TITLE 26 - INTERNAL REVENUE
CHAPTER I - INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
SUBCHAPTER A - INCOME TAX
PART 1 - INCOME TAXES
1.43 - 2 - Qualified enhanced oil recovery project.
(a) Qualified enhanced oil recovery project. A qualified enhanced
oil recovery project is any project that meets all of the following
requirements (1) The project involves the application (in accordance with sound
engineering principles) of one or more qualified tertiary recovery methods (as
described in paragraph (e) of this section) that is reasonably expected to
result in more than an insignificant increase in the amount of crude oil that
ultimately will be recovered; (2) The project is located within the United
States (within the meaning of section 638(1)); (3) The first injection of
liquids, gases, or other matter for the project (as described in paragraph (c)
of this section) occurs after December 31, 1990; and (4) The project is
certified under 1.433.
(b) More than insignificant increase. For purposes of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, all the facts and circumstances determine whether the
application of a tertiary recovery method can reasonably be expected to result
in more than an insignificant increase in the amount of crude oil that
ultimately will be recovered. Certain information submitted as part of a
project certification is relevant to this determination. See 1.433(a)(3)(i)(D).
In no event is the application of a recovery method that merely accelerates the
recovery of crude oil considered an application of one or more qualified
tertiary recovery methods that can reasonably be expected to result in more
than an insignificant increase in the amount of crude oil that ultimately will
be recovered.
(c) First injection of liquids, gases, or other matter(1) In
general.
The first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter generally occurs on the
date a tertiary injectant is first injected into the reservoir.
The first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter does not include (i) The
injection into the reservoir of any liquids, gases, or other matter for the
purpose of pretreating or preflushing the reservoir to enhance the efficiency
of the tertiary recovery method; or (ii) Test or experimental injections.
(2) Example. The following example illustrates the principles of
this paragraph (c).
Example. Injections to pretreat the reservoir. In 1989, A, the owner of an
operating mineral interest in a property, began injecting water into the
reservoir for the purpose of elevating reservoir pressure to obtain miscibility
pressure to prepare for the injection of miscible gas in connection with an
enhanced oil recovery project. In 1992, A obtains miscibility pressure in the
reservoir and begins injecting miscible gas into the reservoir. The injection of
miscible gas, rather than the injection of water, is the first injection of
liquids, gases, or other matter into the reservoir for purposes of determining
whether the first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter occurs after
December 31, 1990.
(d) Significant expansion exception(1) In general. If a project for
which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter (within the
meaning of paragraph (c)(1) of this section) occurred before January 1, 1991,
is significantly expanded after December 31, 1990, the expansion is treated as
a separate project for which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other
matter occurs after December 31, 1990.
(2) Substantially unaffected reservoir volume. A project is
considered significantly expanded if the injection of liquids, gases, or other
matter after December 31, 1990, is reasonably expected to result in more than
an insignificant increase in the amount of crude oil that ultimately will be
recovered from reservoir volume that was substantially unaffected by the
injection of liquids, gases, or other matter before January 1, 1991.
(3) Terminated projects. Except as otherwise provided in this
paragraph (d)(3), a project is considered significantly expanded if each
qualified tertiary recovery method implemented in the project prior to January
1, 1991, terminated more than 36 months before implementing an enhanced oil
recovery project that commences after December 31, 1990. Notwithstanding the
provisions of the preceding sentence, if a project implemented prior to January
1, 1991, is terminated for less than 36 months before implementing an enhanced
oil recovery project that commences after December 31, 1990, a taxpayer may
request permission to treat the project that commences after December 31, 1990,
as a significant expansion. Permission will not be granted if the Internal
Revenue Service determines that a project was terminated to make an otherwise
nonqualifying project eligible for the credit. For purposes of section 43, a
qualified tertiary recovery method terminates at the point in time when the
method no longer results in more than an insignificant increase in the amount
of crude oil that ultimately will be recovered. All the facts and circumstances
determine whether a tertiary recovery method has terminated. Among the factors
considered is the project plan, the unit plan of development, or other similar
plan. A tertiary recovery method is not necessarily terminated merely because
the injection of the tertiary injectant has ceased. For purposes of this
paragraph (d)(1), a project is implemented when costs that will be taken into
account in determining the credit with respect to the project are paid or
incurred.
(4) Change in tertiary recovery method. If the application of a
tertiary recovery method or methods with respect to an enhanced oil recovery
project for which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter
occurred before January 1, 1991, has not been terminated for more than 36
months, a taxpayer may request a private letter ruling from the Internal
Revenue Service whether the application of a different tertiary recovery method
or methods after December 31, 1990, that does not affect reservoir volume
substantially unaffected by the previous tertiary recovery method or methods,
is treated as a significant expansion. All the facts and circumstances
determine whether a change in tertiary recovery method is treated as a
significant expansion. Among the factors considered are whether the change in
tertiary recovery method is in accordance with sound engineering principles and
whether the change in method will result in more than an insignificant increase
in the amount of crude oil that would be recovered using the previous method. A
more intensive application of a tertiary recovery method after December 31,
1990, is not treated as a significant expansion.
