Chapter 1 Analysis of the Bills
Background
1.1
On 25 May 2011 the Selection Committee referred the following bills to
the Committee for inquiry and report:
- Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (National
Regulator) Bill 2011
- Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage (Registration Fees)
Amendment Bill 2011
- Offshore Petroleum (Royalty) Amendment Bill 2011
- Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Regulatory Levies
Legislation Amendment (2011 Measures No. 2) Bill 2011
- Offshore Resources Legislation Amendment (Personal Property
Securities) Bill 2011
Purpose and overview of the bills
1.2
In its submission, RET noted that the main purpose of the Bills is to
amend the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 and
associated Acts to implement reforms associated with the establishment of a
national offshore regulator in Commonwealth waters. The Bills address the
regulatory framework for petroleum and greenhouse gas storage activities and do
not impinge on the activities themselves.[1]
1.3
The four main objectives of the reforms in the Bills are:
- to provide an
integrated approach to the regulation of safety, structural integrity and
environmental management;
- ensure that this
regulation is independent and appropriately skilled and resourced;
- separate the resource
development function from regulation and retain resource development within
government; and
- reduce the regulatory
inconsistency and duplication that is inherent in the existing regulatory
regime.[2]
1.4
The Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (National
Regulator) Bill 2011 (‘National Regulator Bill’) will amend the Offshore
Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006. It will establish two new
regulatory bodies to administer and regulate petroleum and greenhouse gas
storage operations in Commonwealth waters in the Australian offshore area. The
new bodies will replace the Designated Authorities—State and Northern
Territories Ministers who, through their departments, have performed functions
and exercised powers conferred directly on them by the Offshore Petroleum
and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 and its predecessor Act the Petroleum
(Submerged Lands) Act 1967.[3]
1.5
The purpose of the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage (Registration
Fees) Amendment Bill 2011 is to amend the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse
Gas Storage (Registration Fees) Act 2006 to reference the new National
Offshore Petroleum Titles Administrator (NOPTA), which will be established
through the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment
(National Regulator) Act 2011.[4]
1.6
The purpose of the Offshore Petroleum (Royalty) Amendment Bill 2011 is
to amend the Offshore Petroleum (Royalty) Act 2006 to reference NOPTA.[5]
1.7
The purpose of the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage
Regulatory Levies Legislation Amendment (2011 Measures No.2) Bill 2011 is to
amend the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage (Regulatory Levies)
Act 2003 to impose new cost-recovery levies on holders of offshore
petroleum and greenhouse gas storage titles. The levies will recover the costs
of NOPTA in undertaking its regulatory functions in relation to titles
administration and the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental
Management Authority (NOPSEMA) in undertaking its regulatory functions in
relation to environmental management.[6]
1.8
The purpose of the Offshore Resources Legislation Amendment (Personal
Property Securities) Bill 2011 is to amend the Offshore Petroleum and
Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 and the Offshore Minerals Act 1994 to
exclude application of the Personal Property Securities Act 2009.[7]
Policy history
1.9
In April 2007, the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploration
Association’s (APPEA) Strategic Leaders’ Report, ‘Platform for Prosperity’
identified more efficient national petroleum regulation as a policy priority.
APPEA called for the Productivity
Commission to carry out a review of the onshore and offshore regulatory
framework in order to assist implementation of a more efficient and nationally
consistent petroleum regulatory regime.[8]
1.10
In 2008 the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) identified the
upstream petroleum sector as one area where overlapping and inconsistent
regulation threatens to impede economic activity and agreed that the Productivity
Commission should undertake a review. The Productivity Commission review
process involved extensive consultation including informal discussions with
stakeholders, an issues paper, 20 submissions, four roundtable meetings, a
draft report and a final report in April 2009.
1.11
The Productivity Commission delivered its Review of Regulatory Burden
on the Upstream Petroleum (Oil and Gas) Sector in April 2009 and identified
significant unnecessary regulatory burdens on the sector. Its principal
recommendation to reduce those burdens was the establishment of a national
offshore regulator.[9] The Productivity
Commission also identified significant potential national income gains, in the
order of billions of dollars each year, from the implementation of its recommended
reforms.[10]
1.12
The Commonwealth Government sought to develop an all-of-governments’
response to the Productivity Commission report through the Ministerial Council
on Mineral and Petroleum Resources (MCMPR). In August 2009, the MCMPR
established a Working Group of officials involving all jurisdictions to develop
the responses. By the end of 2009, MCMPR had agreed 25 responses to the
Productivity Commission recommendations, but deferred its consideration of the
recommendations for a national offshore regulator pending the outcomes of the
Montara Commission of Inquiry.
1.13
The Montara incident in 2009 highlighted problems arising from
regulatory gaps between regulation of safety separate from regulation of
integrity, environment and day-to-day operations. The Montara Commission of
Inquiry reported to the Commonwealth Minister for Resources and Energy in June
2010 and the Minister publicly released the report together with the
Commonwealth’s draft response on 24 November 2010. The Commonwealth’s draft
response included the reform model that is now in the current amendment Bills.
