Shell UK, Diamond Offshore agree release of rig – News for the Oil and Gas Sector – Energy Voice

Shell and Diamond Offshore have mutually agreed the release of the Ocean Valiant rig from its contract.

Diamonds most recent fleet status report, published in February, shows Ocean Valiant was supposed to be with Shell in the UK North Sea from November 2019 until March 2021.

A source said Shell had shelved plans to drill five wells and that the rig would be stacked later this month.

A spokesman for Shell confirmed Ocean Valiant would be released once it completes a well at the Gannet field.

But he said Ocean Valiants agreed scope would be transferred to Diamonds Ocean Endeavor rig, which is already contracted to Shell.

Energy Voice reported in October that Shell was using Ocean Endeavor for drilling work at its Fram gas field as part of a campaign expected to last up to 110 days.

Its understood the Ocean Valiant decision was operational and not linked to any spending reductions which may be triggered by the current crude price slump.

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Shell UK, Diamond Offshore agree release of rig - News for the Oil and Gas Sector - Energy Voice

Global HNW Offshore Investment Drivers & Motivations, 2020 – 32.5% of HNW Wealth is Invested Outside One’s Country of Residence -…

The "HNW Offshore Investment: Drivers and Motivations" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report draws on survey results to analyze the drivers behind offshore investments in the HNW space. It examines and contrasts offshore HNW investment preferences across 27 jurisdictions, providing readers with an in-depth understanding of what is motivating HNW investors to look for new homes for their wealth.

Key Highlights

The proportion of HNW individuals who invest offshore has been on the rise despite the scandals that have shaken the industry.

While the reasons are diverse and differ from country to country, an expectation of better returns abroad, international business interests, and local political and economic instability top the list. However, we are seeing notable differences between regions, suggesting that one strategy does not fit all.

For example, tax efficiencies as a driver for offshore investments are of particular importance in Europe and North America. This means assisting HNW investors in minimizing their tax liabilities is key in these regions. Meanwhile, in Asia Pacific business interests are a significant driver, so a well-designed business and investment banking proposition neatly integrated with standard private banking services is a must.

Reasons to Buy

Companies Mentioned

Key Topics Covered

1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

1.1. HNW offshore investment is driven by a multitude of factors

1.2. Key findings

1.3. Critical success factors

2. GLOBAL TRENDS DRIVING HNW OFFSHORE INVESTMENTS

2.1. Increasingly easy access will drive offshore investments across the globe

2.1.1. A third of HNW offshore wealth is booked abroad

2.1.2. A sophisticated offshore proposition has become a hygiene factor

2.2. An expectation of better returns abroad and business interests account for a third of HNW offshore investments globally

2.2.1. HNW investors are looking for better returns abroad

2.2.2. Already the second most important offshore driver, the importance of international business interests is set to increase

2.2.3. Taken together, tax efficiencies and client anonymity are the number one driver for offshore investments

2.2.4. Other drivers include access to better investment options, local political and economic instability, expatriate money flows, and currency volatility

2.3. Significant regional differences exist in the motivations for offshore investment

2.3.1. Offshore propositions must be tailored at a country or regional level

3. DETAILED DRIVER ANALYSIS

3.1. Local market factors drive the variety in HNW individuals' motivations for offshore investment

3.2. Driver one: HNW investors are betting on better returns offshore

3.2.1. Despite a desire to capitalize on returns abroad, HNW investors are taking a more careful and diversified stance

3.2.2. Investors who look for better returns abroad are biased towards the US

3.2.3. Chinese HNW investors look for returns abroad in the property space, but tensions with the US will affect booking center preferences going forward

3.3. Driver two: Business interests as a driver for offshore investments means offering hedging products is a must

3.3.1. Targeting Japanese HNW entrepreneurs requires a sophisticated offshore proposition

3.3.2. Increasing business dealings with the US will see more Taiwanese HNW wealth flow offshore

3.4. Driver three: Political and economic uncertainty

3.4.1. Economic factors are marginally more important than political ones as an offshore driver

3.4.2. Political instability remains an important driver for offshore investments in Europe

3.4.3. Political and economic instability are also major concerns in South Africa

3.4.4. Providing access to safe havens is paramount in countries where economic and political stability rank highly

3.4.5. Hong Kong seeks to defend its safe haven status amid economic and political unrest

3.5. Driver four: Access to a broader and better range of investments is also an important consideration in the offshoring decision

3.5.1. Domestic market sector concentration bias drives offshore investment in the developed world

3.5.2. Access to a broader range of investment options is also an important driver in markets with limited investment options

3.6. Driver five: The desire for tax efficiency represents an opportunity, but achieving anonymity is becoming increasingly challenging

Story continues

3.6.1. With a few exceptions, the importance of tax efficiency and client anonymity as an offshore driver go hand in hand

3.6.2. Compliance is becoming an increasingly big headache, but technology can assist

3.6.3. The US and fake residency information are the biggest issues facing CRS

3.6.4. Tax efficiencies are a major driver in the UAE despite the lack of income taxes

3.7. Other drivers: The importance of currency volatility, geographic diversification benefits, and expat money flows vary across markets

3.7.1. Players looking to attract offshore HNW wealth should highlight the benefits of geographic diversification, while smaller companies should promote funds

3.7.2. Expat flows are an important driver in countries with high immigration rates

3.7.3. Currency volatility as a driver for offshore investments is becoming more important

4. APPENDIX

4.1. Supplementary data

4.2. Abbreviations and acronyms

4.3. Definitions

4.3.1. Affluent

4.3.2. CRS

4.3.3. HNW

4.3.4. Liquid assets

4.3.5. Mass affluent

4.3.6. Residency

4.4. Methodology

4.4.1. The 2019 Global Wealth Managers Survey

4.4.2. The 2018 Global Wealth Managers Survey

4.5. Secondary sources

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/iwfwyq

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200409005440/en/

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

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Global HNW Offshore Investment Drivers & Motivations, 2020 - 32.5% of HNW Wealth is Invested Outside One's Country of Residence -...

EGEB: A world first: Offshore oil and gas platforms to be powered by wind – Electrek

In todays Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):

The Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB): A daily technical, financial, and political review/analysis of important green energy news.

Norwegian oil giant Equinor has gotten the go-ahead from Norways Ministry of Petroleum and Industry to build and operate the Hywind Tampen floating offshore wind farm in the North Sea.

Now, heres the twist: This new offshore wind farm will be powering the Snorre and Gullfaks offshore oil and gas platforms. Its a world first. (Writers note: Yes, Im trying to get my head around the concept of renewables to power fossil fuels, too, in case you think its just you.)

Hywind Tampen will feature 11 8MW wind turbines and will be situated around 140km (87 miles) from shore, between the two fossil-fuel platforms. The wind farm will generate 88MW of energy that will meet about 35% of the annual power demand of the oil and gas platforms.

Equinor Norway development and production executive vice-president Arne Sigve Nylund said [via Power Technology]:

Hywind Tampen is a pioneering project and a central contribution to reducing emissions from Gullfaks and Snorre, and I am pleased that both ESA and Norwegian authorities have approved the project.

A Harvard University study at the T.H. Chan School of Public Health, which was updated on April 5, has confirmed that there is a direct correlation between long-term exposure to air pollution and a higher coronavirus death rate.

