Oil, Gas and the Transition to Renewables 2024

Last Updated August 06, 2024

Argentina

Law and Practice

Authors



Bomchil is considered one of the leading full-service law firms in Argentina. Since the firm’s foundation in 1923, it has participated in some of the country’s most complex and significant transactions and disputes. Bomchil’s oil and gas practice is a market leader, with partners that have broad experience counselling local and foreign companies, with solid knowledge of the local industry and unmatched connections in the international field. It has a deep understanding of the industry’s regulatory environment and has been involved in some of the most important investment and infrastructure projects and M&A transactions, representing international and local companies. Clients include the likes of Chevron, Litoral Gas and Refinor.

The main characteristic of the Argentine hydrocarbon regime is that the state (ie, the federal government or the provinces) owns the hydrocarbons in the subsoil. The rights the state grants for the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbon reserves are separate from surface ownership. The hydrocarbons, once extracted, belong to the entity or entities holding the relevant E&P rights.

The National Constitution, as amended in 1994, provides in Article 124 that “the eminent domain of the natural resources existing in their respective territories belongs to the provinces”. The provision became effective when Law 26,197, which was enacted in 2006, amended Law 17,319 (the “Hydrocarbons Law”), in accordance with Article 124. Therefore, as per the current Hydrocarbons Law, hydrocarbons belong to the provinces where they are located, or to the nation if the resources are located in federal territory. As a result, the nation only owns the hydrocarbons in offshore blocks in the continental shelf located more than 12 nautical miles away from the shore. Each province owns the hydrocarbons located in its territory, including those within 12 nautical miles of the shore.

This means the relevant state (ie, nation or province) that owns the resources has full authority to award E&P rights for the exploration, development and exploitation of the resources, including exploration permits, exploitation concessions and association agreements with state-owned companies. The state is also the enforcement authority regarding such awards and contracts.

The State Secretariat of Energy is the main governmental body involved in energy regulation at a national level. The Undersecretariat of Hydrocarbons and Fuels is the subdivision specifically devoted to oil and gas. The federal regulator is governed by the Hydrocarbons Law (as amended) and several executive orders issued by the national executive power. The secretariat is regulated from an administrative organisational standpoint by the Ministries Law, as restated by Decree No 438/92 (as amended), which establishes the different ministries, secretariats and functions assigned to each of them; see Ministry of Economy: Energy.

Each oil and gas-producing province has its own oil and gas regulators. Provincial regulators are governed by the federal Hydrocarbons Law and by provincial legislation. The local legislation in some provinces includes provincial hydrocarbons laws that are mostly in alignment with the Hydrocarbons Law, which provides the basic principles and substantial rules governing petroleum activity.

National policies regarding the exploration, development, production, transportation and marketing of hydrocarbons shall be determined by the national executive branch, according to the Hydrocarbons Law. This means that the power to establish national hydrocarbons policy and pass material legislation remains with the federal government and Congress, even though the provinces retain:

  • ownership of the hydrocarbons;
  • the power to grant permits and concessions; and
  • regulatory powers concerning the way in which the federal hydrocarbons regime is applied in their territories.

The Hydrocarbons Law co-functions with hydrocarbon laws and regulations passed by particular oil and gas-producing provinces, such as the Province of Neuquén Hydrocarbons Law No 2453, the Province of Mendoza Hydrocarbons Law No 7526, the Province of La Pampa Hydrocarbons Law No 2675 and the Province of Chubut Hydrocarbons Law No XVII No 102, which are for the most part substantially aligned with the provisions of the Hydrocarbons Law. 

The Ente Nacional Regulador del Gas (Enargas) regulates most aspects relating to the transportation, distribution and marketing of natural gas.

