more

6
Mining Codes
  • There is not a one-size-fits-all MC
  • MC must consider the economic, historical,
    sociological, administrative and political
    setting of a specific country
  • MC must balance host countrys interests with
    mining companies concerns

7
Mining Agreements
  • May be used instead of or in addition to M
  • Mining Agreements may be defined as Agreement
    between a nation-state and a private entity about
    the development of resources and the production,
    processing, transportation, and marketing of
    goods from resources.
  • Address issues absent in MC
  • Reassure foreign investors

8
Why do contracts matter?
  • Contract terms determine
  • (1) how much a producing country earns from it
    natural resources
  • (2) the regulatory power of government to enforce
    environmental, health and other standards, if
    legal and regulatory system not well established

9
Key Issues of all Mining Agreements
  • How profits are divided between government and
    participating companies
  • How costs are treated, expensed or depreciated
  • What to treat as costs, e.g. Expat housing, best
    technology
  • Taxes, royalties, excess profit taxes
  • Stabilization, what kind
  • Timing
  • Uncertainty about development and exploration
    costs complicates negotiations
  • abandonment
  • Balance needed between countrys and investors
    interests
  • Takes into consideration the communities or
    entities not party to the deal but who will be
    interested or affected by it

10
Contractual Systems
  • To achieve such balance of country and investor
    interests the choice of contractual system is
    crucial
  • 4 basic contracts
  • Concession or license agreement
  • Joint venture (JV)
  • Production-sharing agreement (PSA)
  • Service Agreement

11
The four basic contractual provisions
  • Concession or license agreement
  • Joint venture (JV)
  • Production-sharing agreement (PSA)
  • Service agreement

12
Bilateral Agreement v. Unilateral Permit
  • Should Governments rely on mineral Agreements,
    permits based on the mining code or on a hybrid
    system?

13
Concession or License Agreements
  • Grant Mining company exclusive rights to explore,
    develop, sell, and export Natural Resources from
    a specified area for a fixed period of time

14
Different Ways of Granting Mineral Exploitation
Rights
  • Licensing system based on MC and national
    regulation
  • Systematic use of MAs which complete the national
    MC
  • Hybrid system where national regulations and MAs
    both apply

15
Australian Licensing System
  • Combines contractual and legislative tools
  • Creation of a right to explore or mine is subject
    to licensing by federal and territory governments
  • Governments own the minerals
  • Special negotiating rights granted to Aborigines
    in areas where they hold a claim or interest in
    the land
  • Government ad hoc agreements are justified by the
    idea that the state mining acts are inadequate to
    accommodate large-scale mineral projects

16
Australian Licensing System
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Provides government with a means of coordinating
    regulatory controls and create unique legal
    regime for each project
  • Provides opportunity to maximize local industry
    participation
  • Require TMC to develop infrastructure

17
Australian Licensing System
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Provides TMC with high level of protection from
    arbitrary government action
  • Expensive and time consuming
  • High degree of complexity
  • Overrides MC and can undermine rule of law
    (one-off law)

18
Chilean Licensing System (Hybrid)
  • Hard minerals are exploited under a concession
    regime
  • Grant of mineral rights through legislative
    provisions
  • Separate grant of authorization to invest in
    mining project to foreign investors
  • Mineral ownership is transferred by the state to
    the miner
  • Mining concession issued by courts to first
    petitioner

19
Chilean Licensing System
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Impartiality of body granting the concession
  • First-come-first-serve approach may not favor
    most efficient or profitable bidder

20
Indonesian Licensing System
  • Mineral rights licensing system regarding the
    TMCs is essentially provided for in model mining
    agreements the Contract of Work
  • Government ownership of minerals which cannot be
    transferred to TMC
  • Under Mining Law Minister of Mines can designate
    other parties to carry out mining operations as
    contractors for the government or state companies