This study is the first to confirm a statistical link between coronavirus deaths and air pollution something public health officials and environmentalists already surmised.

The studys background states that the majority of pre-existing conditions that increase the risk of death for coronavirus are the same diseases that are affected by long-term exposure to air pollution. They investigated whether long-term average exposure to fine particulate matter, which is caused by fossil fuels and vehicle emissions, increases the risk of COVID-19 deaths in the US.

The researchers collected data for about 3,000 US counties (98% of the population) for 17 years, up to April 4, 2020.

An increase of one microgram of fine particulates per cubic meter is associated with a 15% increase in the coronavirus death rate. Breathing in fine particulates damages the lungs over time, making it harder for the body to fight respiratory infections.

The study concluded:

A small increase in long-term exposure to PM2.5 [fine particulate matter] leads to a large increase in COVID-19 death rate, with the magnitude of increase 20 times that observed for PM2.5 [fine particulate matter] and all-cause mortality. The study results underscore the importance of continuing to enforce existing air pollution regulations to protect human health both during and after the COVID-19 crisis.

Harvard study researcher Xiao Wu said [via the Guardian]:

We should consider additional measures to protect ourselves from pollution exposure to reduce the COVID-19 death toll.

The American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) reports that more than 80% of US voters favor offshore wind energy, with widespread support coming from both Republicans and Democrats and every demographic group across the country, according to a national survey conducted by Public Opinion Strategies from March 16 to 19, 2020.

85% of all voters think wind energy is a clean, renewable, and affordable power source of the future, including 80% of Republicans. GOP voters support offshore wind energy for slightly different reasons than Democrats: They cite well-paying, stable jobs and improved economic revitalization for port communities/coastal states.

Further, voters from Gen Z to Millennials to Gen X and Boomers all express 83% to 88% favorability in their support for offshore wind.

AWEA CEO Tom Kiernan said:

Republicans and Democrats alike see offshore wind as playing a key role in the nations future energy portfolio, providing tremendous economic and environmental benefits and helping stabilize the cost of electricity.

Photo: Equinor illustration of Hywind

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

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EGEB: A world first: Offshore oil and gas platforms to be powered by wind - Electrek

New poll: Americans across party lines support offshore wind by wide margins Into the Wind – Into the Wind – The AWEA Blog

New poll: Americans across party lines support offshore wind by wide margins

In todays world, sometimes it can feel like a struggle getting two people to agree the sky is blue. And yet, in an era of polarized opinions, wind energy has remained an outlierits a bright beacon of consensus. Just a few months ago, Pew found 85 percent of Americans supported expanding the use of wind power.

Now, just-released survey results show this same support extends to offshore wind. Over 80 percent of U.S. voters favor offshore wind, according to a new AWEA-commissioned study conducted by Public Opinion Strategies. Notably, that support is universal. It transcends across political party affiliation, geography, and every demographic group measured.

Although the U.S. only has one operating offshore wind farm today, states up and down the East Coast have made and the offshore wind project pipeline stands at nearly 26,000 megawatts (MW). Thats enough to power millions of homes and businesses with reliable, affordable, clean energy generated in close proximity to many of the countrys largest population centers.

Building that project pipeline could create over 80,000 jobs by 2030 and a new domestic supply chain, while spurring $57 billion of investment into the U.S. economy. Voters are buying this vision of the future57 percent think wind energy will be more important to the U.S. economy than oil and gas 10 years from now. As one would expect, the creation of well-paying jobs and a new economy-strengthening industry transcends party lines.

One of the reasons support for offshore wind extends so far and wide is because its not just an East Coast storyits benefits will extend nationwide. For example, offshore manufacturing and service companies in the Gulf region used their ocean infrastructure experience to help build the countrys first offshore wind project, the Block Island Wind Farm. These businesses are anxious to get back into offshore wind game as large projects are deployed in the waters off our coasts.

Further down the line, offshore wind will bring similar benefits as it grows along the West Coast and in the Great Lakes. These survey results show Americans understand the promise of offshore wind, and they want to see that promise become a reality. Its our job to get to work and deliver.

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New poll: Americans across party lines support offshore wind by wide margins Into the Wind - Into the Wind - The AWEA Blog

Wind alert extended to Friday as strong storms move offshore – Press of Atlantic City

Live weather updates on the strong winds, storms Wednesday

4:31 p.m.

The wind advisory was extended for another day, with the alert in effect for South Jersey from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday. It is in effect Thursday through 7 p.m.

Wind gusts similar to Thursday will be likely during the day Friday, with many places 45-50 mph, and a few places even higher. Continue to secure all loose objects outside. Isolated power outages and large tree branches down will be likely.

3:16 p.m.

The severe thunderstorm watch has been cancelled. However, strong winds will remain into the evening and the wind advisory will be in effect through 7 p.m.

Most of the power has been restored to Hammonton. Nearly a quarter of Atlantic City Electric customers were out of power in the 2 p.m. hour. Stafford still has a few hundred customers without power.

More wind reports have come in. Among them, a 71 mph wind gust just north of Barnegat Light, over the water. A 51 mph gust roared through Mullica Township at 2:50 p.m., with a mph 48 gust in Fortescue at 1:40 p.m.

2:47 p.m.

2:40 p.m.

The storms largely split around South Jersey. One exception, though, was Long Beach Island and southern Ocean County.

Harvey Cedars reported a 61 mph wind gusts while Beach Haven reported a 51 mph wind gusts.

The severe thunderstorm watch remains in effect for the shore counties. The watch was dropped elsewhere in the region.

Around noon, a severe thunderstorm watch was issued for all of South Jersey. South Jersey is under a level 2 of 5 risk for severe weather by the Storm Prediction Center, a government agency in Norman, Oklahoma.

A slight risk indicates a few scattered severe storms are possible. The potential for severe weather doesn't guarantee it will occur, but instead highlights the possibility to increase awareness in case storms do develop.

An explanation of the different risk categories for severe thunderstorms.

Damaging winds will be the main threat with the line of storms that comes through. Power outages and snapped tree limbs will be in the realm of possibility. Winds a few thousand feet above our heads are screaming near 60 mph and any thunderstorm can tap into that and bring it down to the surface.

To a lesser extent, hail will need to be watched for. Also, while unlikely, a weak tornado will not be ruled out.

No. Consider that the appetizer for the storms to come.

That line of rain, with embedded rumbles of thunder in Cape May County, were associated with a warm front. Rainfall totals ranged from 0.02 inches in Cape May to 0.43 in Atlantic City, according to the Office of the New Jersey State Climatologist.

Temperatures for 2 p.m. Thursday, according to various computer models. The warmer the air will be, the bettter risk for severe weather, as the sun after the morning rain provided extra juice in the atmosphere for severe weather.

The amount of sunshine, and corresponding temperatures, will be critical to the strength and severity of the storms.

The more sun there is, the more instability it will produce in the atmosphere. The vice versa will be possible as well.

Right now,ThePress forecast is for isolated areas of wind damage, with hail and tornadoes not ruled out.

For that risk to be lowered, temperatures would likely need to stay below 65 degrees with the sun only out for an hour or two.

On the other hand, for a widespread severe weather outbreak, most temperatures would likely need to near 75 degrees. That would mean the sun was out for a few hours and created lots of instability in the air.

So far, the High Resolution Rapid Refresh (HRRR) has been performing the best. The HRRR has daytime highs around 70 degrees for many before the line of storms comes in, keeping the forecast on target.

