The Jonah Field in Sublette County, as seen from the air during the height of drilling activity during the 2010s. (EcoFlight)
Share this:

Wyoming oil and gas producer Merit Energy is not entitled to $3 million in tax refunds for electricity it purchased for its operations, the Wyoming Supreme Court ruled this week.

In a 20-page ruling authored by Justice Robert C. Jarosh, the high court denied Merit’s claim that electricity purchases from 2020 to 2023 qualify under a state tax exemption intended for businesses engaged in “transportation.” Rather than transporting the product to market, according to the court, the electricity expenses were associated with production — like powering submersible pumps used to bring petrol and associated fluids to the surface and distributing them to separation facilities.

Essentially, the tax exemption applied only to power purchases for transportation via pipelines necessary to transfer the custody of the product and not for production-related activities, according to the court. 

“Across its units, Merit produces over 1,000,000 barrels of water daily to yield 15,000 barrels of crude oil,” the court noted. “The fluid arriving at the wellhead is not marketable crude oil, it is a commingled stream requiring processing before custody transfer.”

A sign that says State of Wyoming Supreme Court Building
The Wyoming State Supreme Court in Cheyenne. (Andrew Graham/WyoFile)

The ruling overturns a Wyoming State Board of Equalization decision and spares local governments from millions of dollars in potential “clawbacks,” according to some observers who say a ruling in favor of Merit might have incentivized other oil and gas operators to make similar claims. Local officials in Park County, for example, fretted over a series of amended oil and gas tax filings under various statutes asking for refunds, potentially jeopardizing budgets that were set on revenues already distributed.

New law expands ‘transportation’ tax exemption for industry

Though Merit’s electricity purchases from 2020 to 2023 did not qualify under the exemption, the same types of purchases will qualify going forward, due to a new law passed by the Legislature this year.

House Bill 311, “Exemption for transported fuel and power sales-amendments,” which went into effect July 1, extends the tax break to “sales of power or fuel to a person transporting tangible personal property by railroad or by pipeline when the power or fuel is consumed directly in generating motive power for actual transportation purposes, regardless of ownership of the transported tangible personal property.”

The previous version of the exemption either did not apply to, or was legally obscure, regarding some oil and gas pipelines, according to the Petroleum Association of Wyoming, which brought the measure to lawmakers.

“Our argument was, some pipelines are already exempt, but not all pipelines,” PAW President Pete Obermueller told WyoFile. “And that is a major competitive disadvantage to [Wyoming] operators that have to do a lot of moving of their product through these gathering lines.”

An aerial view of a Powder River Basin oil site in 2024. (Dustin Bleizeffer/WyoFile courtesy of Ecoflight)

“Gathering” refers to a web of small pipelines that originate at individual wells and funnel toward larger pipelines that take petrol to refineries and, ultimately, to regional and national market trading points.

However, the “disadvantage” Obermueller mentioned — that Wyoming oil and gas producers had endured prior to the legislation — is unclear. When asked, Obermueller said he didn’t know how Wyoming’s laws compare to similar taxation methods in competing oil and gas-producing states.

Expanding the exemption will result in less revenue for oil- and natural gas-producing counties, according to the Wyoming Department of Revenue. But just how much is unclear.

According to the bill’s fiscal note: “The fiscal or personnel impact is not determinable due to insufficient time to complete the fiscal note process.”

Both PAW and the Department of Revenue noted that even the expanded tax exemption does not apply to all electricity purchases in the oil and gas industry.

“It’s pretty small in the sense that it only affects a certain amount of electricity purchased for a very specific reason,” Obermueller said, “and the only way to get the exemption is if you know how much electricity you’re using for that specific purpose.”

Overall, the expanded exemption could result in an annual revenue loss of about $10 million, Obermueller estimated. Electrical “power costs in Wyoming, apart from labor, are the single largest expense for producing resources here,” he said. “The point is, power costs are a barrier to production.”

The average monthly cost of electricity for all “industrial” consumers in Wyoming decreased by 2.3% year-over-year in August, according to a report by the University of Wyoming School of Energy Resources, compared to a 5% increase nationally.

The spot price for Wyoming crude oil was down 15.4% year-over-year, as of October. Production for the same period had ticked up only 0.1%. Wyoming natural gas production, year-over-year in August, was down nearly 5%.

Dustin Bleizeffer covers energy and climate at WyoFile. He has worked as a coal miner, an oilfield mechanic, and for 26 years as a statewide reporter and editor primarily covering the energy industry in...

Join the Conversation

4 Comments

WyoFile's goal is to provide readers with information and ideas that foster constructive conversations about the issues and opportunities our communities face. One small piece of how we do that is by offering a space below each story for readers to share perspectives, experiences and insights. For this to work, we need your help.

What we're looking for: 

  • Your real name — first and last. 
  • Direct responses to the article. Tell us how your experience relates to the story.
  • The truth. Share factual information that adds context to the reporting.
  • Thoughtful answers to questions raised by the reporting or other commenters.
  • Tips that could advance our reporting on the topic.
  • No more than three comments per story, including replies. 

What we block from our comments section, when we see it:

  • Pseudonyms. WyoFile stands behind everything we publish, and we expect commenters to do the same by using their real name.
  • Comments that are not directly relevant to the article. 
  • Demonstrably false claims, what-about-isms, references to debunked lines of rhetoric, professional political talking points or links to sites trafficking in misinformation.
  • Personal attacks, profanity, discriminatory language or threats.
  • Arguments with other commenters.

Other important things to know: 

  • Appearing in WyoFile’s comments section is a privilege, not a right or entitlement. 
  • We’re a small team and our first priority is reporting. Depending on what’s going on, comments may be moderated 24 to 48 hours from when they’re submitted — or even later. If you comment in the evening or on the weekend, please be patient. We’ll get to it when we’re back in the office.
  • We’re not interested in managing squeaky wheels, and even if we wanted to, we don't have time to address every single commenter’s grievance. 
  • Try as we might, we will make mistakes. We’ll fail to catch aliases, mistakenly allow folks to exceed the comment limit and occasionally miss false statements. If that’s going to upset you, it’s probably best to just stick with our journalism and avoid the comments section.
  • We don’t mediate disputes between commenters. If you have concerns about another commenter, please don’t bring them to us.

The bottom line:

If you repeatedly push the boundaries, make unreasonable demands, get caught lying or generally cause trouble, we will stop approving your comments — maybe forever. Such moderation decisions are not negotiable or subject to explanation. If civil and constructive conversation is not your goal, then our comments section is not for you. 

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. It seems the last three paragraphs tell the story. BTW I’d really like a poster sized copy of that photo of the Jonah Field.

  2. I think of how that money could be benefitting others in the state of Wyoming and can’t help but feel torn.

  3. Another example of the hundreds of tax exemptions that cost the state hundreds of million dollars in tax revenue every year. If the Legislature wants to fix the budget issues they face every session, repeal every single tax exemption and start over. If they actually collected the taxes that are on the books they would have more than enough revenue to help those who can’t afford property tax (sorry billionaire and millionaire “ranchers” from out of state don’t need our help).

    1. Why does the legislature care more about wealthy huge corporations/individuals than they do about Wyoming citizens and communities?