21
Indonesian Licensing System
  • A Contract of Work (COW) is a model agreement
    issued by the state, within which the foreign
    company is given right to operate as a concession
    holder, but for and on behalf of the government
  • Mining authorization is just a permit to
    undertake the mining activity. The holder of such
    a mining authority has always to observe the
    prevailing laws and regulations

22
Papua New Guinea Licensing System
  • Small and medium-scale mining projects regulated
    by MC
  • Mining agreements for major projects
  • Mineral resources are owned by the state
  • Ming agreements are not enacted into law anymore
    to allow for changes, ease renegotiation, and
    ensure confidentiality

23
Mining Agreements
  • In the absence of a modern regulatory framework
    MA is an appropriate vehicle to express political
    will
  • MA can fill gaps in MC
  • Allow governments to express their current
    position as opposed to outdated MC
  • A single MA can replace a multiplicity of permits
    and administrative authorizations
  • Gives investor more confidence in stability of
    their rights
  • Issues which are touched upon such as indigenous
    and environmental rights can be included

24
Hybrid System
  • Provided that a modern and comprehensive MC
    exists, a system where a permit is based on the
    MC may work best
  • Avoids one-off agreements and provides
    consistency and certainty
  • MA requires expertise and negotiation skills
    which cannot be found everywhere
  • MA can fill voids of MC
  • Co-existence of MA and MC allows to tailor permit
    to project characteristics.
  • Clear delineation between MA and MC and their
    relationship needed

25
Different Types of MA
  • Service Contract
  • Production-Sharing Agreement
  • Joint Venture
  • The Key Factor that differentiates all of the
    above from colonial concession system is the
    control and ownership by the state in the mining
    venture

26
Concession or License Agreements
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • If production occurs, government earns royalties
    based on gross revenue and/or profit tax based on
    net income both are based on the quantity
    produced and the price at which commodity is sold
  • Risk that government will not realize full
    potential from auction system

27
Joint Ventures
  • No single definition highly flexible tool
  • 2 or more parties wish to pursue a joint
    undertaking in some still to be clarified form
  • Low success rate less commonly used
  • Indonesia JV between rights holder and TMC
    (less common than Contract of Work)
  • As name implies, in JV things are done jointly
    therefore, material issues need to be resolved
    prior to entering into a JV require long
    negotiations to ensure that all matters are
    thoughtfully addressed.

28
Joint Ventures
  • Cooperation between investor and host country
  • State and mining company share equity
  • Partners share losses and profits in proportion
    to their participation in the mining venture
  • The owner of the mining title, installation and
    production may be the host country or the mining
    company, depending on the agreement

29
Joint Ventures
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Government is not alone in the decision-making
    and responsibility for a project
  • Government can count on expertise of oil company
  • Government shares profit, on top of taxes or
    royalties
  • Risks and costs are also shared
  • Responsibility also brings with it potential
    liability, incl. for environmental damage
  • JV is inherently ambiguous and can complicate
    negotiations which tend to be lengthy require
    more legal advice than any other agreement

30
Joint Venture Characteristics
  • Pure JV Typical JV
    Full carry JV Former Soviet
    Union type JV
  • All costs/risks Government
    Government carried Government
    carried through
  • Shared carried through
    through exploration and
    rehabilitation and development
  • Exploration
    development
    until cash flow from operations
  •  
  •  
  • NOC?----------------------------------------------
    --------------------------------------------------
    ?IOC
  • Risk sharing

31
Service Contracts
32
Service Contracts
  • Mining company conducts mining activities on
    behalf of the government
  • Key characteristics
  • Contractor works under governments mandate and
    is paid for its work
  • Government maintains ownership and title of
    minerals
  • Contractor performs part or the whole of services
    needed for mineral exploration and exploitation
  • Government is intended to provide the whole
    financing for the service it contracts out

