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Santos says gas tax proposal caused reputational damage to Australia

Santos' head said that Australia's reputation for being a stable destination for energy investments was damaged by the proposal to impose 25% tax on gas exports, even after the federal government had backed away from it.

Kevin Gallagher, CEO of Santos, said that the tax proposed by lawmakers was motivated by "activism", rather than by economics. He said that "common sense" prevailed when the centre-left Labor Government backed away from the tax proposal.

He warned that the prospect of taxing energy projects with long-term lives had unnerved foreign investors.

He said that repeated interventions and 'threats of changes' had created anxiety among foreigners, on whose capital Australia relies to fund large oil & gas developments. He said that capital flows to countries where they feel "welcomed and safe", and instability of policy could divert investments elsewhere.

Gallagher, speaking at an event in Sydney, said: "It is impossible to underestimate the damage done."

Gallagher reiterated his concerns that global markets had underpriced geopolitical risks, stating that investors hadn't fully factored the potential volatility of the?U.S. and Israeli war against?Iran.

He warned that expectations of a rapid resolution were overly optimistic. The conflict could continue, "delaying the stabilisation of markets and keeping commodity prices volatile as strategic reserves will eventually need to be built up."

He said: "There is a belief that everything will return to normal very quickly. The markets will be balanced, and everything will return to normal." "I don't think so." (Reporting and editing by Thomas Derpinghaus; Byron Kaye)

(source: Reuters)