Additional downed tree limbs and power outages will be possible into Thursday evening as strong northwesterly winds blow. A wind advisory will be in effect from 1 to 9 p.m. to highlight this threat.

Take down any loose objects and garbage cans before the line of storms arrive.

Wind gusts 40-50 mph will be likely during this time. Typically, issues due to winds occur with winds over 45 mph.

Winds at the 850 millibar level, about 5,000 feet above the surface. This provides a good indicator of what the top gusts will be, as winds can get pulled to the ground from here.

Despite the strong northwesterly winds by this point, a few places will still get into minor flood stage.

The back bays will be most likely to get into just minor flood stage. If your street typically floods, move it a block or so. No major roadway will be likely to close.

Coastal flooding has been a concern since the Wednesday morning high tide. This peaked with the Wednesday evening high tide, when up to a foot of salt water flooding occurred on roadways.

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Wind alert extended to Friday as strong storms move offshore - Press of Atlantic City

Arup Names US Offshore Wind Head – Offshore WIND

Arup has appointed Saygin Oytan to head its offshore wind team in the U.S.

As an associate principal in theBostonoffice, Oytan will lead strategic business development initiatives aimed at expandingArups presence in the U.S. offshore wind market.

We are anticipating major growth in the offshore wind market in the US in coming years, saidBrian Swett, Leader ofArupsBostonoffice.

With Sy at the helm as our new Offshore Wind Leader in the Americas, Im confident thatArups offshore wind business will continue to grow and mature in lockstep with the market, providing more services and more value to our clients acrossNorth America.

According to Arup, Oytan brings nearly two decades of experience managing the development and construction of international offshore and onshore wind projects.

His most recent position was as the Director of Offshore Wind for the New Jersey Economic Development Authority (NJEDA).

Oytan also started up and led Nord Renewable Energy Consulting inEuropeto provide project development, owners and lenders engineering, and transaction advisory services for offshore and onshore wind projects.

Im excited to join theArupteam that has been working diligently to support our international and national clients in offshore wind energy development, Oytan said.

The total size of state commitments to offshore wind is in the range of 26,000 MW to be operational by 2035.Arups global expertise in complex and multi-disciplinary projects is needed in this nascent market.

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Arup Names US Offshore Wind Head - Offshore WIND

No Covid-19 delay to offshore wind power auction delivery, UK Gov says – News for the Oil and Gas Sector – Energy Voice

The UK Government timetable for its offshore wind power auction will not be delayed by the coronavirus pandemic.

The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) announced that the consultation deadline for its Contracts for Difference (CfD) auction will not be affected beyond its current deadline.

The consultation period, which is scheduled to run for twelve weeks, is due to close on May 22.

The delivery of the fourth round is still expected to take place in 2021.

A UK trade body said it provided certainty for the UK renewable energy sector.

The CfD process traditionally grants licences for big offshore wind projects this year the process is likely to include onshore and floating wind as well as solar power.

A number of large offshore wind developers are expected to be part of the bidding process, alongside a group for new entrants from the UK oil and gas sector.

The previous round saw SSE Renewables win consent for its giant Seagreen Offshore Wind Farm off the coast of Montrose in Scotland.

But, developer EDP Renewables missed out on its 90-turbine Moray West Offshore Wind Farm.

Red Rock Powers Inch Cape Wind Farm off the Angus Coast was also unsuccessful, alongside Shetlands Viking Wind Farm.

RenewableUKs head of policy and regulation, Rebecca Williams, said: Were pleased to see the current timetable for the governments clean power auctions remains on track.

This provides certainty for the industry and investors so we can plan ahead. Holding the next round of CfD auctions in 2021 is vital to secure the much-needed new renewable energy capacity we need to meet net zero.

This will enable consumers to benefit from new cheap power as fast as possible.

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No Covid-19 delay to offshore wind power auction delivery, UK Gov says - News for the Oil and Gas Sector - Energy Voice

What is a tax haven? Offshore finance, explained – ICIJ.org

Tax revenue keeps civilization afloat. But not all taxpayers play by the same set of rules.

With the help of lawyers, accountants, white-shoe professionals and complicit Western governments, the wealthy and well-connected have avoided paying trillions of dollars in taxes. The rest of us cover the difference or, more commonly, cant, leaving treasuries bereft of monies needed to build roads, schools and tackle existential threats like climate change and global pandemics.

Tax havens make it all possible.

By some estimates, about 10 percent of the total output of all the economies in the world is parked in offshore financial centers, held by shell companies that exist only on paper. The cost to governments, in lost revenue, is estimated to exceed $800 billion a year.

The wealthy keep the money to build intergenerational fortunes, creating a new global aristocratic class and exacerbating the divide between the global haves and have-nots.

Multinational companies use the extra cash to reward shareholders and edge out smaller competitors.

Countries that need tax revenue the most lose more tax money, as a percentage of GDP, than wealthy countries. As with other inequities, the poor get it the worst.

Years after Panama Papers, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists remains committed to exposing those who exploit tax havens a long list that also includes corrupt politicians, mobsters, drug traffickers and other criminals who launder cash and assets through offshore companies to throw law enforcement off the scent. The easy movement of illicit money destabilizes governments and helps despots stay in power.

Here is a guide weve assembled to help explain how offshore finance works, and why it matters. If you have questions we havent answered, email us here.

There is no universal definition, but tax havens, or offshore financial centers, are generally countries or places with low or no corporate taxes that allow outsiders to easily set up businesses there. Tax havens also typically limit public disclosure about companies and their owners. Because information can be hard to extract, tax havens are sometimes also called secrecy jurisdictions. Tax havens nearly always deny being tax havens.

All over the world. Some are independent countries, like Panama, the Netherlands and Malta. Others are within countries, like the U.S. state of Delaware, or are territories, like the Cayman Islands.

ICIJ investigations have focused on different tax havens, often depending on the origin and content of documents. Panama Papers, for example, exposed how Mossack Fonseca, one of the biggest offshore law firms in the world, sold thousands of shell companies in the British Virgin Islands to clients around the globe. Mauritius Leaks examined how companies used Mauritius to avoid taxes, while Paradise Papers revealed the secrets of Bermuda, the island where the law firm Appleby was founded.

Some tax havens, like Niue and Vanuatu, have cleaned up their act under international pressure while others, like Dubai, are emerging as new hotspots of illicit wealth.

Mauritius, which was central to Mauritius Leaks, is one example of a tax haven that attracts companies from thousands of miles away.

Money. Tax havens make significant income from fees paid by people and companies who create and use shell companies. Tax havens also create work for lawyers, accountants and secretaries. Mauritius, for example, has said 5,000 people would lose jobs if the country stopped being a tax haven.

A shell company is a legal entity created in a tax haven. Shell companies typically exist only on paper, with no full-time employees, and no office. A single office building in the Cayman Islands, for example, is home to 19,000 shell companies. Rules differ, but the actual owners of many shells are not disclosed in incorporation documents. Some use the term shell company and offshore company interchangeably.

Shell companies only exist, legally, on paper.

Because, like an empty shell, there is nothing inside. A shell company exists, legally, only on paper.

Legal and illegal purposes. Shell companies can hold money, luxury homes, intellectual property, businesses and other assets. They also play a vital role in facilitating the flow of illicit money around the globe.