(5) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of
this paragraph (d).
Example 1. Substantially unaffected reservoir volume. In January 1988, B, the
owner of an operating mineral interest in a property, began injecting steam
into the reservoir in connection with a cyclic steam enhanced oil recovery
project. The project affected only a portion of the reservoir volume. In 1992,
B begins cyclic steam injections with respect to reservoir volume that was
substantially unaffected by the previous cyclic steam project. Because the
injection of steam into the reservoir in 1992 affects reservoir volume that was
substantially unaffected by the previous cyclic steam injection, the cyclic
steam injection in 1992 is treated as a separate project for which the first
injection of liquids, gases, or other matter occurs after December 31, 1990.
Example 2. Tertiary recovery method terminated more than 36 months. In 1982, C,
the owner of an operating mineral interest in a property, implemented a
tertiary recovery project using cyclic steam injection as a method for the
recovery of crude oil. The project was certified as a tertiary recovery project
for purposes of the windfall profit tax. In May 1988, the application of the
cyclic steam tertiary recovery method terminated. In July 1992, C begins
drilling injection wells as part of a project to apply the steam drive tertiary
recovery method with respect to the same project area affected by the cyclic
steam method. C begins steam injections in September 1992. Because C commences
an enhanced oil recovery project more than 36 months after the previous
tertiary recovery method was terminated, the project is treated as a separate
project for which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter occurs
after December 31, 1990.
Example 3. Change in tertiary recovery method affecting substantially
unaffected reservoir volume. In 1984, D, the owner of an operating mineral
interest in a property, implemented a tertiary recovery project using cyclic
steam as a method for the recovery of crude oil. The project was certified as a
tertiary recovery project for purposes of the windfall profit tax. D continued
the cyclic steam injection until 1992, when the tertiary recovery method was
changed from cyclic steam injection to steam drive. The steam drive affects
reservoir volume that was substantially unaffected by the cyclic steam
injection. Because the steam drive affects reservoir volume that was substantially
unaffected by the cyclic steam injection, the steam drive is treated as a
separate project for which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other
matter occurs after December 31, 1990.
Example 4. Change in tertiary recovery method not affecting substantially
unaffected reservoir volume. In 1988, E, the owner of an operating mineral
interest in a property, undertook an immiscible nitrogen enhanced oil recovery
project that resulted in more than an insignificant increase in the ultimate
recovery of crude oil from the property. E continued the immiscible nitrogen
project until 1992, when the project was converted from immiscible nitrogen
displacement to miscible nitrogen displacement by increasing the injection of
nitrogen to increase reservoir pressure. The miscible nitrogen displacement
affects the same reservoir volume that was affected by the immiscible nitrogen
displacement. Because the miscible nitrogen displacement does not affect
reservoir volume that was substantially unaffected by the immiscible nitrogen
displacement nor was the immiscible nitrogen displacement project terminated
for more than 36 months before the miscible nitrogen displacement project was
implemented, E must obtain a ruling whether the change from immiscible nitrogen
displacement to miscible nitrogen displacement is treated as a separate project
for which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter occurs after
December 31, 1990. If E does not receive a ruling, the miscible nitrogen
displacement project is not a qualified project.
Example 5. More intensive application of a tertiary recovery method. In 1989,
F, the owner of an operating mineral interest in a property, undertook an
immiscible carbon dioxide displacement enhanced oil recovery project. F began
injecting carbon dioxide into the reservoir under immiscible conditions. The
injection of carbon dioxide under immiscible conditions resulted in more than
an insignificant increase in the ultimate recovery of crude oil from the
property. F continues to inject the same amount of carbon dioxide into the
reservoir until 1992, when new engineering studies indicate that an increase in
the amount of carbon dioxide injected is reasonably expected to result in a
more than insignificant increase in the amount of crude oil that would be
recovered from the property as a result of the previous injection of carbon
dioxide. The increase in the amount of carbon dioxide injected affects the same
reservoir volume that was affected by the previous injection of carbon dioxide.
Because the additional carbon dioxide injected in 1992 does not affect
reservoir volume that was substantially unaffected by the previous injection of
carbon dioxide and the previous immiscible carbon dioxide displacement method
was not terminated for more than 36 months before additional carbon dioxide was
injected, the increase in the amount of carbon dioxide injected into the
reservoir is not a significant expansion. Therefore, it is not a separate
project for which the first injection of liquids, gases, or other matter occurs
after December 31, 1990.
(e) Qualified tertiary recovery methods(1) In general. For purposes
of paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a qualified tertiary recovery method is
any one or any combination of the tertiary recovery methods described in
paragraph (e)(2) of this section. To account for advances in enhanced oil
recovery technology, the Internal Revenue Service may by revenue ruling
prescribe that a method not described in paragraph (e)(2) of this section is a
qualified tertiary recovery method. In addition, a taxpayer may request a
private letter ruling that a method not described in paragraph (e)(2) of this
section or in a revenue ruling is a qualified tertiary recovery method.