Stakeholders were provided three months to comment on the draft response.[11]
1.14
On 18 February 2011, the MCMPR met to consider the Commonwealth’s
proposed establishment of a national offshore regulator. In its submission, RET
notes that:
While a consensus could not be reached, the Commonwealth
Minister advised the Council that, in light of the PC Review and the Montara
Report, continuation of the status quo was not a credible option. Accordingly
he advised the Council that the Commonwealth would move to implement its
proposed reforms in Commonwealth waters. MCMPR agreed to establish a Working
Group of officials from all jurisdictions to guide the transition to the new
regulatory arrangements.[12]
1.15
On 25 May 2011, the Commonwealth Government released its final response
to the Montara Report and its response to the Productivity Commission report.
Both responses incorporate the reform model in the current Bills.[13]
1.16
The importance of the Montara incident to the evolution of policy was
highlighted in the evidence of both RET and APPEA. In evidence before the
Committee Mr Peter Livingston, Manager, Offshore Petroleum Regulatory Reform,
Resources Division, RET, explained:
There have been changes to the proposed model for reform as
these reviews have developed. If you go back and look at the original proposed
government response to the Productivity Commission review, that was looking at
maintaining the National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority unchanged and
creating a separate national offshore petroleum regulator to look after the
other regulatory functions. In light of the Montara response and also the
comments that we received during consultation with stakeholders, we amended
that model fairly significantly so that the national regulator that is now
proposed is an expansion of the National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority so
that it can now have an integrated approach to the regulation of environmental
management and structural integrity at the same time. That was a significant
change. The original model did not propose to retain the joint authority.
However, industry and jurisdictions wanted to maintain that strong state
involvement in the process, so we have amended it there. It has been an
evolutionary process.[14]
1.17
In its evidence, the peak industry organisation also recognised the
significance of Montara. Mr Mark McCallum, Deputy Chief Executive, Policy and
External Relations for APPEA, told the Committee:
The Montara Commission of Inquiry was important in that it
identified and reinforced the need for substantial improvements to the
regulatory regime. In our mind, the commissioner raised real and serious
concerns in relation to the regulatory disconnects, particularly around the
matters of safety, environment and integrity of facilities, and made a very
compelling case for the establishment of a single national regulator.[15]
Discussion of the Bills
1.18
The evidence presented to the Committee has identified three principal
issues in relation to the Bills, which otherwise are a series of machinery
amendment to provide for these three central outcomes. These principal issues
are:
- The creation of a
national regulator for Commonwealth offshore waters for the petroleum and gas
industry;
- The introduction of a
new system of fees for industry based on the principle of full cost recovery;
and
- Amending the Offshore
Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 to exclude application of the
Personal Property Securities Act 2009.
1.19
The Committee notes that the first two have been the subject of
considerable controversy between the Commonwealth and Western Australian
Governments.
National Regulator
1.20
The Bills propose to create a national regulator through the creation of
two regulatory bodies, the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental
Management Authority (NOPSEMA) and the National Offshore Petroleum Titles
Administrator (NOPTA).
1.21
NOPTA will replace the current system of Designated Authorities
(essentially the State and Northern Territory Ministers and their respective
departments) with a single national titles administrator. NOPTA will be part of
the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism. Its principal functions will
be to provide information, assessments, data, analysis, reports, advice and
recommendations to members of the Joint Authorities and the Responsible
Commonwealth Minister in relation to the performance of those Ministers’
functions and the exercise of their powers, the collection, management and
release of data, titles administration, approval and registration of transfers
and dealings, and the keeping of the registers of petroleum and greenhouse gas
titles.[16]
1.22
The Bills retain the Joint Authority as decision maker on key petroleum
and mining title decisions to maintain a state role in these decisions. The
Joint Authority for each State and the Northern Territory comprises the
responsible Commonwealth Minister (currently the Minister for Resources and
Energy) and the relevant State or Northern Territory Minister. The Joint
Authorities make the major decisions under the Act concerning the granting of
petroleum titles, the imposition of title conditions and the cancelling of
titles, as well as core decisions about resource management and resource
security. The responsible Commonwealth Minister’s view prevails in the event of
a disagreement. Statutory timeframes for key title decisions are to be
introduced. The Commonwealth Minister will remain decision maker for greenhouse
gas storage titles.[17]
1.23
NOPTA will make recommendations to the Joint Authority on titles as well
as administer titles and collect data relating to petroleum, mining and
greenhouse gas storage activities in Commonwealth waters. States will have an
option to confer their administrative powers on NOPTA.[18]
1.24
In evidence before the Committee, Ms Fiona Brotherton, a lawyer with the
Australian Government Solicitor outposted to RET, explained the advantages of
NOPTA over current arrangements:
The titles administrator will be able to source that advice
from wherever they wish to, and obviously all relevant and available sources of
advice will be used, including any information and advice that can be provided
by the state department. But the advice will go to the joint authority as a
single set of advice from the titles administrator. That will increase
efficiency over the current situation, where it tends to be the case that the
state minister gets his technical advice from his department and the
Commonwealth minister gets his technical advice from Geoscience Australia, and
sometimes there is toing and froing between the two departments about the
quality of each other's advice and that kind of thing. That will all now be
dealt with in an efficient manner by the titles administrator and there will be
one set of technical advice that goes up.[19]
1.25
NOPSEMA will be created by expanding the functions and title of the
National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority (NOPSA). NOPSA, which is a body
corporate, will continue under the new name and with an extended range of
functions in relation to petroleum and greenhouse gas operations. Its principal
functions will be: occupational health and safety; structural integrity of
facilities, wells and well-related equipment; environmental management; and
