Pradhan made a case for levy of ad-valorem rate of cess, which results in higher payouts when prices are high and lower when rates fall. Currently, state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) and Oil India Ltd (OIL) pay a cess of Rs 4,500 per tonne on crude oil they produce from their allotted fields on a nomination basis. Cairn has to pay the same cess for oil from the Rajasthan block.
"We have asked the Finance Ministry that the cess pattern has to be changed to ad valorem from fixed rate now. Make it formula-driven," Pradhan told reporters here.
The Ministry wants cess to be levied at no more than 8 per cent of the price of crude realised.
The Oil Industry (Development) Act, 1974, provides for collection of cess as a duty of excise on indigenous crude oil. Cess incurred by producers is not recoverable from refineries and thus, forms part of cost of production of crude oil. The cess was levied at Rs 60 per tonne in July 1974 and subsequently revised from time to time.
More From This Section
While the government had effectively linked the cess rate to prevailing crude oil prices in the past, there has been no reduction when the oil prices have declined.
"For a net importer of oil, availability is an issue. Domestic production meets 20-25 per cent of the oil needs. We have to protect this level and increase it. For this to happen, fiscal pattern has to be looked into," Pradhan said.
The producers say the current cess rate constitutes about one-third of the oil price, which has severely impacted several small discoveries and marginal fields, making many of the projects unviable.
In the low oil price environment, several countries including the UK, the US, and China have changed fiscal systems to increase production and promote investments.
Most of crude oil produced in India comes from pre-NELP and nomination blocks and is liable for payment of cess.