The main oil and gas company controlled by the state is YPF SA, which is a sociedad anónima (stock company) governed by General Companies Law No 19,550 and therefore subject to the general legislation that applies to private companies. As per Law 26,741 (passed in 2012), whereby the controlling shares of YPF were expropriated from Repsol, the national government and petroleum-producing companies own 51% of the shares, of which 51% are owned by the federal government and 49% by the provinces. The provinces and the national government act jointly as though they were one shareholder but follow the national government’s lead. The remaining 49% of the shares are listed on the Buenos Aires Stock Exchange and also traded on international stock exchanges, such as New York, and privately owned.

As a sociedad anónima formed under the General Companies Law, YPF is subject to the regulations generally applied to any other stock company, except for its control structure. 

Energía Argentina SA (formerly Integración Energética Argentina SA) (ENARSA) is another state-owned company whose main purpose is to administer natural gas and LNG imports and act as an intermediary in certain domestic natural gas purchase and sale transactions – that is, when gas is then used to supply the distribution and sub-distribution sectors. Decree No 76/22 granted the company a natural gas transportation concession for the new “President Néstor Kirchner Gas Pipeline” between the cities of Tratayén (Province of Neuquén) and San Jerónimo (Province of Santa Fe).

The Hydrocarbons Law (as amended by inter alia Laws 26,197 and 27,007 and the recently passed Law of Bases and Starting Points for the Liberty of Argentines, known as the “Bases Law”), contains the basic material legislation in relation to the exploration, development and production of hydrocarbons. The Mining Code, along with the Hydrocarbons Law, applies in connection with certain issues not included in the Hydrocarbons Law. The Hydrocarbons Law is supplemented by numerous executive orders and resolutions. There are no specific rules in connection with pooling and unitisation. The Hydrocarbons Law establishes, as a basic principle, that holders of concessions shall conduct operations in a reasonable manner and procure to do so in a way that does not cause damage to any adjacent fields. This law provides that issues involving adjacent exploitations shall be resolved by the concessionaire’s agreement and that, if no agreement can be reached, the Secretariat of Energy shall establish the way in which the adjacent fields shall be exploited.

Law 24,076 outlines the basic regulations for the transportation, marketing and distribution of natural gas. Other important laws are No 24,145 (federalisation of hydrocarbons), No 26,659 (restrictions in connection with the E&P of petroleum in the continental shelf) and No 26/,741 (establishes the achievement of petroleum self-sufficiency as a matter of national strategic interest and expropriates the controlling shares of YPF SA).

Surface Inspection

Any person may carry out the superficial inspection of any area within the Argentine territory in search of hydrocarbons, except in areas covered by exploration permits and exploitation concessions, with the prior authorisation of the landowner.

The Ministry of Energy and Mining passed Resolution 197/18 in 2018, with a new set of regulations applicable to surface inspection permits on offshore areas – ie, areas beyond 12 nautical miles from the coastline. This resolution provides for an eight-year term and gives the permit holder commercial exploitation rights. These include the exclusive right to disclose (subject to a few exceptions) and commercialise the data obtained from the inspection activities on a non-discriminatory basis for two years after the permit expires.

Onshore surface inspections are unusual. Offshore surface inspection activity has been conducted by a few international companies with permits issued under Resolution 197/98 or by a pre-existing permit that was converted into a permit under the terms of Resolution 197/18, as mentioned above.

Permits under Resolution 197/18 are granted by the federal government.

Exploration Permits

Exploration permits are granted by the relevant executive branch, which will be either federal or provincial, depending on where the hydrocarbons are located. 

The holder of an exploration permit has the exclusive right to perform exploratory activities within the permit area. They also have the exclusive right to obtain an exploitation concession upon discovering oil or gas in commercially exploitable quantities and conditions (commercial discovery) during the term of the permit.

Exploration permits are awarded through a bidding process. As in similar processes, this involves the submission of two envelopes. Envelope A must contain evidence of the bidder’s experience and technical and financial qualifications, whereas envelope B is the economic offer itself. The latter typically comprises work commitments and an entry bonus.