regulation of day-to-day petroleum operations. NOPSEMA will appoint and deploy
OHS inspectors and petroleum (and greenhouse gas) project inspectors. NOPSEMA,
like NOPSA, will be fully funded by cost-recovery levies and fees, managed by
means of a Special Account under the Financial Management and Accountability
Act 1997.[20]
1.26
The advantages of the integrated safety, structural integrity and
environmental management functions were highlighted in evidence by RET:
NOPSEMA will have responsibility for occupational health and
safety, structural integrity of facilities, wells and well operations, and also
environmental management. Those are three separate subject areas, but there is
a substantial degree of overlap between them and therefore overlap in the
skills required of the regulator. The structural integrity of facilities,
including pipelines, and structural integrity of wells and well operations is
at the core of what NOPSEMA will be doing. It is a very important element of
occupational health and safety. It is also an extremely important element of
environmental management because if there are people on board a facility,
structural integrity is crucial to their safety. The integrity of the well
means, essentially, its ability to contain pressure within the well and prevent
the release of fluids. Those fluids can be petroleum, oil or gas, but they can
also be drilling mud or whatever comes out of the well while it is being
drilled—whatever is down there. So the containment of fluids within the well is
crucial to the protection of the environment. If you have a well blowout you
have a potential environmental disaster as well as a potential safety
catastrophe, as there will be people on board the vessel or structure that the
drilling is taking place on.[21]
1.27
NOPSEMA will operate in offshore Commonwealth waters. However, in
addition, the States and the Northern Territory will have the option to confer
their equivalent regulatory powers and functions on NOPSEMA in State and Northern
Territory waters. NOPSEMA will be solely a regulator of offshore petroleum
activities. Where States or the NT confer functions and powers under their
coastal waters legislation, the activities of NOPSEMA as regulator of safety,
structural integrity and environmental management will be concerned only with
the offshore operations of titleholders. The conferral will have no bearing
whatever on the State or Territory’s right to grant petroleum rights over its three
nautical mile seabed. The same will be true if Western Australia confers
functions and powers on NOPSEMA in the ‘eligible coastal waters’. The
amendments will enable NOPSEMA to provide assistance on a cost recovery basis
to State, NT and international governments and regulators, provided the
assistance is within the scope of its functions.[22]
1.28
Jurisdictional areas in which NOPSEMA and NOPTA will or may operate are:
- Commonwealth waters – these are the waters covered
by the Commonwealth Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006,
i.e. waters of the territorial sea between 3 and 12 nautical miles as well as
the continental shelf, and the offshore areas of external Territories (such as
Ashmore and Cartier Islands). NOPSEMA and the Titles Administrator will
function in all Commonwealth waters.
- Designated coastal waters of each State and the
Northern Territory—these are the waters covered by the State and Northern
Territory Petroleum (Submerged Lands) Acts, i.e. the first 3 nautical miles of
the territorial sea adjacent to each State and the Northern Territory, plus (in
the case of Western Australia) some historic petroleum title areas landward of
the (3-mile) territorial sea baseline but external to the State. In designated
coastal waters, functions and powers may be conferred on NOPSEMA by the
relevant State’s or the Northern Territory’s Petroleum (Submerged Lands) Act
and regulations. Functions and powers may also be conferred on the Titles
Administrator.
- Eligible coastal waters (WA only)—these are waters
landward of the (3-mile) territorial sea baseline that are external to the
State. Only Western Australia has any offshore resources activity in waters in
this category. WA is able to confer functions and powers on NOPSEMA on the same
basis as in designated coastal waters.
- Any State/NT waters or onshore—A State or the
Northern Territory may contract with NOPSEMA for the provision of regulatory
services. In relation to the provision of services onshore, constitutional
restrictions apply.[23]
1.29
In its submission, RET notes that the ‘Bill thus provides the potential
to avoid any offshore boundary between regulatory regimes’ and that:
NOPSEMA and NOPTA will provide significant regulatory reform
by replacing seven DAs and their Departments and will deliver significant
efficiency gains and reduction in regulatory burden. NOPSEMA and NOPTA together
provide the integrated approach to regulation and separate titles
administration recommended by the Montara Commission of Inquiry.[24]
1.30
Further, there is an explicit function that NOPTA and NOPSEMA will ‘each
have an express function of cooperating with the other in matters relating to
the administration and enforcement of the Act and regulations’:
While it is an important aspect of the new regime that the
two bodies will act entirely independently of each other in their
decision-making and regulatory practices, a level of administrative
coordination between the agencies will assist in minimising any potential
impact on the industry of having offshore operations regulated by two different
entities.[25]
1.31
In evidence before the Committee, RET highlighted the key feature of the
new regulatory regime—the separation of the resource management and regulatory
functions and the integration of safety, structural integrity and environmental
management:
The Montara inquiry and the Macondo disaster in the Gulf of
Mexico have highlighted the importance of having a regulator of petroleum
operations that is independent of government resources departments. This
package of bills separates the resources development functions of the joint
authorities and their departments from the regulation of human health and
safety, the structural integrity of facilities, wells and well operations, and
environmental management and gives the regulator the necessary independence.[26]
1.32
In its submission and evidence before the Committee, APPEA highlighted
the need for a further degree of integration, the accreditation of NOPSEMA
under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act:
Montara in particular showed regulatory disconnect. You
cannot just regulate for environment. You are regulating for the environment;
you are regulating to make sure that hydrocarbons do not escape,
basically—which is what safety regulators do as well and which is what
integrity regulators do as well. Just regulating for the environment under the
EPBC Act, prudently, the environment minister should have access to people who
are experts in corrosion, well design, well construction, concreting, welding—a
whole suite of things that relate to the integrity of facilities, and they do
not. They do not have access to that expertise. So, if you are going to
regulate for the environment, you need to make sure that you cover off each and
every one of those skill sets, because you are regulating, really, for the
integrity of facilities.