Rich but otherwise average folk, including dentists and at least one Alabama greengrocer, use shell companies for reasons that may include making it harder for potential creditors including former spouses, displeased business partners or tax inspectors to identify and recoup monies allegedly owed.

Investments made through tax shelters can be especially lucrative, owing to the significant tax savings offshore companies may enjoy.

Bob Geldof, Madonna and U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross are among the bold-faced names that ICIJ has linked to shell companies. Some, like Queen Elizabeth II, say they dont even know they have invested offshore.

Politicians, like Icelands former prime minister, Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson, and Nigerias former senate president, Bukola Saraki, have concealed investments or luxury homes with the help of shell companies. So have their children. Notables include the son and daughter of former Pakistan prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, and Isabel dos Santos, the billionaire daughter of former Angolan strongman president, Jose Eduardo dos Santos.

Drug lords and ladies, bank robbers and arms traffickers, mafia kingpins and queens and bribe takers and makers also use shell companies to obscure their identities and conceal money, assets and illicit activities.

The short answer is no. The longer answer is that it depends on how it is used and where the shell company is created or incorporated. Hiding stolen assets abroad is clearly illegal, but buying a luxury yacht with a shell company may not be. (Hello Microsofts Paul Allen and Saudi prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud!). Lawyers and accountants are very good at proposing technically legal ways to spend or stash cash offshore.

Businesses, especially those that transact across borders, can enjoy massive tax savings by routing payments, profits or investments through subsidiaries in offshore financial centers.

A big pharmaceutical company, for example, might set up a new entity in Bermuda or the Netherlands, and sell that entity a patent for a profitable drug. The parent company might then pay a big licensing fee to the offshore company, which in turn would allow it to record lower profits at home and pay a lower tax bill. Drug companies have avoided billions of dollars in taxes this way, according to Oxfam.

Each year, companies avoid paying more than $500 billion in taxes using methods like these. Some pay little or no taxes at all in their home countries.

Notable corporate tax avoiders include Apple, Johnson and Johnson and Skype.

Companies often say shell companies encourage foreign investment and get deals done that wouldnt otherwise. They also incorporate offshore, many say, to avoid paying taxes twice on the same pot of money. Experts say that such defenses are either overblown or mythical.

Want to know more? Watch our reporter Simon Bowers give a TED Talk about uncovering the tax secrets of Nike and Apple in the Paradise Papers.

Experts refer to this as the tax mantra. It allows corporations to appear to be good corporate citizens but does not contradict the fact that many of these companies use loopholes (some of which are subsequently found to be illegal) to avoid paying taxes.

In most cases, it is as simple as an email or phone call. You dont even have to leave your house. In most cases seen by ICIJ, individuals pay someone else to do it for them. Theres a cottage industry of offshore specialists including Mossack Fonseca (now defunct), Appleby and Asiaciti, as weve reported previously eager to make that phone call or write that email on your behalf (for a fee) to set up a shell company.

Rules differ by jurisdiction, but you will usually have to provide a form of identification and answer questions about how you made your money, and the purpose of the new business. Offshore specialists regularly fail to ask these questions.

In the aftermath of the Panama Papers investigation, for example, lawyers around the globe scrambled to try to figure out the identity of their own clients.

Some reporters have gone so far as to set up a shell company for themselves. Listen to NPRs Planet Money do that here. ICIJ partners at Univisions Fusion opened a Delaware shell company for a cat.

Companies like Deloitte, KPMG, Mossack Fonseca, EY, Appleby and Conyers all service (or did serve) the offshore industry.

Consultants, wealth managers and tax lawyers, who advise on how best to avoid taxes and hide money from authorities. Accountants, who sign off on shell company audits.

Costs depend on where you create your shell company and who helps you do it. Some lawyers, including Mossack Fonseca from the Panama Papers, charged $350 to incorporate a company. Other law firms, including Appleby from the Paradise Papers, charged a flat fee of almost $2,000 in one popular tax haven, the Isle of Man, and $2,700 in Bermuda.

Shell companies, corporations or entities come in different forms. While companies and corporations are the most common offshore tool (in Delaware, the British Virgin Islands, Bahamas and Niue), other offshore entities include trusts (Jersey) and foundations (Panama). Each has a different rule, according to a tax havens domestic laws. Trusts are particularly open to abuse because they use ancient legal principles to avoid declaring or defining an owner. Trusts split possible ownership into three: the legal owner of the assets, the person who controls the assets and the person who can enjoy or use the asset.

Confused yet? Thats the point. Complex structures confound tax officials, law enforcement and investigative journalists. Here is one example of a complex structure set up for Abbott labs from our Lux Leaks investigation.

A nominee director can be a person or a company paid to appear on official documents. Shell companies can use nominees, also known as dummies, instead of the companys true owner (or owners) as directors to avoid public disclosure. Nominees perform administrative tasks, including signing minutes of company meetings, but have no real or legal power or control over the shell company. One recent example of a dummy nominee company was the use of Regula by Deutsche Bank.

Tax avoidance versus tax evasion.

According to the traditional definitions, tax evasion is illegal (a crime) but tax avoidance uses legal loopholes to reduce or avoid paying taxes. Increasingly, experts argue that the distinction is blurry; a lot (but not all) of what gets called tax avoidance could be criminalized or overturned if there were a court challenge but much of it remains secret. This grey area has led to the term tax avoision.

The person or company who ultimately owns the shell company, no matter how many nominee directors or subsidiary companies are placed in between him or her and the shell company.

It depends where you live. As a general rule, keeping offshore secrets is no longer as easy as it once was. Many governments, including the United States, can receive information automatically from tax havens and other countries about foreign bank accounts of their own citizens. Other countries, especially developing countries, must make individual requests to tax havens for information. Many jurisdictions, , including the U.S. state of Delaware, refuse to make public registers that would show the beneficial owners of shell companies.

A bearer share allows whoever holds the physical document (the share) to be its legal owner, which can make someone the owner of a shell company. The bearer share is not registered under the name of any person, which means ownership is never recorded. Bearer shares have been banned in many countries because criminals have used the lack of ownership registration to hide crimes and assets.

Transfer pricing occurs when two companies from the same group transact with each other. This happens, for example, when Facebook Ireland sells a service or an asset to Facebook USA. Transfer mispricing is when companies (allegedly including Facebook) avoid or evade taxes by artificially inflating or deflating the value of internally sold services or assets.

Its impossible to know for sure (thats part of the point: its secret.) French economist Gabriel Zucman estimates hat the equivalent 10% of global GDP is held offshore about $5.6 trillion. U.S. economist James Henry estimates as much as $32 trillion.

Panama Papers, first published in 2016, is probably the best known ICIJ investigation into tax havens. It was the biggest journalism collaboration in history, at the time, and led to the resignation of world leaders, criminal convictions and more than $1 billion in recouped money. It built on the work of our previous investigations, Offshore Leaks, Swiss Leaks and Lux Leaks. We returned with Paradise Papers, West Africa Leaks, Mauritius Leaks, and in 2020, with Luanda Leaks.

One reason: some of the most powerful countries in the world are major players. Offshore money flows through overseas territories of the United Kingdom; the U.S. states of Delaware, Wyoming, Nevada and South Dakota; and through Switzerland and the Netherlands.

