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Reeves, UK's Reeves, looks to early scrapping windfall tax in the oil and gas industry. FT reports

The Financial Times reported that Britain's Finance Minister, Rachel Reeves could eliminate a windfall-tax on the oil and gas sector a year sooner than originally planned.

Reeves, it is said, is considering several options in order to achieve her goal of balancing daily spending and tax revenue by the end the decade.

The Financial Times reported that she could use her budget for next month to eliminate the energy profit levy by March 2029, instead of March 2030. This was according to people who are familiar with her thoughts.

The newspaper reported that Reeves wanted assurances from the energy companies about how such a move could spur new investments, jobs, and future tax revenue.

Could not verify immediately the report.

In an email, a spokesperson from Reeves’ office stated: "We don't comment on speculation about changes to tax before the Budget."

The levy was introduced in 2022, after the surge in energy costs following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It increased the effective tax rate for North Sea producers to 78 percent.

Offshore Energies UK, a UK industry body, has claimed that removing the temporary tax earlier could unlock investment of 40 billion pounds ($53.68billion) across 90 projects.

Economists say Reeves could have to break a government promise and increase income tax. This would be a break from the commitment Labour made before the 2024 election to the voters.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Keir starmer declined to commit to his previous promise not to increase taxes. He said that future forecasts will show that the economy is in a much worse state than previously thought.

People familiar with the situation said that the British budget watchdog will likely cut its productivity forecasts by more than expected 0.3 percentage points. This could lead to a hit of 20 billion pounds to the public finances. $1 = 0.7451 pounds (Reporting from Sam Tabahriti and Anusha in Bengaluru, Editing by Leslie Adler & Daniel Wallis).

(source: Reuters)