The establishment of NOPSEMA will have that exact skills set,
will have experts in every one of those fields and will be looking at the
integrity of facilities. For us it makes sense—good sense—for the environment
minister to consider on drawing on that expertise, drawing on that skill base
to make sure that, diligently, he has access to the right sets of expertise.
That being said, I am not questioning the environmental credentials of those working
under the EPBC Act. I am merely suggesting that, to regulate for the
environment, you also need to regulate for the integrity of facilities. To do
so, you need that broader skills set.[27]
1.33
In evidence before the Committee, RET indicated that accreditation of
NOPSEMA to carry out functions under the Environment Protection and
Biodiversity Conservation Act would represent a further efficiency and was
a possible outcome.[28]
The Western Australian Position
1.34
The Western Australian Government is opposed to the creation of a
national regulator.[29] In evidence before the
Committee, Mr Bill Tinapple, Director,
Petroleum Division, Western Australian Departments of Mines and Petroleum
stated:
We still think that the old joint authority and designated
authority system was not broken, so we do not see a need to throw out the baby
with the bathwater. There were improvements being made almost daily, and we
think it could be improved to the extent that it would offer a better system
than what is proposed in these amendments.[30]
1.35
Western Australia believe that the Bills will actually complicate the
regulatory system by creating two regulators where there is now only one,
replacing the single Designated Authority with a national regulator in
Commonwealth waters and a state regulator in coastal waters.[31]
1.36
The Western Australian Government seeks three changes to the Bills,
reflecting its concerns about royalties, the role of the joint authority and
consultation through NOPSEMA: Mr Tinapple explained:
Western Australia is the only state that has royalties from
the offshore area and we believe that we should be able to maintain the
administration of those areas for royalties. We have been doing it for 25 years
and doing it, we believe, reasonably efficiently … As far as the joint
authority is concerned, we believe that although the joint authority that has
worked well for 40 years or so has been preserved, it is a single almost
Superman kind of joint authority from the states’ viewpoint. Western Australia and
the other states will have an input, but there is no support staff and no
recognition of consultation with other state agencies, so we would like to see
something reflected in the amendments for that. Finally,
NOPSEMA, as a statutory authority, is really an authoritative agency unto itself.
There is no requirement for consultation or notice to be given to the state for
NOPSEMA.[32]
1.37
The Western Australian Government is concerned at the loss of control
over the setting of royalties, a significant source of State revenue (over $800
million per annum and rising[33]). In its submission, the
Department of Mines and Petroleum noted that though the changes would have no
impact on State revenue, the following responsibilities will move from the
Department of Mines and Petroleum (DMP) to NOPTA:
- Involvement in
setting the royalty rates.
- Negotiation of
wellhead royalty schedules (agreements) with holders of licences.
- Determination of the
wellhead point and the value of petroleum at the wellhead.
- Assessment/determination
of the quantity of petroleum recovered.
- Assessment and audit
of monthly royalties payable.
- Exemption from
royalties.
- Forecasting of
Northwest Shelf royalties.