However, since the Panama Papers was first published, there has been a push in the U.S. to eliminate corporate secrecy. Some experts are optimistic about reform; last year, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Corporate Transparency Act.

Well, yeah.

The Laundromat directed by Steven Soderbergh and written by Scott Z. Burns

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What is a tax haven? Offshore finance, explained - ICIJ.org

Stauper secures further patent for offshore water treatment process – Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

The new design is an evolution of Staupers existing and patented Compact Flotation Unit, allowing for a smaller vessel on offshore installations where space and footprint are critical.

(Courtesy Stauper Offshore)

Offshore staff

SANDEFJORD, Norway The Norwegian Patent Authorities have granted Stauper Offshore a patent for its new Compact Flotation Unit (CFU) design.

This applies to a CFU vessel with a secondary point for oil removal as part of the water treatment process.

The new design is an evolution of Staupers existing and patented CFU, allowing for a smaller vessel on offshore installations where space and footprint are critical.

Managing director Rune G. Nilssen said: The new patent will allow us to further reduce the footprint of our technology without compromising efficiency. Space and efficiency are critical factors for any offshore installation.

This new patent enables Stauper to further help operators meet their challenges accommodating space limitations for process equipment.

The CFU is said to be proven in treating produced water down toward zero ppm oil in water. It is also said to be stable, and requiring no energy, with minimal operator interference and maintenance.

04/08/2020

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Stauper secures further patent for offshore water treatment process - Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

Arup hires Americas offshore wind head – reNEWS

Arup has appointed Saygin Oytan to lead the companys US offshore wind efforts.

He will be based in Arups Boston office and will head up the companys initiatives aimed at expanding its presence in the US offshore wind market.

Most recently Oytan was offshore wind director at the New Jersey Economic Development Authority (NJEDA), where he led a range of offshore wind port and supply chain development initiatives.

Arup Boston office leader Brian Swett said: We are anticipating major growth in the offshore wind market in the US in coming years.

With Sy at the helm as our new offshore wind leader in the Americas, Im confident that Arups offshore wind business will continue to grow and mature in lockstep with the market, providing more services and more value to our clients across North America.

Oytan added: I'm excited to join the Arup team that has been working diligently to support our international and national clients in offshore wind energy development. The offshore wind market in the US is growing rapidly, where a capacity of 9040MW is under development with secured financial mechanisms.

State governors, legislatures and energy agencies are boldly moving forward on huge offshore wind programmes and projects.

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Arup hires Americas offshore wind head - reNEWS

Offshore wind pacesetter Orsted completes its largest land-based project – Recharge

Developer Orsted has completed construction of the 338MW Sage Draw project in Texas, its largest onshore wind farm to-date.

Switch-on of Sage Draw, build by contractor Blattner Energy with 120 GE turbines, brings the Danish utilitys installed capacity on land in the country to 1.3GW, with another 800MW of onshore, solar and storage projects under construction and due to enter operations late this year or early next.

Orsted during the past years had become the worlds largest operator of offshore wind, and only two years ago decided to go back into the onshore wind business.

The company in 2013 (then still with the name Dong Energy) had announced it would exit wind on land to concentrate on its offshore plans, and by the end of the following year had sold its Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and Polish onshore wind assets.

In yet another strategic shift, the utility roared back into onshore wind in 2018, a move it cemented with the acquisition of US outfit Lincoln Clean Energy (LCE) in the same year.

The safe completion of Sage Draw amidst the escalating Covid-19 crisis is a testament to the resilience and adaptiveness of the Orsted team and key project partners at Blattner Energy and GE Renewable Energy, as well as financial partners GE Energy Financial Services and BHE Renewables, said Orsted onshore wind CEO Declan Flanagan, LCEs former chief executive.

This underscores the significant role renewable energy can play in continuing to build our economy as we manage through and beyond the current crisis."

Orsted targets reaching 5GW in installed onshore wind capacity by 2025.

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Offshore wind pacesetter Orsted completes its largest land-based project - Recharge

Ardyne awarded long-term North Sea intervention contracts – Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

Offshore staff

ABERDEEN, UK Fishing, milling, and casing recovery services provider Ardyne has secured four long-term contracts for work on 175 wells in the North Sea.

Three of the contracts, ranging in duration from three to five years, are from major operators to provide fishing, P&A and inner string conductor recovery on 103 wells in the UK and Norwegian sectors.

The projects will start this spring and summer.

Another contract involves provision of fishing and slot recovery services for 72 wells to a major Norwegian operator. The four-year campaign is expected to start in 3Q.

Ardyne will deploy its Trident single-trip casing retrieval solution, its Titan single-trip casing cutting hydraulic power system, and its DownHole Power Tool.

Trident and Titan have each been deployed more than 1,200 times in various locations worldwide and in various locations worldwide.

04/09/2020

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Ardyne awarded long-term North Sea intervention contracts - Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

Cassidy, Kennedy ask Trump to aid offshore oil and gas industry – Greater Baton Rouge Business Report

U.S. Sens. Bill Cassidy and John Kennedy want President Donald Trump to provide relief to the offshore oil and gas industry, which has been ravaged in recent weeks.

As The Daily Advertiser reports, a letter from the two senators asks the president to direct the Department of the Interior to suspend all royalty payments for independent offshore oil and gas producers for a full year after the World Health Organization declares the COVID-19 pandemic has ended.

In 2018, independent oil and gas producers paid $1.5 billion in royalties, according to the letter.

Unless the federal government provides meaningful relief to the independent offshore oil and gas companies in the next 30 days, the continued viability of the industry will be in serious jeopardy, the senators letter states. The loss of this important industry would have a devastating effect on Louisiana and would negatively impact the national security interests of the United States.

In addition to suspending the payments, the senators asked the president to suspend production and operation of federal offshore leases and grant automatic three-year extensions for the primary lease terms of offshore leases. Read the full story.

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Star of the South Unveils Three Transmission Route Options – Offshore WIND

Star of the South Wind Farm has unveiled three potential power transmission corridors for Australias first offshore wind farm. The project company has now invited community feedback on the proposed routes.

The project needs to select a transmission corridor to continue progressing by the end of the year, Star of the South Wind Farm said.

The developer will assess the three possible transmission corridors based on engineering and technical studies, advice from specialists and feedback from landholders and local communities.

Each of the three proposed options involves underground cables and substations, and connection to the grid in the Latrobe Valley.

Due to COVID-19, face-to-face community information sessions planned in April have been cancelled. The community is encouraged to provide feedback online or get in touch with the project team to request a hard copy information pack or setup a teleconference meeting, the project company states.

The public will be able to provide feedback from 14 April to 17 May 2020.

Surveys at the project site off Gippsland, Victoria, started late last year. Wind, wave and seabed studies will continue over several years. The data from the surveys will inform planning assessments and the projects feasibility, Star of the South Wind Farm said.

The developers have already referred the project to the state and federal authorities to start the environmental assessment process.

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Star of the South Unveils Three Transmission Route Options - Offshore WIND

Oceaneering to Work on Moray East Offshore Wind Project – Offshore WIND

Oceaneering International Services Ltd (OISL) has secured a contract to complete seabed route and debris clearance at the Moray East offshore wind project in Scotland.

OISL said it will provide a full suite of services, including vessel, route preparation tools, remotely operated vehicle (ROV), survey, and personnel to complete the operations for the wind farms export cable routes.

