West Virginia Code § 11-1C-10

Valuation of industrial property and natural resources property by Tax
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Commissioner; managed timberland; rulemaking authority; penalties; methods;
values sent to assessors.
(a) As used in this section:
"Industrial property" means real and personal property integrated as a functioning unit
intended for the assembling, processing and manufacturing of finished or partially finished
products.
"Natural resources property" means coal, oil, natural gas, limestuone, fireclay, dolomite,
sandstone, shale, sand and gravel, salt, lead, zinc, manganese, iron ore, radioactive
minerals, oil shale, managed timberland as defined in section two of this article, and other
minerals.
(b) All owners of industrial property and natural resources property each year shall make a
return to the State Tax Commissioner and, if requelsted in writing by the assessor of the
county where situated, to such county assessosr at a time and in the form specified by the
commissioner of all industrial or natural resources property owned by them. The
commissioner may require any informationi to be filed which would be useful in valuing the
property covered in the return. Any gpenalties provided for in this chapter or elsewhere in
this code relating to failure to list any property or to file any return or report may be applied
to any owner of property required to make a return pursuant to this section.
(c) The State Tax Commissioner shall value all industrial property in the state at its fair
market value within three years of the approval date of the plan for industrial property
required in subsection (e) of this section. The commissioner shall thereafter maintain
accurate values for all such property. The Tax Commissioner shall forward each industrial
property appraisal to the county assessor of the county in which that property is located and
the assessor shall multiply each such appraisal by 60 percent and include the resulting
asseWssed value in the land book or the personal property book, as appropriate for each tax
year. The commissioner shall supply support data that the assessor might need to evaluate
the appraisal.
(d) Within three years of the approval date of the plan required for natural resources
property required pursuant to subsection (e) of this section, the State Tax Commissioner
shall determine the fair market value of all natural resources property in the state and
thereafter maintain accurate values for all such property.
(1) In order to qualify for identification as managed timberland for property tax purposes the
owner must certify every five years, in writing to the Division of Forestry, that the property
meets the definition of managed timberland as set forth in this article and contracts to
manage property according to a plan that will maintain the property as managed timberland.
In addition, each owner's certification must state that forest management practices will be
conducted in accordance with approved practices from the publication "Best Management
Practices for Forestry". Property certified as managed timberland shall be valued according
to its use and productive potential. The Tax Commissioner shall propose rules for legislative
approval in accordance with the provisions of §29A-3-1, et seq. of this code to administer the
valuation and classification of managed timberland for purposes of taxation.
(2) In the case of all other natural resources property, the commissioner shall develop an
inventory on a county by county basis of all such property and may use any eresources,
including, but not limited to, geological survey information; exploratory, drilling, mining and
other information supplied by natural resources property owners; and mraps and other
information on file with the state Department of Environmental Protection and office of
miners' health, safety and training. Any information supplied by natural resources owners or
any proprietary or otherwise privileged information supplied by the state Department of
Environmental Protection and office of miner's health, safetyt and training shall be kept
confidential unless needed to defend an appraisal challenged by a natural resources owner.
Formulas for natural resources valuation may contain differing variables based upon known
geological or other common factors. The Tax Commissioner shall forward each natural
resources property appraisal to the county assessor of the county in which that property is
located and the assessor shall multiply each such appraisal by sixty percent and include the
resulting assessed value in the land book or the personal property book, as appropriate, for
each tax year. The commissioner shall supply support data that the assessor might need to
explain or defend the appraisal. The commissioner shall directly defend any challenged
appraisal when the assessed value of the property in question exceeds $2 million or an
owner challenging an appraisael holds or controls property situated in the same county with
an assessed value exceeding $2 million. At least every five years, the commissioner shall
review current technoloLgy for the recovery of natural resources property to determine if
valuation methodologies need to be adjusted to reflect changes in value which result from
development of new recovery technologies.
(3) Property producing oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids.
(A) WThe Tax Commissioner shall value property producing oil, natural gas, natural gas
liquids, or any combination thereof in the state at its fair market value determined through
the process of applying a yield capitalization model to the net proceeds.
(B) For the purposes of this subdivision:
(i) "Actual annual operating costs" shall include, without limitation, all lease operating
expenses, lifting costs, gathering, compression, processing, separation, fractionation, and
transportation costs as further defined herein.