1.38
The submission argues that this is a ‘significant departure from the
practical and cooperative approach to administration of the offshore areas that
was put in place under the 1979 Offshore Constitutional Settlement’, and that:
WA does not support the amendments to the Offshore
Petroleum Royalty Act 2006 in the absence of a Service Level Agreement
(SLA) with WA to continue this function. The amendments remove the State’s
involvement in the administration of royalty arrangements for the North West
Shelf (NWS) Project (WA-1-P and WA-28-P). WA is the only jurisdiction that
receives any royalties under this legislation.[34]
1.39
The submissions recommends ‘that all references to the “Designated
Authority” in the current legislation are replaced with “the Western Australian
Member of the Joint Authority”’ rather than NOPTA, ‘or a clear Policy Statement
is made that WA will continue this function under a SLA’ (Service Level
Agreement).[35]
1.40
In evidence before the Committee, Mr David Norris, of the Royalties
Division of DMP, emphasised the complexity of the royalties regime and the
necessary expertise that had developed within DMP to deal with it:
From our perspective we have said that this particular act,
which is one of the acts being amended, is an act that only relates to Western
Australia. It only relates to the North West Shelf Project, which has been
paying royalties since it started up with the first royalty payments coming
through around 1984. The arrangement that we have in place is relatively
complex—it is based on sales values with deductions of capital and operating
costs. It is called a wellhead royalty system, and the objective is to try to calculate
the value of the petroleum at the wellhead and then apply the royalty rate to
it. It is a complex arrangement that involves operating and capital costs, LNG
shipping deductions and, in addition to that, interest and boring costs. It is
a very specialised role that is required. It is not a general accounting-type
qualification that would enable a person to do it but it is a very specialised
role that the state has been successfully doing for 25 years now in terms of
looking after the North West Shelf Project.[36]
1.41
The Western Australian Government has also questioned the effectiveness
of arrangements for the Joint Authority under the Bills. In its submission, DMP
argues that ‘the creation of the national regulator in the main amendment Bill
does not contain any provisions to safeguard the State’s interests. The State
member of the Joint Authority has no formal access to advice other than that
received from NOPTA’:[37]
The reality is that for the Joint Authority to be effective,
DMP will have to continue to provide advice to the WA member of the Joint
Authority, This capability is currently funded through the financial returns
that WA receives from administration of these projects, which will be removed
with the establishment of NOPTA.
Activities taking place in Commonwealth waters offshore WA
can come under significant public and media scrutiny due to their proximity to
sensitive environments, including Margaret River, Rottnest Island, the Abrolhos
Islands and Ningaloo Reef. It is therefore critical that WA maintains the
capability to assess these activities and ensure that appropriate safeguards
are in place.
1.42
DMP is also concerned that there is no provision for any linkage to the
Western Australian member of the Joint Authority ‘which could act to safeguard
the State’s interests in the areas that are NOPSEMA’s responsibility’.
1.43
In view of this, in its submission, DMP has recommended that:
amendments are incorporated into the Offshore Petroleum
and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (National Regulator) Bill 2011 to provide
recognition that State/NT members of the Joint Authorities will incorporate
advice from State/NT agencies in making decisions and that this function may
require some limited staffing resources which should be cost recovered or
funded through another appropriate mechanism.
1.44
And that:
further amendments are incorporated into the Offshore
Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Amendment (National Regulator) Bill 2011 to
provide a consultation mechanism between NOPSEMA and the State/NT members of
the Joint Authorities, which would include notice of approvals.[38]
Response to Western Australian Position
1.45
In evidence before the Committee, RET addressed the concerns put forward
by the Western Australian Government. Mr Graeme Waters, General Manager,
Offshore Petroleum Regulatory Reform, Resources Division, RET, highlighted the
work undertaken to develop a Memorandum of Understanding between the
Commonwealth and Western Australian Governments. He stated:
The alternative that was put forward by the Department of Mines
and Petroleum in Western Australia, Minister Moore's alternative, was talking
about cooperative working arrangements and collocation, and everything that sat
underneath that, which Mr Tinapple now refers to as the ‘big shed’. We saw a
lot of positives in that approach. So we progressed that, which then led to a
meeting between Minister Moore and Minister Ferguson, where an in-principle
agreement was reached between the two to further flesh out this notion of
cooperative working arrangements. To that end, we developed a memorandum of
understanding, which addressed all of those issues and it exists between the
CEO of NOPSA, the Secretary of the Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism
and the Director General from DMP. We reached agreement on
those things, Minister Ferguson signed the MOU and it was sent to DMP in late
May. That is where we have got to, and all of those issues relating to
consultation—working together, the notion of the executive liaison committee
and how these three co-located organisations would operate—is explained in the
MOU.[39]
1.46
The importance of the Memorandum of Understanding, and
Commonwealth–Western Australian co-operation generally, to industry was
emphasised by APPEA in its evidence before the Committee. Mr McCallum told the Committee:
We view the arrangements between the Commonwealth and the
states as critically important and we have been encouraged by the recent
efforts of cooperation, particularly between Western Australia Minister for
Resources Norman Moore and Commonwealth minister for resources Martin Ferguson.