The work scope, carried out by OISLs Aberdeen-based team, will involve the deployment of the companys Route Preparation Plough RP15.

The project is planned to be completed early in the second quarter of the year.

We are very proud to have been awarded this work from MOWEL for the Moray East development, thereby increasing our presence on this project and adding to the local content aspirations of the developer, said Allan Ralston, Oceaneerings Director of Renewable and Subsea Projects.

Our tried, tested, and proven Route Preparation Plough has an established record of successfully supporting several U.K. wind farm projects to date and will provide our client with the most robust and cost-effective technical solution for route preparation in advance of export cable installation.

Moray East will comprise 100 MHI Vestas 9.5MW turbines located 22km from the coast in theOuter Moray Firth zone.

The 950MW offshore wind farm is expected to be fully operational in 2022.

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Oceaneering to Work on Moray East Offshore Wind Project - Offshore WIND

Growth Myths About Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (DO) You Probably Still Believe – The News Heater

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (NYSE:DO) went up by 20.59% from its latest closing price when compared to the 1-year high value of $12.64 and move down -670.73%, while DO stocks collected +3.14% of gains with the last five trading sessions. Press Release reported on 02/11/20 that Loews Corporation Announces Quarterly Dividend on Common Stock

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (NYSE: DO) The 36 Months beta value for DO stocks is at 2.25, while of the analysts out of 0 who provided ratings for Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. stocks as a buy while as overweight, rated it as hold and as sell. The average price we get from analysts is $2.59 which is $1.67 above current price. DO currently has a short float of 22.71% and public float of 137.29M with average trading volume of 4.58M shares.

DO stocks went up by 3.14% for the week, with the monthly drop of -6.29% and a quarterly performance of -76.77%, while its annual performance rate touched -86.20%. The simple moving average for the period of the last 20 days is -24.48% for DO stocks with the simple moving average of -71.32% for the last 200 days.

Many brokerage firms have already submitted their reports for DO stocks, with Barclays repeating the rating for DO shares by setting it to Equal Weight. The predicted price for DO socks in the upcoming period according to Barclays is $45 based on the research report published on March 19, 2020.

CapitalOne, on the other hand, stated in their research note that they expect to see DO stock at the price of $45. The rating they have provided for DO stocks is Underweight according to the report published on March 17, 2020.

Morgan Stanley gave Equal-Weight rating to DO stocks, setting the target price at $3 in the report published on March 16, 2020.

After a stumble in the market that brought DO to its low price for the period of the last 52 weeks, Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. was unable to take a rebound, for now settling with -87.03% of loss for the given period.

The stock volatility was left at 38.97%, however, within the period of a single month, the volatility rate increased by 36.10%, while the shares surge at the distance of +17.14% for the moving average in the last 20 days. In oppose to the moving average for the last 50 days, trading by -65.98% lower at the present time.

In the course of the last 5 trading sessions, DO went up by +3.14%, which changed the moving average for the period of 200 days to the total of -80.64% of losses for the stock in comparison to the 20-day moving average settled at $2.1835. In addition, Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. saw -77.19% in overturn over the period of a single year with a tendency to cut further losses.

Reports are indicating that there were more than several insider trading activities at Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (DO), starting from ROLAND DAVID L, who sold 4,000 shares at the price of $2.52 back on Mar 16. After this action, Rushing now owns 25,240 shares of Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc., valued at $10,064 with the latest closing price.

Kornblau Scott Lee, the Senior Vice President CFO of Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc., sold 5,819 shares at the value of $8.69 during a trade that took place back on Sep 16, which means that Kornblau Scott Lee is holding 0 shares at the value of $50,567 based on the most recent closing price.

The current profitability levels are settled at -28.68 for the present operating margin and -21.76 for gross margin. The net margin for Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. stands at -36.43. Total capital return value is set at -5.14, while invested capital returns managed to touch -6.54. Equity return holds the value -10.60%, with -6.00% for asset returns.

Based on Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (DO), the companys capital structure generated 66.51 points for debt to equity in total, while total debt to capital is set at the value of 39.94. Total debt to assets is settled at the value of 35.70 with long-term debt to equity ratio rests at -2.29 and long-term debt to capital is 65.89.

The value for Enterprise to Sales is 2.29 with debt to enterprise value settled at 0.72. The receivables turnover for Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. is 4.53 with the total asset turnover at the value of 0.16. The liquidity ratio also appears to be rather interesting for investors as it stands at 1.51.

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Growth Myths About Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (DO) You Probably Still Believe - The News Heater

Spain’s king renounces inheritance and cuts father’s income over ‘offshore fund’ – The Guardian

Spains King Felipe VI has renounced his personal inheritance from his father and stripped the former king Juan Carlos of his annual stipend after it was alleged that Felipe VI was poised to receive millions of euros from a secret offshore fund with ties to Saudi Arabia.

The statement issued by Spains royal household on Sunday evening came after a report named King Felipe as a beneficiary of an offshore fund set up by his father in 2008. At the time, Juan Carlos was still in power.

The former head of state abdicated in 2014, after a series of scandals sent his popularity plummeting. Juan Carlos, 82, had continued to receive an annual stipend from the state, however, amounting to around 194,000 (175,000) in 2018.

The alleged offshore account, named as the Lucum Foundation, held around 65m in funds that were described as a donation from the king of Saudi Arabia, according to the Sunday Telegraph. The account was set up at an office in Panama city and tied to an account with Genevas Mirabaud private bank, the report added.

An investigation by Swiss prosecutors into another offshore fund allegedly tied to Juan Carlos, named Fondation Zagatka, sparked calls this month for Spains parliament to investigate the business dealings of the former king. The push was rejected by Spains Socialists and the two main parties on the right, who argued that any such probe would be unconstitutional.

According to newspaper La Tribune de Genve, prosecutors believe the fund could be linked to kickback payments after the former monarch helped to broker business deals with Saudi Arabia while in power.

On Sunday, the statement by the Royal household noted that King Felipe became aware last year of claims that he was the beneficiary of the Lucum Foundation and subsequently swore before a notary public that he had told his father that he was renouncing any benefit from the fund. King Felipe denied any knowledge of being a beneficiary of the Zagatka fund.

Neither King Felipe nor his household had any knowledge, participation or responsibility in the alleged events, the statement noted. The statement also includes a note from the former king, stating that he had never told his son that he was the beneficiary of the two funds.

The former king had been informed of his sons decision to renounce his inheritance as well as any asset, investment or financial structure whose origin, characteristic or purpose may not be in accordance with the law or with the rectitude and integrity of the crown, the statement added.

Since taking the throne, Felipe has fought hard to regain the royal familys footing and move past the calls for a referendum on the monarchy that greeted his proclamation. The task was made more difficult after his sister, the Infanta Cristina, was caught up in a financial scandal involving her husband, the former Olympic handball player Iaki Urdangarn.

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Spain's king renounces inheritance and cuts father's income over 'offshore fund' - The Guardian

Pict Offshore to Expand Production of Ladder-Less Offshore Wind Access System – Offshore WIND

Pict Offshore has received a GBP 250,000 Regional Selective Assistance grant from Scottish Enterprise to expand production of the Get Up Safe (GUS) ladder-less access system at its site in Inverkeithing, Fife.