Generally, the methods identified in revenue rulings or private letter rulings
will be limited to those methods that involve the displacement of oil from the
reservoir rock by means of modifying the properties of the fluids in the
reservoir or providing the energy and drive mechanism to force the oil to flow
to a production well. The recovery methods described in paragraph (e)(3) of
this section are not qualified tertiary recovery methods.
(2) Tertiary recovery methods that qualify(i) Thermal recovery
methods(A) Steam drive injection. The continuous injection of steam into one
set of wells (injection wells) or other injection source to effect oil
displacement toward and production from a second set of wells (production
wells); (B) Cyclic steam injectionThe alternating injection of steam and
production of oil with condensed steam from the same well or wells; and (C) In
situ combustion. The combustion of oil or fuel in the reservoir sustained by
injection of air, oxygen-enriched air, oxygen, or supplemental fuel supplied
from the surface to displace unburned oil toward producing wells. This process
may include the concurrent, alternating, or subsequent injection of water.
(ii) Gas Flood recovery methods(A) Miscible fluid displacement. The
injection of gas (e.g., natural gas, enriched natural gas, a liquified petroleum
slug driven by natural gas, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, or flue gas) or alcohol
into the reservoir at pressure levels such that the gas or alcohol and
reservoir oil are miscible; (B) Carbon dioxide augmented waterflooding. The
injection of carbonated water, or water and carbon dioxide, to increase
waterflood efficiency; (C) Immiscible carbon dioxide displacement. The
injection of carbon dioxide into an oil reservoir to effect oil displacement
under conditions in which miscibility with reservoir oil is not obtained. This
process may include the concurrent, alternating, or subsequent injection of
water; and (D) Immiscible nonhydrocarbon gas displacement. The injection of
nonhydrocarbon gas (e.g., nitrogen) into an oil reservoir, under conditions in
which miscibility with reservoir oil is not obtained, to obtain a chemical or
physical reaction (other than pressure) between the oil and the injected gas or
between the oil and other reservoir fluids.
This process may include the concurrent, alternating, or subsequent injection
of water.
(iii) Chemical flood recovery methods(A) Microemulsion flooding.
The injection of a surfactant system (e.g., a surfactant, hydrocarbon,
cosurfactant, electrolyte, and water) to enhance the displacement of oil toward
producing wells; and (B) Caustic floodingThe injection of water that has been
made chemically basic by the addition of alkali metal hydroxides, silicates, or
other chemicals.
(iv) Mobility control recovery methodPolymer augmented
waterflooding.
The injection of polymeric additives with water to improve the areal and
vertical sweep efficiency of the reservoir by increasing the viscosity and
decreasing the mobility of the water injected. Polymer augmented waterflooding
does not include the injection of polymers for the purpose of modifying the
injection profile of the wellbore or the relative permeability of various
layers of the reservoir, rather than modifying the water-oil mobility ratio.
(3) Recovery methods that do not qualify. The term qualified
tertiary recovery method does not include (i) WaterfloodingThe injection of
water into an oil reservoir to displace oil from the reservoir rock and into
the bore of the producing well; (ii) Cyclic gas injectionThe increase or
maintenance of pressure by injection of hydrocarbon gas into the reservoir from
which it was originally produced; (iii) Horizontal drillingThe drilling of
horizontal, rather than vertical, wells to penetrate hydrocarbon bearing
formations; (iv) Gravity drainageThe production of oil by gravity flow from
drainholes that are drilled from a shaft or tunnel dug within or below the oil
bearing zones; and (v) Other methodsAny recovery method not specifically
designated as a qualified tertiary recovery method in either paragraph (e)(2)
of this section or in a revenue ruling or private letter ruling described in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(4) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of
this paragraph (e).
Example 1. Polymer augmented waterflooding. In 1992 G, the owner of an operating
mineral interest in a property, begins a waterflood project with respect to the
property. To reduce the relative permeability in certain areas of the reservoir
and minimize water coning, G injects polymers to plug thief zones and improve
the areal and vertical sweep efficiency of the reservoir. The injection of
polymers into the reservoir does not modify the water-oil mobility ratio.
Accordingly, the injection of polymers into the reservoir in connection with
the waterflood project does not constitute polymer augmented waterflooding and
the project is not a qualified enhanced oil recovery project.
Example 2. Polymer augmented waterflooding. In 1993 H, the owner of an
operating mineral interest in a property, begins a caustic flooding project
with respect to the property. Engineering studies indicate that the relative
permeability of various layers of the reservoir may result in the loss of the
injectant to thief zones, thereby reducing the areal and vertical sweep
efficiency of the reservoir. As part of the caustic flooding project, H injects
polymers to plug the thief zones and improve the areal and vertical sweep
efficiency of the reservoir. Because the polymers are injected into the
reservoir to improve the effectiveness of the caustic flooding project, the
project is a qualified enhanced oil recovery project.
[T.D. 8448, 57 FR 54925, Nov. 23, 1992; 58 FR 6678, Feb. 1, 1993]