LONDON: The UK Government handed Shell a £112m tax rebate last year, despite the oil giant making billions of pounds in profits. Most of the payment from HM Revenue and Customs is a contribution towards Shell’s costs for decommissioning its North Sea oil and gas fields. It follows a similar payment of £85m in 2016. The figures highlight how the North Sea has transformed from being a cash cow for the Government over four decades, to being a drain on the nation’s finances, as the remaining oil has become unprofitable to extract.
Energy research group Wood Mackenzie estimates that oil companies will spend £53bn from 2017 winding down North Sea fields but the Treasury will hand them back £24bn in tax relief. In a January report, Wood Mackenzie said one fifth of the likely cost is will hit over the coming five years, meaning almost £5bn will be paid to oil companies by the end of 2021. This is not the first time Shell has been criticised for its tax practices. The company paid no UK corporation tax in 2014, despite making a global profit of £19.87bn that year. Shell said on Wednesday that it paid governments a total of £3.5bin in income taxes and £1.8bn in fees related to its extraction activities last year. Jessica Uhl, Shell’s chief financial officer, said: “Shell believes that transparency is an essential tool in building trust in tax systems.