(ii) "Capitalization rate" means a single state-wide capitalization rate for oil, natural gas, and
natural gas liquids producing property, which shall be determined annually by the Tax
Division based on a "Build-up-Model" of the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC).
(iii) "Compression costs" are the actual costs in the process of raising the pressure of
minerals.
(iv) "Fractionation costs" means the actual costs incurred by the producer in fractionation.
Fractionation is the separating of components of a mixture through differences in physical or
chemical properties. Fractionation is the process by which raw hydrocarbons are separated
into products.
(v) "Gathering costs" means the actual costs of transportation of oil, natural gas, natural gas
liquids, condensate, or any combination thereof from multiple wells by separate and
individual pipelines to a central point of accumulation, dehydration, compression,
separation, heating and treating or storage. u
(vi) "Lease operating expenses" means the actual costs incurred to bring the subsurface
minerals (oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids) up to the surface and convert them to
marketable products. Lease operating expenses refersa to the costs of operating the wells and
equipment. "Lease operating expenses" includes actual costs of labor, fuel, utilities,
materials, rent or supplies, which are directly relatled to the production, processing, or
transportation of oil, natural gas, natural gas sliquids, or any combination thereof and that
can be documented by the producer. For the purposes of this calculation, depreciation,
depletion, extraordinary expenses, ad valorem taxes, capital expenditures, intangible drilling
costs, expenditures relating to vehicgles or other tangible personal property not permanently
used in the production of oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, or any combination thereof
shall not be included as lease oeperating expenses.
(vii) "Lifting costs" means the actual costs incurred to operate a well during production.
(viii) "Marginal well" means in the calendar year immediately preceding the July 1
assessment date a well with an average daily production of 2 barrels of oil or less and an
average daily production of 10 MCF or less of natural gas.
(ix) "Natural gas liquids" means propane, ethane, butanes, and pentanes (also referred to as
condensate), or a combination of them that are subject to recovery from raw gas liquids by
processing in field separators, scrubbers, gas processing and reprocessing plants, or cycling
plants.
(x) "Net proceeds" means actual gross receipts on a sales volume basis determined from the
actual price received by the taxpayers as reported on the taxpayer's returns, less royalty
interest receipts, and less actual annual operating costs as reported on the taxpayer's
returns.
(xi) "Processing costs" means the actual costs incurred by the producer for activities
occurring beyond the inlet to an oil, natural gas, or natural gas liquids processing facility
that changes the physical or chemical characteristics, enhances the marketability, or
enhances the value of the separate components. Processing costs are limited to the costs for
the following activities: fractionation, adsorption, flashing, refrigeration, cryogenics,
sweetening, dehydration within a processing facility, beneficiation, stabilizing, compression,
and separation which occurs within a processing facility.
(xii) "Processing, Separation, and Fractionation costs" means de-ethnization fees, processing
or fractionation fees, pipeline or transportation fees, fuel fees, and electric fees charged by a
processing or fractionation plant to the producer.
(xiii) "Royalty interest receipts" means the fractional interest in production of oil, natural
gas, natural gas liquids, or any combination thereof, that may or may not be subject to
development costs or operating expenses and extends undiminished over the life of the
property. Typically, it is retained by the mineral owner, mineral ulessor, or both.
(xiv) "Transportation costs" means the actual costs of moving oil, natural gas, natural gas
liquids, unprocessed gas, residue gas, or gas plant products or any combination thereof to a
point of sale. a
(C) (i) For all assessments made on or after July 1, l2022, the valuation of property producing
oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, or any comsbination thereof shall be calculated using a
yield capitalization model. The yield capitalization model shall be composed of a working
interest model and a royalty interest modeil. The summation of the working interest model
and the royalty interest model shall grepresent the fair market value of the property.
(I) The working interest model shall be calculated as the sum of the working interest net
proceeds income series for natural gas, oil, and natural gas liquids. The net proceeds income
series shall be calculated as a terminating series of net proceeds discounted by applying a
capitalization rate multiplier and a decline rate multiplier. The initial term of the terminating
series of net proceeds shall be the net proceeds for that product multiplied by a six month
capitalization rate multiplier and an eighteen month decline rate multiplier.
In each subsequent term of the net proceeds income series, the calculation shall use the
value from the previous term and multiply that term by a capitalization rate multiplier and
an applicable twelve-month decline rate multiplier.