The Get Up Safe system is a motion-compensated hoist solution that enables technicians to transfer between small moving vessels and offshore wind turbines withoutturbine boat landing and ladders.

The funding is part of a wider investment by Pict Offshore to expand manufacturing at its Inverkeithing site and allows the acceleration of the development of its R&D and assembly capabilities.

According to the company, the aim is to add 13 high skilled jobs throughout 2020 and to start placing orders with the local supply chain.

We have witnessed this innovative Scottish companys growth over many years to develop a transformative product for offshore wind made in Fife and used across the world, said Head of Low Carbon Transition at Scottish Enterprise, Andy McDonald.

The network of support around Fife Energy Park is also at the heart of this project as it is host to ORE Catapults Levenmouth Demonstrator Turbine and allowed the company to test its products on the worlds most advanced open access offshore wind turbines.

Pict Offshore began developing the product in 2016, and from 2017 prototypes of the system were tested at the 7MW Levenmouth Demonstration Turbine.

rsted announced last year it had acquired a 22.5% share in the company with an aim to mature the new ladder-less access system.

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Pict Offshore to Expand Production of Ladder-Less Offshore Wind Access System - Offshore WIND

Can New England Hang On to Its Offshore Wind Jobs? – Greentech Media News

BOSTON Siemens Gamesa, the worlds leading supplier of offshore wind turbines, recently revealed that its considering building a $200 million blade factory in Virginias Hampton Roads region a potential cornerstone investment for the domestic supply chain.

Thats great news for the U.S. offshore wind industry, though New England officials could be forgiven for being less than thrilled with the choice of location.

An offshore wind jobs boom looks set to wash up on American shores. An analysis released this week by the American Wind Energy Association found that offshore wind could support 83,000 U.S. jobs by 2030, assuming the country builds 30 gigawatts by then and supply-chain investments are made quickly.

But where those jobs end up is still an open question. And its one that officials in New England a region that includes Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire may have reason to be nervous about.

New England is the cradle of the American offshore wind market and in many ways its spiritual home. It hosts the country's only operating project (Block Island, off Rhode Island) and its only tailor-made offshore wind port (New Bedford, Massachusetts). Many of the U.S. industry's most important companies are currently based here.

But the regions future role in the industry particularly in manufacturing looks uncertain. Waterside space is tight in southern New England, where many projects are clustered. A number of states in the Mid-Atlantic region, where the population and electricity demand are far larger, now have much higher offshore wind targets.

We do have a relatively higher labor cost, so its hard to compete with the Mid-Atlantic, said Bruce Carlisle, managing director for offshore wind at the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center, speaking last month at an industry event in Boston. MassCEC operates the states offshore wind port in New Bedford, where its hoping to see more supply chain investment.

New England has a large cluster of projects, but the Mid-Atlantic has higher offshore wind targets. (Credit: AWEA)

Massachusetts, which boasts New Englands largest offshore wind targetat 3.2 gigawatts by 2030, has chosen to emphasize low-cost power over local job creation. Thats helped to deliver headline-grabbing prices $58 per megawatt-hour in the latest round whichin turn has spurred other states to embrace offshore wind. Whether it's an approach that delivers as many jobs as the state is hoping for remains to be seen.

In its latest procurement, Massachusetts utilities chose the low-cost energy option put forward by Mayflower Wind, a joint venture of Shell and EDPR. Other proposed projects had focused more heavily on local manufacturing.

The delay of the 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind project, originally slated for completion across two phases in 2021-2022, may also alter calculations for the local supply chain. Since Vineyard was unexpectedly hit with its delay last August, Dominion Energy confirmed plans for a 2.6-gigawatt project in Virginia, while New York and New Jersey have continued to add fuel to their markets.

Carlisle said hes frequently asked whether Massachusetts should be doing more to incentivize in-state job creation through its offshore wind procurements. Speaking at the recent event hosted by the University of Delawares Special Initiative on Offshore Wind, Carlisle stressed that Mayflower Winds winning bid did come with very significant economic development commitments.

That said, if I were the one picking the procurements, would I have picked the low-cost [project]? Probably not.

The biggest rival for jobs is the Mid-Atlantic, a region that loosely stretches from New York down to Virginia. The population in those states tends to be much larger than in New England, and some of them have more waterside space for factories, laydown yards and other critical offshore wind facilities.

By and large, the Mid-Atlantic got a later start in offshore wind, or, in cases like that ofNew Jersey, saw early efforts stall out. But over the past few years, the region has embraced the market with a passion.

Last week Virginia passed legislation mandating 5.2 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2034, and even before Siemens Gamesas announcement, the state was seen as a strong contender for future factories.

New York and New Jersey, meanwhile, now have combined targets totaling 16.5 gigawatts for 2035. New Jerseys governor talks about his state getting half of its electricity from offshore wind by the 2030s. Both states are vying aggressively for jobs.

Maryland, too, looks set for an influx of investment in the port facilities around Baltimore. All told, the Mid-Atlantic now represents one of the largest future offshore wind markets in the world, making it a powerful draw for the supply chain.

The potential emergence of markets even farther south, offshore the Carolinas, adds to the lure of the Mid-Atlantic as a location for factories.

What I worry about is the demand in the Mid-Atlantic. [] If you go farther south, the wind speeds arent as good, but theyve got some pretty powerful procurements coming up, Hilary Fagan, executive vice president for business development at the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation, said onstage at the Boston event.

Even some regions without huge targets could begin to pick up jobs in the sector. Maine, for one, has no big projects in developmenttoday but is nevertheless hoping to carve out an early role in the market.

We dont think we have to wait [for our own projects] to be engaged in that, said Dan Burgess, director of the Maine governors energy office, speaking at the Boston event.

Searsport, Maine holds promise as an offshore wind port, Burgess said. Searsport is no stranger to the wind industry: Its already seen a gigawatt of turbines pass through its gatesen route to onshore projects in Maine and Vermont, he said.

Maine, at least, ispart of New England; even farther north, companies in Canada are starting to pay close attention to the market. Marine Renewables Canada, an industry group based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, held a U.S. offshore wind "readiness" workshop this week for interested Canadian companies.

Several ports in the provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia could play a role, as could facilities as far away as Newfoundland. The troublesome Jones Act, which requires that any transportation of goods and equipment between American ports must be done by U.S.-flagged vessels, could work to Canadas advantage.

Elisa Obermann, executive director at Marine Renewables Canada, said the intention of Canadian companies is not "competing for potential opportunities" with American ports.Instead, the focus is looking at where there may be gaps" and how Canadian firms "could support early U.S. offshore wind projects as they ramp up," she told Greentech Media.

We have in Canada, especially in Atlantic Canada, a number of companies that have capabilities from working in related marine and offshore sectors predominately the offshore oil and gas sector.

Many in the offshore wind industry still diplomatically downplaytensions that the competition for future jobs may engender. The market looks set to go from no pie at all to a very big one, leaving lots of pieces to go around.

Unless we really screw it up, I think were all going to win," said Fagan of the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation. "If we can get the talent and supply chain here [in New England], I think we could probably benefit from the demand down there, she said of the Mid-Atlantic market.

Even if New England were to miss out on some of the big factories, it would almost certainly remain a central hub for parts of the industry, particularly white-collar jobs:developers, engineers, financiers. Last week Denmarks rsted, the worlds leading offshore wind developer, opened an innovation hub in Providence, Rhode Island.