The blocks are awarded based on criteria that include the amount of work units, time of exploration commitments and, in some bids, the entry fee offered by the bidder. The public tender will be awarded to the bidder who makes the highest offer, in keeping with a formula that takes all the above-mentioned factors into consideration.

Exploitation Concessions

Exploitation concessions grant the exclusive right to exploit the area’s existing hydrocarbon fields. They are granted by the relevant executive branch, which is either federal or provincial, depending on where the hydrocarbons are located.

The exploitation of a field involves the development of its potential. The Hydrocarbons Law requires concessionaires to make, within a reasonable term, works to explore for and extract hydrocarbons using rational and efficient techniques. By the same token, the exploitation concession also allows the concessionaire to build and operate treatment plants and other surface facilities. This includes having the right to request a transportation authorisation to transport the production out of the concession area.

The hydrocarbons belong to the concessionaire, in accordance with its participating interest in the concession, and the concessionaire may dispose of its share of the production freely – subject to the general limitations contained in the Hydrocarbons Law and its supplementary regulations.

Association Agreements With Province-Owned Companies

The province-owned company typically owns the E&P rights in association agreements and makes such rights irrevocably available to the private party/parties involved in the joint venture.

The provincial company makes its exploration rights over the area available during the exploration stage. Should a commercial discovery occur, the provincial company must request an exploitation concession from the province and, once granted, make it available to the joint venture.

Typically, the province-owned company holds a 10% participating interest.

The private parties assume all the exploratory risk on an exclusive basis, as the province-owned company does not assume any investments, costs and expenses during the exploration stage. Following a commercial discovery and the subsequent grant of an exploitation concession on the block, the province-owned company must pay its share of capital and operating expenditures (CapEx and OpEx respectively). 

The hydrocarbons belong to each party as per its participating interest in the contract, and each party can dispose of its share of the production freely – subject to the general limitations contained in the Hydrocarbons Law and its supplementary regulations.

The private party (or one of the private parties if there is more than one) shall be the operator.

Offshore inspection permits beyond 12 nautical miles from the shoreline are granted by the federal government following a request from a company willing to conduct such surface inspection.

Exploration permits are granted through public bidding rounds.

Exploitation concessions can be obtained:

  • by the holder of an exploration permit for all or a portion of the exploration area, following a commercial discovery;
  • through a public bid in connection with “proved” blocks (blocks where exploration activities are deemed unnecessary); or
  • in the case of unconventional exploitation concessions, and until 31 December 2028, when the exploitation concession holder asks for the concession area to be subdivided based on the block’s unconventional potential and for the subdivided area with unconventional potential to then be granted an unconventional concession.

Association agreements with state-owned companies are granted through public bidding rounds called by the relevant provinces.

The following are some of the qualifications required to grant an upstream licence in a public bid. 

  • Bidders must provide a bond to guarantee that the offer will not be withdrawn and – once the permit, concession or contract is awarded – the prevailing bidder must provide a bond to guarantee the proposed minimum work commitments will be fulfilled.
  • A local entity is required – this can be a local company (a stock company or a limited liability company) or branch.
  • The local entity must be registered with the E&P Companies Registrar of the Secretariat of Hydrocarbons, and with similar registrars in the relevant province.
  • The company must show evidence of its financial capability (and also technical capability, if it is going to be an operator) in order to register. The financial capability requirement parameter (as set forth in Disposition No 335/19, issued in September 2019) currently stands at a net worth of at least:
    1. the value in ARS of 27,000 barrels of crude oil for companies involved (or willing to be involved) in onshore activity; or
    2. the value in ARS of 270,000 barrels of crude oil for companies involved (or willing to be involved) in offshore activity (where the average price of a barrel of crude oil is calculated based on domestic sales in the previous calendar year, as confirmed by the Undersecretariat of Hydrocarbons on its web page).
  • The applicant’s financial and economic capability should be analysed using certain ratios applicable to evaluate the company’s financial and economic position.
  • Specific financial and technical capability requirements for qualifying as a bidder were set forth in an international bidding round for offshore blocks that took place in the first quarter of 2019.
  • Companies performing any E&P activities in the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), or that have any affiliate involved in such activities, cannot register with the E&P Companies Registrar and therefore cannot hold any interests in any upstream licence.