For us, that cooperation should see an agreement to co-locate the offshore and
onshore regulatory agencies with interests in WA. That is important because it
should result, we would hope, in greater efficiencies, greater streamlining and
in sharing the rare expertise that is required to undertake the regulatory
oversight of this very complex and dynamic industry. So we look forward to the
outcomes of those negotiations between the respective ministers.[40]
1.47
The first amendment proposed by Western Australia, covering royalties,
has been one of close discussion between the Commonwealth and Western
Australia, and one where the Commonwealth has indicated it is prepared to give
further consideration to Western Australia’s position.[41]
1.48
The issue of advice to the State member of a Joint Authority is regarded
by RET as a matter for the States themselves—one of the members of the Joint
Authority is always a State Minister, who, by definition, has access to advice
from their department. Recognising and financially supporting State input into
the Joint Authority could undermine the role of sole technical advisor to the
Joint Authority.[42]
1.49
The third issue raised by Western Australia, the proposed amendment requiring
formal consultation between NOPSEMA and the Western Australian Government, was
rejected on the grounds that it would impinge upon the independence of the
regulator and confuse operational and safety/integrity/environmental decision
making:
A right to be consulted makes WA DMP part of the legal
process of NOPSEMA making the regulatory decision and, as we have said
previously, it is the major object of these reforms to separate regulation from
resource development. A right to be consulted may sound
quite innocuous and in most cases indeed it is. It can however be used
tactically to great effect to achieve outcomes that you want that are not
necessarily related to the process that the consultation is about. A right to
be consulted is, in the right hands, an ability to delay the decision-making
process. The ability to delay is a very powerful tool. If you consider that the
company that is applying for the regulatory approval or consent—this may relate
to the drilling of a well—may have had a drilling rig booked for the last six
months. It might be due to arrive in three days time. The time when a drilling
rig is sitting idle will cost the company maybe $500,000 a day, possibly a
million dollars a day for sitting there doing nothing. That is an enormous cost
to the company
…apart from that sort of tactical use of that power, there is
also the fact that if WA DMP has a right to be consulted in the making of
NOPSEMA’s regulatory decisions, that makes WA DMP’s interests relevant to the
making of NOPSEMA’s decisions. You do not put in a right to be consulted unless
that person’s interests or position is going to be relevant to the making of
the decision and our position is that resource development issues are not
relevant to the making of decisions about safety, integrity or environment.[43]
Cost recovery
1.50
In its submission to the inquiry, RET notes that the Australian
Government ‘has decided that the costs of regulating petroleum and greenhouse
gas storage activities in Commonwealth waters should be recovered from those
industries which gain the benefits from those activities. This will ensure that
the costs of regulation do not fall upon the wider community.’[44]
1.51
The cost recovery process will fall into two stages. First, the costs of
establishing NOPTA and NOPSEMA will be recovered from industry by the
Commonwealth retaining registration fee revenues for a minimum of 24 months
subject to the lesser of $30.6 million or the actual establishment costs being
recovered. Second, from 1 January 2012, NOPTA and NOPSEMA’s fees and levies
will be re-set to ensure they operate on a full cost recovery basis. On-going
fees and charges will be subject to three yearly reviews.
1.52
One key aspect of the change is greater transparency in cost recovery.
The RET submission notes that:
As the petroleum and greenhouse gas storage industries will
pay the costs of their regulation, it is appropriate that they are provided
full transparency in the raising of revenue from fees and levies and its
expense on the regulation and administration of petroleum and greenhouse gas
storage activities. Under the current arrangements there is no transparency in
the Designated Authority’s costs and the revenues from offshore petroleum fees
frequently significantly exceed the DAs’ costs of administering petroleum
titles.[45]
1.53
RET estimates that the reforms will result in an on-going cost reduction
for industry in the order of $5 million per year after the establishment costs
of NOPSEMA and NOPTA are recovered. While the establishment costs are being
recovered, industry will incur a cost increase in the order of $10 million per
year for about two years. The submission further notes that:
It is expected that the annual net cost reduction for
industry is likely to be less than the average annual cost of the registration
fees because NOPSEMA will adopt a more robust approach to the regulation and
compliance monitoring of the structural integrity of wells and environmental
management than has previously occurred.[46]
Table 1 Estimated Cost Impacts on Industry
|
Existing
Regime
Full
year costs
$
Million |
Establishment
Phase (a)
Full
year costs
$
Million |
Final
Regime (b)
Full
year costs
$
Million |
Registration Fees |
15 |
15 |
- |
Non-registration fees |
7 |
- |
- |
NOPSA |
15 |
- |
- |
NOPSEMA |
- |
23 |
23 |
NOPTA |
- |
8 |
8 |
Total |
37 |
46 |
31 |
(a) Establishment
Phase refers to the period after the Commencement of NOPSEMA and NOPTA during
which the Commonwealth retains registration fee revenues to recover the
establishment costs of NOPSEMA and NOPTA.
(b) Final Regime
refers to the period following the abolition of registration fees.
Source RET,
Submission no. 1, Attachment A
1.54
RET will prepare full Cost Recovery Impact Statements prior to
determining new fees and levies for NOPSEMA and NOPTA’s ongoing costs. These
processes will provide more accurate indications of the cost impacts on
industry.[47]
1.55
The RET submission emphasises that one of the key objectives of the
reforms in the amendment Bills is to reduce unnecessary delays in approvals
times. The benefits of reducing approvals times for industry will far outweigh
any short term cost to industry while the establishment costs of NOPSEMA and
NOPTA are recovered.[48]
Criticism of new cost recovery model
1.56
In its submission and in evidence before the Committee, APPEA
highlighted its opposition to fees collected on a full cost recovery basis,
arguing that there is a strong case for recognition of public good outcomes in
the cost of industry regulation. APPEA’s submission states:
APPEA and its members are strongly opposed to full cost
recovery being applied to the regulatory functions associated with the control,
administration and technical oversight of the industry’s operations. While
there is a benefit to the industry from regulatory third party oversight of the
industry’s operations, the industry remains of the view that there are
substantial public benefits associated with the regulation and oversight of the
industry.