People look at landing a blade factory or a tower facility as the ultimate goal, and yeah, it would be great, said Carlisle of the MassCEC. But lets shift our perspective a littleand look at all the engineering, innovation, R&D, all down through our marine network supply base."

"Theres going to be plenty of activity to go around," Carlisle said. "The supply chain is going to grow and take hold here. We are going to be one of the regions people are going to look to for that expertise."

Originally posted here:

Can New England Hang On to Its Offshore Wind Jobs? - Greentech Media News

The Implications of CBP’s Offshore Jones Act Changes – The Maritime Executive

The non-Jones Act crane ship Thialf working on the topsides facility at Shell's Perdido platform in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, 2009 (file image)

By Jon Waldron 03-11-2020 05:06:00

In December, after years of debate within the offshore industry, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) issued a decision in its Customs Bulletin entitled Modification and Revocation of Ruling Letters Relating to CBPs Application of the Jones Act to the Transportation of Certain Merchandise and Equipment Between Coastwise Points (the Decision). This decision became effective on February 17. So now the question arises - how does this actually affect offshore activities going forward?

In short, the notice eliminates previous erroneous decisions that allowed non-coastwise qualified vessels to transport items that should have been considered merchandise and not vessel equipment under the Jones Act. The notice also clarifies that lifting operations may be conducted by non-Jones Act vessels.

Specifically, as discussed in more detail below, the Decision (1) broadens the definition of merchandise to make it clear that non-Jones Act vessels can no longer carry out certain offshore activities that they have performed for years under an equipment of the vessel theory, and (2) establishes a new interpretation of Lifting Operations, to specify the movements that a non-Jones Act vessel can perform, when conducting installation or decommissioning operations, which will not be considered transportation within the meaning of the Jones Act.

Background

In both 2009 and 2017, CBP published notices to revoke or modify various rulings which potentially could have overturned decades of precedent with regard to a sweeping range of offshore operations which have never been subject to the Jones Act.To be frank, CBP did not fully understand how the offshore industry operated offshore, and the proposals were potentially over broad, without CBP understanding the economic impacts on the various types of offshore operations these proposals would have adversely affected.

As a result of strong industry backlash on both occasions, the proposals were withdrawn for reconsideration. Finally, following the 2017 withdrawal, CBP undertook an intensive exchange of information with all facets of industry to fully understand how industry actually operates offshore and to fine-tune and focus its 2019 proposal on the equipment of the vessel issues and lifting operations which resulted in this fair and well-balanced Decision.

The changes in the Decision will affect:

Vessel Equipment

For decades, CBP used a Mission of the Vessel concept to justify certain subsea installation, repair, and maintenance work. This concept was incorrectly applied over broadly, which allowed non-Jones Act vessels to perform some of these activities that should have been reserved to the Jones Act fleet. The Mission of the Vessel regime was revoked by the Decision and replaced with a new Vessel Equipment interpretation. Under this interpretation, the scope of vessel equipment was narrowed to include only items, which are necessary and appropriate for the navigation, operation, or maintenance of a vessel and for the comfort and safety of the persons on board.

CBP stressed that if an item is necessary and appropriate for the operation or maintenance of a vessel, it is considered vessel equipment. Items considered necessary and appropriate for the operation of the vessel are those items that are integral to the function of the vessel and are carried by the vessel. CBP also emphasizes that the fact that an item is returned to and departs with the vessel after an operation is completed, and is not left behind on the seabed, is a factor that weighs in favor of an item being classified as vessel equipment but is not the sole determinative factor. In addition, CBP determined that other historically used rationale using the terms foreseeability, incidental to an activity, de minimis, or unforeseen, can no longer be relied on to support an interpretation of vessel equipment.

Lifting Operations

Non-Jones Act vessels have been used for decades to perform lifting operations in the offshore sector. However, in a series of three rulings issued in 2012 and 2013, CBP ruled that a movement of a crane vessel off its central axis while a topside module is suspended from its crane - in order to avoid hitting the offshore facility before unlading the topside on it - is a violation of the Jones Act. The off-axis movement of the vessel was interpreted by CBP as providing part of the transportation of the topside between a point in the U.S. and the offshore facility. This created great confusionin the industry by making virtually any lifting operation a potential violation of the Jones Act.

As a result of its discussions with industry on this point, CBP made it a priority to clarify in its Decision that lifting operations are distinct from transportation within the meaning of the Jones Act. Accordingly, offshore lifting operations now include the lifting by cranes, winches, lifting beams, or other similar activities or operations, from the time that the lifting activity begins when unlading from a vessel or removing offshore facilities or subsea infrastructure until the time that the lifting activities can be safely terminated in relation to the unlading, installation, or removal of offshore facilities or subsea infrastructure.

CBP explained that offshore lifting operations are distinct from transportation in that any lateral movement of the vessel or the item in the vicinity of the structure or facility where the item is being positioned or removed is merely subordinate to and a direct consequence of the lifting operations. CBP reasoned that this interpretation was necessitated by safety and practical concerns, including the physical demands of the lifting operations, the mitigation of risk to human life and health, and the avoidance of damage to the marine environment. Importantly, CBP confirmed that this interpretation applies to all offshore lifting operations and is not limited to heavy lifts.

Pipelaying, Drilling Related Operations and Offshore Wind Energy Facilities

CBP specifically confirmed in its Decision that CBPs existing rulings on pipelaying and cable laying remain valid and are unaffected by its Decision. In addition, while not providing similar a statement with regard to drilling, it noted that drilling ruling letters previously identified for revocation pertaining to cement, chemicals, and other consumable materials will remain in force.Several comments sought clarification regarding the impact of the Decision on the development of offshore wind energy facilities. CBP responded that any future interpretations by CBP on the application of the Jones Act to wind energy facilities or other activities will be in response to ruling requests based on specific transactions. Accordingly, it remains prudent to assume that for the most part, until CBP issues future rulings, the Jones Act applies to wind projects in much the same manner as it applies to oil and gas projects.

Pending legislation

Meanwhile, as of the time of the writing of this article, Installation Vessel legislation is pending in Congress in the form of an amendment to the coastwise laws that would create a waiver procedure for certain lifting operations that could statutorily overturn the Decision with regard to Lifting Operations as discussed above. This provision is contained in the House passed version of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2019 (CGAA 2019). The Senate version of this bill is silent on this point. It is unclear what action (and when) Congress will act on this bill.

In conclusion, CBP should be commended for its hard work to reach this result and future offshore activities must be conducted in accordance with the Decision. Non-Jones Act vessels must now comply with a narrower definition of what constitutes vessel equipment not subject to the Jones Act. On the other hand, non-Jones Act vessels may conduct lifting operations in accordance with the Decisions new interpretation without fear of enforcement action, because such operations are not transportation subject to the Jones Act. However, industry must closely watch what action Congress ultimately takes on the Installation Vessel provision passed by the House to determine if the Decisions interpretation of Lifting Operations will be changed.

Jon Waldronis a partner in the Maritime and International Trade practice group at Blank Rome. Heserved in the U.S. Coast Guard for 20 years, attaining the rank of commander, and was senior counsel to the Marine Spill Response Corporation, where he provided on-scene legal advice at major spill events.

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Maritime Executive.

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The Implications of CBP's Offshore Jones Act Changes - The Maritime Executive