Royalty on the production of hydrocarbons must be paid on a monthly basis to the relevant province or national government (in accordance with the location of the hydrocarbons field). Royalty is regulated by Sections 59 to 65 of the Hydrocarbons Law and by National Decree 1671/1969.

Royalties are a percentage of the hydrocarbons produced at wellhead (Section 59 Hydrocarbons Law). The royalty applicable on the hydrocarbons produced under exploration permits and exploitation concessions granted after the enactment of the Bases Law (July 2024) shall be the one agreed upon by the National or Provincial Executive Branch, as appropriate, in the competitive tender. Bidders shall compete for the value of the royalty, taking as reference a base 15% rate. Bidders shall be able to offer such 15% or another rate, above or below the reference rate. Permits and concessions granted before the enactment of the Bases Law shall continue paying royalty in accordance with the terms applicable to them the term before the enactment of the Bases Law (12% royalty on hydrocarbons produced under exploitation concessions and for a 15% royalty on hydrocarbons produced under an exploration permit). 

Article 27(3) of the Hydrocarbons Law, amended by Law 27,007, provides that the royalty can be reduced by up to 50% in tertiary production (enhanced oil recovery and improved oil recovery) and in extra heavy oil and offshore projects that, owing to their particular productivity issues and location, present particularly unfavourable technical and economic characteristics.

Royalty shall be paid in cash, unless the relevant province or national state asks to be paid in kind, and provided the producer ensures that hydrocarbons are received on a reasonably permanent basis. Therefore, royalty is calculated on the net price obtained for the production.

During the extension periods of concessions granted before the Bases Law, an additional royalty of up to 3% can be added – with a total cap of 18%.

The royalty prescribed in law shall be the only government take calculated and received from production. 

However, in concessions that were extended before the enactment of Law 27,007 in 2014, extra payments for the production may apply, such as additional payments of up to 3% of the production. This also includes certain windfall profit payments, which are triggered when the prices obtained for hydrocarbons produced from the concession exceed certain particular parameters.

Surface Fee

The Hydrocarbons Law establishes that holders of exploration permits and concessions must pay an annual fee (payable in advance in January), which is calculated for each square kilometre (km²) of the permit or concession area. These annual fees vary during the exploration phase, depending on the exploration period, as explained below.

In a basic exploration term, the fee is an amount equal to the value of 0.50 bbl of oil/km² for the first period and an amount equal to the value of 12 bbl of oil/km² for the second.

During an exploration permit’s extension period, the fee is an amount equal to the value of 15 bbl of oil.

Under exploitation concessions, the fee to be paid is an amount equal to 10 bbl of oil/km².

The value of a barrel of crude oil is calculated based on the average domestic price for the first semester of the previous year (published on the Secretariat of Energy’s website).

Extension Bonus

For concessions granted before the enactment of the Bases Law, Law 27,007 allows for an extension bonus fee to be imposed when a concession extension is granted. The maximum bonus shall be equivalent to 2% of the average oil and gas price of the relevant basin’s proven reserves at the end of the concession’s term.

Social Programmes

Tender processes organised by the provinces for the granting of permits, concessions or association agreements to provincial state-owned companies usually include obligations to make social contributions. These can take the form of:

  • donating an amount of money that the province can use to benefit communities local to where the company will carry out its operations;
  • donating vehicles or computers that can be used to monitor activities by the hydrocarbons and/or environmental authorities;
  • providing training for – or paying for the training of – certain public officials or employees of provincial state-owned companies; or
  • contributions to provincial agencies or not-for-profit organisations (eg, provincial or national universities).