33
Production-Sharing Agreements
  • First used by Indonesia in 1966 after
    independence to replace old colonial law
    (license concession)
  • Basic Concept State retains ownership of natural
    resources and negotiates profit-sharing system
  • Now common form of agreement, especially in
    Central Asia and the Caucasus
  • PSA recognizes that the ownership of the natural
    resources rest with the state but at the same
    time permits foreign corporations to manage and
    operate the development of the oil field.
  • Mining company carries most financial risks of
    exploration and development
  • Often governments contribute to the share capital
    of the consortium

34
Production-Sharing Agreements
  • Exact split of shares is the result of hard
    bargaining
  • Financial terms host government often earns
    signing bonus, regularly waived for a greater
    share of future profits oil company is first
    entitled to cost recovery definitional problems
    of what is a capital cost.
  • What remains is shared according to the agreed
    percentage division with the host government.
  • Foreign company is required to pay taxes but
    often waived and included in the companys
    portion of the agreed percentage split.
  • PSA are rare in Mining because government does
    not have a major interest in receiving the actual
    production of mining activities as it has in
    Petroleum

35
Production-Sharing Agreements
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Government shares potential profits without
    having to make a direct investment
  • PSA can be enacted into law to provide legal
    security (Azerbaijan and other former Soviet
    republics)
  • Government generally has less knowledge about
    potential of oil field than oil company
  • If government holds significant share, it will
    face conflict of interest it has to balance the
    desire for higher profits with the enforcement of
    environmental and other regulations

36
Production-Sharing Agreements
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • PSA grants oil companies a say in environmental
    and other standards when these standards have
    been incorporated as contractual provisions
    violating a contractual provision is less costly
    than violation of a regulation because only in
    case of a serious or material breach of contract
    is the termination of the agreement a possibility

37
Production-Sharing Agreements
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • Violation of a legal statute is an offense,
    subjective to legislatively approved sanctions
    and penalties
  • Making contracts into law creates a legal
    infrastructure of exceptional situations little
    possibility of developing a coherent and
    comprehensive legal system

38
Production-Sharing Agreements
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages
  • PSA positive legal discrimination for oil
    companies investors in other sectors will
    invariably lobby the host government for similar
    special treatment

39
Contractual Provisions
  • Common Provisions for concession Or License
    Agreements and Production-Sharing Agreements

40
Parties
  • Host government should not assume contractual
    liability as a direct party to an agreement to
    avoid direct responsibility and unlimited
    liability
  • Instead, it should engage a state-owned
    enterprise as a separate legal entity as
    contractual partner to limit its liability in
    case of liability only the enterprises assets
    can be seized
  • Mining companies usually create local
    subsidiaries with limited or no assets of their
    own
  • Government should require guarantee from parent
    company so it can tap into its resources to cover
    potential liabilities

41
Accounting Methods
  • To determine profits, there must be a decision on
    accounting methodology
  • Still no international accounting principles
    only national standards
  • Accounting standards leave room for discretion
    and can lead to serious disputes e.g. they dont
    have provisions prohibiting any particular type
    of expenses clarification in contract needed
  • Accounting standards do not provide resolution
    for intercompany pricing, which can inflate costs
    and decrease government compensation

42
Recovery of Costs
  • How companies account for their costs determines
    the taxes companies pay and the royalties they
    share with governments
  • 2 types of costs
  • Current operating costs expensed in the year in
    which they are incurred immediate reduction in
    taxable profits
  • Capital investment costs long term and can be
    depreciated over a set period of time quick
    depreciation means less profits and decreases
    incentives to continue operations

43
Recovery of Costs
  • Depreciation period is important Companies will
    want to make up this investment as soon as
    possible. There are a number of dangers if this
    is allowed to occur
  • Companies will have less to lose if project fails
    or discontinues
  • Profits for the year will be low
  • Government will receive lower returns on its tax
    or profit sharing terms

