Louise
Maureen Simeon (The Philippine Star) - August 4, 2018 - 12:00am
MANILA, Philippines —
The mining industry has expressed concern over government’s plan to impose
royalty on all mining operations, saying such a move is detrimental to the
sector.
Under the proposed
second package of the tax reform, the government plans to slap royalty on
mining contractors for all metallic and non-metallic operations in the country.
The Chamber of Mines of
the Philippines said the plan would severely hurt the sector.
“We hope this new
proposal will only apply to future projects and not the existing ones. It will
be a bit unfair to the existing because current mines already have their
feasibility studies,” COMP executive director Ronald Recidoro told The STAR.
According to reports,
the Department of Finance proposed the imposition of royalties on all
operations regardless if they are operating outside of mineral reservation
areas.
At present, only five percent royalty is slapped on those operating in the nine
mineral reservation areas in the Philippines.
“We hope the DOF will
consult with the industry to arrive at a rational fiscal regime. We want to
contribute to the national economy but we can not do that if we will all close
because it has already become too expensive,” Recidoro said.
The industry has just
started to feel the impact of the doubling of the excise tax under the first
package of the tax reform program.
Mining companies
operating under a mineral production sharing agreement pay the regular
corporate income tax, business tax, and the indigenous people directly affected
by mining operations, among others.
“Their new proposal
would likely impact more on copper and gold production because they are more
expensive to operate,” Recidoro said.
To date, there are only
nine mineral reservation areas in the Philippines namely, Ilocos Norte
feldspar, Zambales chromite, Biak-na-Bato, Siruma white clay, Samar bauxite,
Zamboanga, Mt. Diwalwal Gold, Surigao, as well as all offshore areas within the
country’s territorial limits.
The Mines and
Geosciences Bureau identifies and recommends an area to be declared as mineral
reservation by the Office of the President based on the area’s economic
potential.
Once declared as
mineral reservation, an area covered by the proclamation shall be “reserved”
for future mining exploration and exploitation, and will be covered by the
five-percent royalty tax under the mining law.
Mining royalty tax
represents five percent of the market value of the gross output of the minerals
produced by mining companies within a declared mineral reservation area.
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