The amount of these social contributions has not been material vis-à-vis the amounts involved in the relevant E&P projects. 

The terms and conditions applicable to the extension of existing concessions or to bidding rounds for the award of upstream licences may – and usually do – contain an obligation to make certain contributions for the relevant province to use in the implementation of social or educational programmes.

Within the national jurisdiction, E&P companies are liable for the payment of all federal taxes generally applicable in the country (income tax, value added tax, debits and credits in bank accounts tax) and any applicable customs duties.

E&P companies are also liable for the payment of all provincial taxes (ie, gross income tax and stamp tax) and municipal taxes in force as of the date of the award. During the term of the permits and concessions, the provinces and municipalities shall neither levy new taxes upon the holders thereof nor increase the rate of pre-existent taxes – except for those rates paid towards the performance and improvement of services, or a general increase in taxes.

Federal Taxes

Income tax

Law No 27,630, published in the Official Gazette on 16 June 2021, modifies the Income Tax Law (Law No 20,628, as amended in 2019) with regard to corporations and permanent establishments. Consequently, the income tax rate will depend on the accumulated taxable net income as per the following:

  • up to ARS5 million, a 25% rate will be applied;
  • more than ARS5 million and up to ARS50 million, a 30% rate will be applied; and
  • more than ARS50 million, a 35% rate will be applied.

The amounts provided for in the new scheme will be adjusted annually from 1 January 2022, taking into account the annual variation of the Consumer Price Index (IPC) compiled by the Argentine Institute of Statistics and Censuses (INDEC).

The net profit of individuals and foreign entities from dividends and profits will be taxed at a 7% withholding rate.

With a few exceptions, all expenses incurred in the process of obtaining and maintaining the income-producing source are deductible. Tax losses can be carried forward for five fiscal years. There is no carry-back.

Treaties designed to avoid double taxation are in force with Canada, Australia, the UK, Sweden, Bolivia, Germany, Brazil, France, Austria, Chile, Italy, Spain, Finland, Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands and Norway. Argentina and the USA signed a treaty to avoid double taxation in 1981, but it has never entered into force.

Value-added tax

This federal tax is applied on the sale of goods, the rendering of services and the importation of goods at 21%. When purchasing goods, obtaining services or importing goods, registered taxpayers must pay an additional 21% on the price to the individual or entity selling the goods or rendering the services. The amount of VAT paid constitutes a VAT credit. When selling goods or rendering services, the registered taxpayers must charge an additional 21% on their prices. The amount so collected constitutes a VAT debit.

The difference between VAT credits and VAT debits must be paid to the Federal Internal Revenue Agency from time to time. VAT credits may be carried forward without a time limit.

Joint ventures and other sorts of associations are considered VAT taxpayers. Such associations and their members are viewed as separate entities for the purposes of VAT. 

Tax on financial transactions

This tax applies to any debit from – or credit to – bank accounts. The applicable rate is 0.6% of the amount of the transactions; 0.3% of the amounts levied on credits can be taken as advanced payment of income tax. 

Provincial Taxes

Gross income tax

This tax is applied to the gross income derived by entities or individuals that carry out economic activities within the territory of a province. The tax rates vary depending on the activity and the province, but generally range from 1% for primary activities to 3% for trading and 4% for financial activities or intermediation. If one activity is carried out in several provinces, the Multilateral Convention is applied, whereby the tax base is distributed among the provinces in order to prevent double taxation.

Stamp tax

Stamp tax is applied to agreements that are executed within the territory of a province or that produce effects in it. The tax rates vary depending on the sort of agreement and the province, but the applicable general rate ranges from 1% or 1.5% to 3.5% to 4% for certain transactions (such as the transfer of vehicles and real estate). Most fiscal codes specify that agreements will be levied with stamp tax when they are executed by the parties thereto or if they will have effects in the province. 

