Originally posted by Flubber
I am thinking about the general good as well. Add special taxes and they become a disincentive to investment. The companies today have more projects that are feasible than they have people and equipment to do them.
Ask premier Williams of Newfoundland how a hardball stance to take a bigger stake worked for him when it came to the Hebron project. Bottom line was his demands were more than similar projects elsewhere so other projects beat that project out for capital.. . . Now the long-term effect on oil will be unchanged since some other project with a similar production rate will get done.
But in an attempt to take more "cream", the flow of milk disappeared
I am thinking about the general good as well. Add special taxes and they become a disincentive to investment. The companies today have more projects that are feasible than they have people and equipment to do them.
Ask premier Williams of Newfoundland how a hardball stance to take a bigger stake worked for him when it came to the Hebron project. Bottom line was his demands were more than similar projects elsewhere so other projects beat that project out for capital.. . . Now the long-term effect on oil will be unchanged since some other project with a similar production rate will get done.
But in an attempt to take more "cream", the flow of milk disappeared
Do you think Suncor would shut down if the GoA announced a royalty increase?
What if the GoC slapped a tax on energy company profits?
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