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Gas Impact Fees Expected To Drop 17 Percent This Year

Joe Ulrich
/
WITF

 

The year 2016 is already shaping up to be a bad one for Pennsylvania’s gas industry, and it’s going to hurt state and local governments too. Impact fees paid by drillersare projected to bring in the lowest amount ever — $185.5 million — according to a new analysis by the state’s Independent Fiscal Office. It’s a 17 percent drop compared to the previous year.

The decline is driven by two factors: depressed gas prices and fewer new wells being drilled.

“The data from DEP suggests there was a 42.9 percent drop-off in new wells drilled,” says IFO director Matthew Knittel.

The shift means the overall effective tax rate for Marcellus Shale gas wells will now be higher. It jumps to 5.5 percent in 2015, compared to 2.1 percent in 2014, according to the report.

The impact fees have become an important source of revenue for local governments because 60 percent of the money stays in the regions where drilling occurs. The rest goes to various state agencies involved in regulating the industry and to the Marcellus Legacy Fund– which gets spread out around the state.

Read more of this report on the site of our partner, StateImpact

WMHT/Capital Region reporter for the Innovation Trail.