44
Taxation or Compensation
  • Taxation of production matters because income
    from oil production often accounts for biggest
    portion of government budget
  • Profit tax
  • Can come in form of corporate income tax or as
    part of the amount government agrees to take from
    any profits
  • Tax inspectors need to collect production and
    sales data and audit company expenses
  • Problem of transfer pricing oil sold to
    subsidiaries may be priced above or below market
    price

45
Taxation or Compensation
  • Royalty or excise tax which is normally a
    percentage of the value of the production
  • Often imposed on top of other taxes
  • Easy to administer
  • Can be inefficient, however, because they tax
    production without regard to profit when project
    is marginal, excise tax may discourage further
    investment
  • Bonuses
  • Signature bonus one-time payment before
    exploration starts
  • Production bonus continued fixed payments
  • Bonuses are fixed payments and do not take
    profitability of project into account

46
Service Agreement
  • SIMPLE Payment for services, effectively set fee
  • CHALLENGE Most energy companies reluctant to
    sell services and/or technology know-how as
    earning more limited

47
Environment
  • Government must have objective standards for
    environmental protection and must not lower them
    in the hope of increasing profits
  • When environmental standards are covered by
    contractual agreements, oil companies can
    interpret, negotiate, or even veto environmental
    standards
  • No reason why environmental standards should be
    lower in developing countries considering that
    oil and gas are in such high demand
  • Governments must take into account that companies
    prefer to pay relatively low noncompliance
    penalties over investments in pollution control
  • Fines should be high enough to act as deterrent
  • Restoration of polluted area by companies should
    be mandatory

48
Work Program
  • A work program details a companys exploration or
    development plan
  • Companies tend to slow down projects they deem
    too expensive
  • Governments should insist on a work plan that
    specifies clearly the circumstances under which a
    project could be delayed or discontinued

49
Stabilization
  • Stabilization provisions protect oil companies
    from the cost of governmental or legislative
    changes affecting contract terms during life of
    agreement
  • Stabilization provisions are extremely
    disadvantageous for governments because it
    freezes the legal and regulatory situation of the
    country for an extended period of time
    (Contractual Colonialism)
  • Variation clause/Renegotiation preferable if
    circumstances change substantially

50
Arbitration
  • Arbitration clauses provide for the settlement of
    conflicts between host country and mining company
    by an arbitration court
  • Types of disputes need to be clearly defined in
    MA
  • Institutional or ad hoc

51
Price
  • Method of determining market price is critical as
    it directly impacts compensation of government
  • A contract should specify what prices serve as
    benchmark (e.g. price established by spot market
    in the particular region)
  • Governments should never accept as contract price
    the price paid between related companies this
    price is likely to be well below market price

52
Termination
  • Considering the significant amount of investment,
    the mining agreement needs to address under what
    circumstances it can be terminated
  • Examples
  • Repeated and/or severe environmental violations
  • If companies no longer develop the mine
  • Other questions
  • Ownership of mine after termination
  • Can government pursue other developing companies?

53
Outside Experts
  • Inevitable and necessary since government
    officials cannot possibly know, understand or
    supervise every of complex natural resource
    development process
  • Governments have to ensure that foreign experts
    who negotiate contracts are truly independent
  • Outside experts must be evaluated, selected, then
    managed and directed
  • Avoiding conflict of interests ensuring trust
    are KEY factors

54
Governing Law
  • Commonly chosen jurisdictions are the U.S. and
    the U.K. or continental European jurisdictions
    such as Switzerland
  • Regulatory authority must be retained by the host
    country, i.e. under no circumstances should a
    foreign law become the valid law of the host
    nation this would violate state sovereignty
  • Government may have to give assurances that laws
    are stable

55
Transparency
  • Mining Agreements are complex and can be subject
    to abuse and corruption
  • Transparency will prevent governments from
    agreeing to terms the public cannot accept
  • To avoid corruption all contractual systems and
    most terms should be disclosed no need for full
    confidentiality.
  • Contract transparency is key to curb corruption
    biggest obstacle to social and economic
    development (World Bank)
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