The industry strongly believes that the significant public
benefits derived from the effective and efficient oversight of the industry
represents a public good that should be recognised through at least some
publicly funded contribution.[49]
1.57
APPEA is also concerned that there may be some discrepancy between the
establishment costs of NOPTA and NOPSEMA and the fee revenue collected to cover
that cost.[50]
1.58
The Western Australian Government opposes the new fee structure because
of the loss of revenue from registration fees. In its submission, DMP states:
The State will also suffer a funding gap due to the loss of
registration fee revenue at the same time that WA will need to cover start-up
costs for the co-location of the State and Commonwealth petroleum regulators.
The Commonwealth amendments make no mention of the co-location exercise that is
the subject of the recently finalised MOU. This is indicative of the need to
ensure cooperation in the regulation of the petroleum industry especially as WA
is in effect funding the establishment of the NOPTA and NOPSEMA.[51]
1.59
In evidence before the Committee, Mr Tinapple noted that the costs
savings identified by RET under the new fee structure did not take account of
the need for States to raise revenue to cover their own costs following the
loss of fee revenue. He stated:
I believe that DRET had put in their table about the
financial forecast for the cost of the national regulator showing basically
that, once it is established, the cost would go from $37 million to $31
million. Whilst that is true for the best estimate for the Commonwealth area,
something that is not included in that…is that the states—not just Western
Australia, but Western Australia has much larger activity happening in state
waters than onshore—will want to, will have to, cost recover their regulatory
services. Having the two agencies there, we will be adding to that $31 million
and it will be a less efficient way than having a single DA based agency. We
will have our own system, our own state agency, and that will add to the cost
of the industry.[52]
1.60
The overall loss of revenue to Western Australia from the abolition of
fees is expected to be in the order of $14 million per annum.[53]
Response to criticism of new cost recovery model
1.61
In its response to criticism of full cost recovery, RET has highlighted
the findings of the Productivity Commission in favour of full cost recovery in
the regulation of the petroleum sector[54] In its report, the
Productivity Commission recommended that:
The current full cost recovery model used for the National
Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority should be used to fund any new regulatory
agency. As with the National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority, the cost
recovery model adopted for a new regulatory agency should be subject to regular
review and appropriate governance arrangements. Only appropriately defined
costs associated with regulating the upstream petroleum sector should be
recovered by the new national offshore petroleum regulator. Implementation of
this recommendation should be associated with the removal of the registration
fee for transfers and dealings.[55]
1.62
In evidence before the Committee, RET stated that the NOPSA model ‘is
consistent with the Australia government’s cost recovery guidelines’, and that
that ‘is the model that the government has chosen to implement.’[56]
1.63
RET’s position on the recovery of cost by Western Australia was that it
was Western Australia’s ‘right and their responsibility’ to levee charges in
State waters, but that they have no ability to recover costs in Commonwealth
waters. Western Australia also has the option of reducing its own regulatory
burden by conferring powers over coastal waters on NOPSEMA.[57]
Personal Property Securities
1.64
The Offshore Resources Legislation Amendment (Personal Property
Securities) Bill 2011 is a stand-alone measure, amending the Offshore
Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 and the Offshore Minerals
Act 1994 to exclude application of the Personal Property Securities Act
2009 to the registration and approval of offshore petroleum, greenhouse gas
and minerals titles and dealings in relation to those titles.
1.65
In its submission, RET notes that the Bill:
… will ensure that necessary safeguards remain in place to
enable the regulator to ensure the suitability of entities that potentially are
able to exercise control over Australia’s offshore petroleum and greenhouse gas
storage resources, while maintaining the legal certainty of treatment of those
interests, and also will achieve consistency with State/Territory onshore
mining legislation. This ensures that Australian Government objectives are met,
while the regulatory burden on industry is not increased.[58]
1.66
The submission further notes that if no amendments are made to the Offshore
Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 and the Offshore Minerals
Act 1994, offshore petroleum, greenhouse gas and minerals titles will be
‘personal property’ for the purposes of the Personal Properties Securities
Act 2009, and that the registration and other provisions of the Personal
Properties Securities Act will apply to these titles, in addition to the
requirements of the Offshore
Petroleum and Minerals Acts:
This Bill implements the policy decision to expressly exclude
application of the PPS Act for the purposes of dealings relating to titles
under the OPGGS Act and the OMA. As a result of the proposed amendments, all
types of rights and interests acquired in relation to those titles and
licences, are not personal property for the purposes of the PPS Act.[59]
1.67
Excluding application of the Personal Properties Securities Act to
the Offshore Petroleum and Minerals Acts is designed to ensure consistency
between the onshore and offshore mining regimes, and minimise a potential
regulatory burden and cost to industry with the potential to skew investment
between onshore and offshore.[60] It will also prevent a
situation whereby a dealing refused under the Offshore Petroleum Act could be
registered on the Personal Properties Securities Register, leading to legal
confusion over the standing of the security interest.