Export duty

Executive Order 488/20 states that export duties shall be paid on any exports of hydrocarbons or hydrocarbon by-products, in accordance with a mobile rates scheme. Pursuant to this scheme, the applicable rate will be:

  • 0%, if the international reference price (Brent) is not higher than USD45;
  • 8%, when the international reference price is higher than USD60; and
  • determined by a certain formula, which takes into account the value of the international reference price at any given time, when the international reference price is higher than USD45 but not higher than USD60.

No special rights for national oil companies are granted in the applicable legislation. However, as mentioned in the section on association agreements with province-owned companies (2.1 Forms of Private Investment: Upstream), the provincial company is carried throughout the exploration stage in such agreements.

Section 71 of the Hydrocarbons Law states that companies performing jobs regulated by this law should hire Argentine nationals and, in particular, residents of the region where the works are to be carried out. The proportion of nationals employed by each concessionaire, authorised or permit holder shall not be less than 75%.

A similar provision is included in Section 94 of Neuquén Hydrocarbons Law No 2453. In practice, exceptions to the above-mentioned rule are accepted in the case of specialised workers that are not available in Argentina or the region where the operations are conducted.

Decree No 277/22 created a promotional regime to enable beneficiaries to access the foreign exchange market with proceeds resulting from incremental oil and natural gas production, providing they comply with the Regime for the Promotion of Employment, Labour and Development of Regional and National Suppliers of the Hydrocarbons Industry. The aim is to use entirely regional and national manpower, suppliers and service providers through two different schemes, namely:

  • the Regional and National Integration Requirements Scheme; and
  • the Preferences Scheme.

Holders of exploration permits must inform the relevant national or provincial authority about any petroleum discovery within 30 days. Moreover, once the permit holder determines the discovery is commercially exploitable, it has 30 days to request an exploitation concession, which must be granted within 60 days – provided that the permit holder has submitted the delimitation of the area.

The award of the concession does not affect the continuity of the exploration rights until the end of the relevant exploration periods on the portion of the exploration block that is not subject to the exploitation concession.

If, following the performance of exploration and/or evaluation works, the exploitation concession holder determines that all or part of the concession area has unconventional petroleum potential, they can request the grant of an unconventional exploitation concession on the relevant area.

The authority must decide whether to grant the request within 60 days of its submission, provided that the concessionaire has supplied all the information deemed necessary to make such a decision – and to the authority’s satisfaction.

The province of Neuquén has imposed a specific regulation outlining the development plan requirements that need to be met in order to obtain unconventional hydrocarbons exploitation concessions. The regulation stipulates the need to include a pilot plan (and the methodology to determine the pilot plan area) and, once this has been completed, annual updates of the development plan to be approved by the province. 

There are no deemed approvals. A denial by the petroleum authority can be appealed through administrative recourse and eventually before a court of law.

As per the Hydrocarbons Law, the exploration periods are set forth in the terms and conditions that apply to each public bid, within the following maximum terms.

  • For a permit with a conventional objective, there is a basic term of three years plus three years, plus an extension term of five years. In permits referring to offshore exploration, each of the periods of the basic term can be increased by one year.
  • For a permit with an unconventional objective, the basic term is four years plus four years, plus an extension term of five years. 

At the end of the first period of the basic term, the permit holder shall be able to keep all the exploration area. This shall be relinquished at the end of the second period of the basic term – unless an extension is requested, in which case at least 50% of the area shall be relinquished.

The term of an exploitation concession is 25 years (or 30 years for offshore concessions). The term of an unconventional exploitation concession is 35 years.

Concessions granted before the enactment of the Bases Law can be renewed for ten-year periods and there is no limit on the number of renewals. However, a renewal must be requested no less than one year before the expiry of the current term and by concessionaires that are in compliance with their obligations under the relevant concession. The term of concessions granted after the enactment of the Bases Law cannot be extended.

