
COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 17 (UPI) -- Ohio's governor said he'd like to raise taxes for oil and natural gas producers in the state, though the industry complained of the potential increase.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican, proposed raising taxed on oil and natural gas produced from Ohio's shale deposits to 4 percent, up from the initial rate of 1.5 percent.
The governor said the current tax rate is "so low because Ohio has never been a major oil producer and our 40-year-old oil company tax never envisioned the explosion in oil and gas production we are seeing now," the Platts news service reports.
BP Chief Executive Officer Bob Dudley touted Ohio's energy potential at a Cleveland conference. He said there might be as much as 15.7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in the state, making it one of the largest potential energy producers in the country.
The Ohio Oil and Gas Association said tax burdens shouldn't fall on "the state's emerging, but yet economically unproven, shale industry."
Ohio hosts portions of the Marcellus and Utica plays, two of the richest shale deposits in the United States. The American Petroleum Institute, a trade group representing more than 500 companies, said shale natural gas was a "game changer" for the region.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Additional Energy Resources Stories | |
TEL AVIV, Israel, May 17 (UPI) --
Nobel Energy of Houston, which discovered Israel's big gas fields in the eastern Mediterranean, is pressing the government to decide soon on an energy export policy as the prospect of an undersea pipeline to Turkey gains credibility.
|
TEL AVIV, Israel, May 17 (UPI) --
mid growing concerns about security threats from Syria and Iran, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has greatly reduced planned defense budget cuts.
|
Properties repossessed by lenders in the first quarter took an average of 477 days to complete the foreclosure process, up from 414 days in the previous...
|
Nobody likes spending cuts but the champion of that attitude is clearly President Barack Obama, who seems to have a very clear pain-avoidance agenda.
|
| Stories | Photos | Comments |
View Caption