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SPONSOR: |
Gubbels |
DATE TYPED: |
1-31-02 |
HB |
143 |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Electric Generation Facilities Tax Incentives |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Neel |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years
Impact |
Recurring or Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY02 |
FY03 |
|
|
|
|
($150.0) |
($440.0) |
Recurring |
General Fund |
|
($200.0) |
($600.0) |
Recurring |
Property Tax |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases) In
thousands
Duplicates/Conflicts with/Companion to/Relates
to SB 46, HB 233, SB 187
LFC files
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD).
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House Bill 143 amends
the Industrial Revenue Bond Act and the County Industrial Revenue Bond Act to
allow “electricity generation facilities that do not provide retail electric
services to New Mexico customers” to qualify for IRBs under the definition of
allowed projects. HB 143 also amends the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes
Act and the Investment Credit Act to include ”electricity generation facilities
that do not provide retail electric services to New Mexico customers” under the
definition of manufacturing.
Significant
Issues
HB 143 would expand incentives to power plants
in any part of the state that were passed by the 2001 Legislature. Currently only a power plants in Lea, Eddy,
Chavez, Luna, Roosevelt, Curry, Hidalgo or Rio Arriba Counties is eligible for
the following: (1) county industrial revenue bond financing; and (2) investment
credit of 5% of the value of qualified investments. Additionally HB 143 would limit the present law incentives to
power plants that are not intended to provide retail service to New Mexico
customers.
TRD notes the
following assumptions in deriving the fiscal impact:
(1) The equivalent of one medium-size facility (100 MWe) per year is constructed in each part of the state—i.e. one in those counties currently eligible for the IRB and investment credit incentives and one in the counties currently ineligible.
(2) These facilities would be built even if the proposed incentives are not approved.
(3) These facilities all produce entirely for the wholesale market.
(4) Capital expenditures and employment figures were based on information from industry experts.
(5) The fuel used in the power plants is not assumed to represent an increase in annual sales by New Mexico producers and therefore does not generate additional oil and gas taxes. The amount of fuel consumed in these plants is small compared to total output of New Mexico producers.
TRD also notes that
there will be significant impact for property taxes due to the IRB provisions
included in HB 143. This impact will
increase over time with additional electric generation facilities coming on
line.
TRD
notes that the legislation passed last year (Laws 2001, chapter 284) included
eligibility for the double-weighted sales election for apportioning corporate
income tax. But, because another bill
amended the same section of statute and was signed after Senate Bill 739, the
double-weighted sales provision was not compiled into the statutes. However according to a November 1, 2000
Attorney General Opinion (Opinion No. 00-05) “unless two laws covering the same
subject matter are incompatible, the rules of statutory construction require
that they be harmonized and construed together if possible.”
SN/njw
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