(II) The royalty interest model shall be calculated as the sum of the royalty interest receipts
income series for natural gas, oil, and natural gas liquids. The royalty interest receipts
income series shall be calculated as a terminating series of royalty interest receipts
discounted by applying a capitalization rate multiplier and a decline rate multiplier. The
initial term of the terminating series of royalty interest receipts shall be the royalty interest
receipts for that product multiplied by a six month capitalization rate multiplier and an 18
month decline rate multiplier.
In each subsequent term of the royalty interest receipts income series, the calculation shall
use the value from the previous term and multiply that term by a capitalization rate
multiplier and an applicable 12-month decline rate multiplier.
(ii) For all assessments made on or after July 1, 2022, the Tax Commissioner shall annualize
gross receipts and actual annual operating expenses before calculation of the working
interest model and the royalty interest model for wells that produced for less than 12 months
during the first calendar year of production or during the first calendar year of production
after being shut-in during the previous calendar year. Companies may provide additional
actual gross receipts and actual operating expense information that will be supplemented or
used in lieu of the Tax Commissioner annualization calculations. e
(iii) For all assessments made on or after July 1, 2024, but not before, trhe Tax Commissioner
may not include a minimum valuation for any calculation related to determining the value of
any well. For all assessments made prior to July 1, 2024, no minimum valuation shall exceed
the values of $0.30 per MCF of natural gas, $10.00 per barrel of oil, or $0.30 per unit of
natural gas liquids, as established in a Notice to taxpayers frtom the State Tax Division dated
on or about December 22, 2021.
(D) Safe harbor. – The Tax Commissioner shall annually determine a safe harbor amount for
actual annual operating costs to be published in the State Register for all marginal wells
producing oil, natural gas, natural gas liquidss, or any combination thereof. For operators of
marginal wells choosing to use the safe harbor amount rather than calculate their actual
annual operating costs, that safe harbor amount will be considered the costs associated with
the production of the oil, natural gasg, natural gas liquids, or any combination thereof, typical
of the producing geographical area and geological strata.
(E) The Tax Commissioner shall collect, retain, and report to the Speaker of the House of
Delegates and the PresiLdent of the Senate on or before April 1, 2023, and each April 1
thereafter, all information requested by the Division of Regulatory and Fiscal Affairs
regarding the valuation of property producing oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, or any
combination thereof.
(F) The Tax Commissioner shall propose rules required to administer this subdivision,
inclWuding emergency rules, in accordance with §29A-3-1 et seq. of this code, regarding
valuation of property producing oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, or any combination
thereof.
(e) The Tax Commissioner shall develop a plan for the valuation of industrial property and a
plan for the valuation of natural resources property. The plans shall include expected costs
and reimbursements, and shall be submitted to the property valuation training and
procedures commission on or before January 1, 1991, for its approval on or before July 1, of
such year. Such plan shall be revised, resubmitted to the commission and approved every
three years thereafter.
(f) To perform the valuation duties under this section, the State Tax Commissioner has the
authority to contract with a competent property appraisal firm or firms to assist with or to
conduct the valuation process as to any discernible species of property statewide if the
contract and the entity performing such contract is specifically included in a plan required
by subsection (e) of this section or otherwise approved by the commission. If the Tax
Commissioner desires to contract for valuation services only in one county or a group of
counties, the contract must be approved by the commission.
(g) The county assessor may accept the appraisal provided, pursuant to this section, by the
State Tax Commissioner: Provided, That if the county assessor fails to accept the appraisal
provided by the State Tax Commissioner, the county assessor shall show juset cause to the
valuation commission for the failure to accept such appraisal and shall further provide to the
valuation commission a plan by which a different appraisal will be condructed.
(h) The costs of appraising the industrial and natural resources puroperty within each county,
and any costs of defending same shall be paid by the state: Provided, That the office of the
state Attorney General shall provide legal representation ont behalf of the Tax Commissioner
or assessor, at no cost, in the event the industrial and natural resources appraisal is
challenged in court.
(i) For purposes of revaluing managed timberland als defined in section two of this article,
any increase or decrease in valuation by the csommissioner does not become effective prior
to July 1, 1991. The property owner may request a hearing by the director of the Division of
Forestry, who may thereafter rescind the disqualification or allow the property owner a
reasonable period of time in which tgo qualify the property. A property owner may appeal a
disqualification to the circuit court of the county in which the property is located.

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