1.68
RET considers that ‘the amendments are necessary to meet the Australian
Government’s ongoing commitment and objective to ensure regulatory certainty
while keeping the regulatory burden on industry to a minimum’.[61]
1.69
Speaking to the Bill before the Committee, Ms Jessica Brown, Legislation
Review and Timor Sea, Offshore Resources Branch, Resources Division, RET,
stated:
There are a number of interests that are contained in both
the Petroleum Act and the Offshore Minerals Act that would be captured by the
personal property securities regime that is being established by the Personal
Property Securities Act, so there would be a couple of implications from that.
It would create duplication in that there would be a registration scheme under
our regime as well as the national register being established by the PPS Act.
Minister Ferguson has agreed with the Attorney-General that there is a
necessity to keep the registration scheme under the offshore petroleum and
offshore minerals regimes because there is an approvals mechanism contained
there in terms of ensuring the suitability of people who have interests in
these significant resources. So we need to retain that approvals mechanism.
That would be duplication in itself, and a situation could possibly arise where
there could be an interest that was rejected under our regime but was
registered on the PPS register; because there is no approvals mechanism
involved. They simply register and it comes into being on that register. So
that could create some legal uncertainty in terms of the status of that
interest.
The last thing I would point out is that we have consulted
with our state and territory counterparts for onshore mining and state and
territory governments have to actively opt out of this regime because
Commonwealth legislation overrides state and territory legislation. So, in
terms of maintaining the consistency in the industry both onshore and offshore,
we think it is important that we also opt out.[62]
Committee conclusions
1.70
The Committee believes there is a global trend towards one regulator
dealing with safety, structural integrity and environmental issues, and the
evidence that we have been given as a Committee is that the expertise these
days needs to incorporate all those skill sets. There seems to be a trend in
the world, especially post the disasters in the Gulf of Mexico, to make sure
that we have regimes for safety, structural integrity and environmental
regulation separate from the areas of managing production, royalties and
collecting of income. There are people with those skill sets that work in the
world, and probably one difficulty will be ensuring that we have people with
those skills within our regulator. That is the rationale behind these Bills and
the issues we are dealing with as a parliament at the moment.
1.71
The starting point for these Bills is the essential reforms identified
by the Productivity Commission report and the report of the Montara Commission
of Inquiry. The Committee agrees with the Government that failing to address
the findings of these reports is not an option. The Committee also believes
that these Bills do fulfil the objectives laid down by those reports. The Bills
are actually reforming regulatory processes, tidying up the present arrangement
between regulatory bodies for the new era we are in now in for the regulation
of offshore petroleum. The Bills are making the regulatory environment more
efficient and effective and are moving towards world’s best practice.
1.72
An essential part of this is cooperation between the Commonwealth and
the States and Northern Territory in the transition to the national regulator.
The Committee is heartened by the evidence of cooperation between Western
Australia and the Commonwealth in the formulation of a Memorandum of
Understanding to guide government and industry along the new regulatory path.
The success of that process is essential to the future of the industry. Both Governments
have a responsibility to make it work.
1.73
In terms of the detail of the Bills, the Committee endorses the
formation of NOPTA and NOPSEMA to replace the current regulatory regime. We
endorse the retention of the Joint Authorities, but with NOPTA as the principle
source of technical advice. We fully endorse the independence of NOPSEMA and do
not believe that its activities should be compromised by mandatory consultation
with outside bodies. The independence of the regulator of safety, structural
integrity and environmental management should be ensured. The Committee
therefore rejects two of the three recommendations made by the Western
Australian Government.
1.74
On the other hand, the Committee recognises the importance of the
royalties to the Western Australian Government, and the expertise that the
Department of Mines and Petroleum has developed over many years in negotiating
and setting royalties. Leaving this matter in the hands of the Western
Australian Government will not affect the integrity of the reforms and will
allow access to the existing expertise of the Department of Mines and Petroleum
in administering royalties.
Recommendation 1 |
1.75 |
The Committee recommends that the Designated Authority role
in the Offshore Petroleum (Royalty) Act 2006 be conferred upon the
State member of the relevant Joint Authority under the Offshore Petroleum
(Royalty) Amendment Bill 2011. |
1.76
The Committee also recognises the national and global trend around the
world to go to full cost recovery for operational regulation, and endorses the
cost recovery mechanisms created by these bills. Industry must expect to face
closer scrutiny on safety and environmental matters as part of its social
licence to operate. Public confidence in industry and its effective regulation
is an important consideration for industry as well as government.
1.77
The Committee endorses the amending Bill dealing with personal property
securities. This is important for regulatory consistency and to prevent
confusion.
1.78
The Committee believe that with the new responsibility for environmental
oversight, the NOPSEMA Advisory Board should include members with environmental
expertise. This will be especially important if and when NOPSEMA receives
accreditation under the Environment Protection Biodiversity Conservation Act.
Recommendation 2 |
1.79 |
The Committee recommends that given NOPSEMA’s environmental
management function, the membership of the NOPSEMA Advisory Board include
members with relevant environmental expertise. |
1.80
The Committee notes that the Senate Economics Legislation Committee has
reported on these Bills and recommended their passage, with a dissent calling
for further negotiations with Western Australia before the Bills were passed.
1.81
The Committee endorses the Bills.
Recommendation 3 |
1.82 |
The Committee recommends that the House of Representatives
pass the Bills. |
Hon Dick Adams MP
Committee Chair
24 June 2011