In new concessions granted after the enactment of the Bases Law, the national or provincial executive branch, as appropriate, at the time of defining the bidding terms and conditions, may determine other terms of up to ten years above or below the terms provided for conventional, offshore and unconventional concessions, based on reasonable grounds.

Extensions, when applicable, are not granted automatically but require governmental approval, so some negotiation is required in practice. As mentioned in 2.3 Typical Fiscal Terms: Upstream, extension bonuses that the provinces or nation can apply are capped by the Hydrocarbons Law.

Concessionaires can relinquish the concession areas at any time; in which case, they will have to comply with all accrued and pending obligations as of the relinquishment date and with the abandonment procedures set forth in the applicable regulations.

With regard to association agreements with province-owned companies, their most relevant terms and conditions are detailed in 2.1 Forms of Private Investment: Upstream.

Permit holders, concessionaires and holders of participating interests in association agreements own and have free access to their share of the petroleum substances produced from the relevant area, subject to the general limitations established in the applicable regulations.

According to Section 72 of the Hydrocarbons Law, exploration permits, exploitation concessions and authorisations can be transferred to those that fulfil the necessary financial and technical conditions and requirements, provided there is prior authorisation from the executive branch (federal or provincial, as applicable). 

Under Section 73 of the Hydrocarbons Law, a concessionaire can assign its interest in an exploitation concession as a security interest when it comes to obtaining loans to finance upstream operations in the relevant concession area. 

Provincial hydrocarbon laws contain provisions in line with the ones described earlier.

The assignment of participating interests in joint venture agreements with provincial E&P companies usually has to be approved by the board of the relevant province-owned company, and that approval must be ratified by the provincial executive branch.

Retained liabilities following a duly approved and consummated transfer of an upstream interest include any royalty and taxes accrued before the effective date of the transfer. In case of damage to property, individuals or the environment, retained liabilities towards third parties include those caused during the period in which the transferor held the upstream interest. This is irrespective of any indemnity provisions that the transferor may have agreed upon vis-à-vis the transferee. 

The transfer of any upstream licence is subject to the rules of Argentine antitrust law, so approval from the antitrust regulator might be required, depending on the specific circumstances of each transaction.

No legal or regulatory restrictions apply.

Private producers of petroleum – either liquid or gaseous – have a right, under the Hydrocarbons Law, to build transportation facilities to transport the production from the producing fields to the trunk pipelines transportation system and to obtain any applicable transportation authorisations granted by the federal or provincial states. 

The system of transportation through the trunk pipelines can also be operated by private companies under transportation authorisations for liquid hydrocarbons – and under transportation licences for gaseous hydrocarbons – for terms of between 25 and 35 years, which can be extended. Terminals and associated storage facilities are operated under the same transportation authorisations previously referred to.

However, in a recent exception, the national state has directly granted a new trunk natural gas transportation concession to the state-owned ENARSA through Decree No 76/22. The operation and maintenance of this new facility will be carried out by a private company, under a contract with ENARSA.

The transportation of natural gas from the trunk pipelines to consumers is carried out by certain private companies that have been granted distribution licences by the federal government, and each of these companies has a monopoly within the area of its licence. There are no other governmental or private monopolies in the midstream and downstream sectors.

No specific restrictions apply to the construction of new facilities or the acquisition of participating interests in companies that refine, store and market fuels and other petroleum by-products. Decree 1212/89 formed the basis of a system that, unlike previous regulations, allows the free construction of refineries and service stations by the private sector, subject to the technical and safety regulations that apply to such facilities.

There are no national monopolies (or near-monopolies) in downstream operations in Argentina.

Transportation concessions granted following the privatisation of companies that provided transportation services through the trunk pipelines system in the 1990s were awarded mostly to companies holding upstream licences. Such companies had a right to obtain transportation concessions and, after the enactment of the Bases Law, transportation authorisations, directly so they can transport their production out of the production fields without a public bidding process. In order to obtain a transportation authorisation, the companies must comply with the applicable technical, environmental and safety requirements. After the enactment of the Bases Law, owners of processing and industrialisation projects may request authorisations to transport hydrocarbons and by-products to and from their plants. These authorisations do not have a time limit. The same applies to holders of storage licences in depleted reservoirs.

The transportation authorisations granted to holders of exploitation concessions shall be granted and extended for terms equivalent to those of the exploitation concessions associated with the transportation authorisations. Upon expiry of such terms, the facilities shall become the property of the national or provincial executive branch, as appropriate.

In case of assignment of a transportation authorisation granted by virtue of the above, the authorised parties may request extensions for a term of ten years each, as long as they have complied with their obligations and are transporting hydrocarbons at the time of requesting it.

The transportation concessions granted prior to the enactment of the Bases Law shall be governed by the terms and conditions under which they were granted. The authorisations granted to the holders of projects and/or facilities for the conditioning, separation, fractionation, liquefaction and/or any other hydrocarbon industrialisation process will not be subject to a term.

In other cases, authorisations to transport petroleum through new pipelines within the trunk system must be obtained through a public bidding process. Executive Order 115/19 (which amended Executive Order 44/91) empowered the Secretariat of Energy to launch public bidding processes for the grant of one or more liquid hydrocarbons transportation concessions.

The developer of a new pipeline – in addition to existing concessionaires looking to expand their transportation facilities – can sell and reserve firm capacity in advance at transportation tariffs that may be freely negotiated with transporters seeking to secure transportation capacity in the new facilities.

The Bases Law created a new type of licence, the authorisation for underground storage of natural gas at depleted natural hydrocarbon reservoirs, including the process of injection, deposit, and withdrawal of the natural gas. If the storage is not carried out in reservoirs, it does not require authorisation under Law 17,319 (as amended by the Bases Law). Storage authorisations will not be subject to a time limit. Storage licensees may request authorisation to transport hydrocarbons to and from their facilities, not subject to a time limit.

As mentioned in 3.1 Forms of Private Investment: Midstream/Downstream, the national state granted a new trunk natural gas transportation concession directly to the state-owned ENARSA through the issuance of the “urgency and necessity” Decree No 76/22. Urgency and necessity decrees rank pari passu with laws passed by the National Congress, provided certain requirements are met.

After the enactment of the Bases Law, a licence shall be required for the processing of hydrocarbons. Other than that, the construction by private companies of new refineries, storage plants and service stations requires specific licences, provided that the following requirements are met before the start of operations.

  • A municipal permit must be obtained from the relevant municipal authority, which will check that the facilities are in full compliance with the applicable health, safety and environmental regulations.
  • The company must be registered with the Oil and Gas Companies Registrar, under its Refineries and Marketing Companies Section (Resolution SE 419/98 and supplementary regulations), or with the Registrar of Service Stations, Self-Consumption, Storage, Distribution and Wholesale Marketing of Petroleum and Natural Compressed Gas (Resolution SE 1,102/04 and supplementary regulations). Certain technical, legal and financial documents must be submitted to the Registrar for this purpose.

The income obtained by the operators of the petroleum trunk pipeline’s transportation system (including terminals) and certain storage facilities comes from the tariffs paid by the users of the services, in accordance with the rules applicable to the relevant concessions or licences. The rest of the midstream and downstream operations are conducted under freely negotiated commercial terms and conditions, including swaps authorised as non-physical transportation by Decree No 540/21.

With respect to midstream facilities constructed or expanded after the enactment of Decree No 115/19, the contracts for the transportation of liquid hydrocarbons typically provide for the contracting of firm capacity with Ship-or-Pay clauses. Midstream contracts are agreed based on maximum quantities and other variable commercial terms.

Last, supply of fuels to service stations is usually regulated by contracts with a duration not exceeding five or eight years, in which the suppliers, while authorising the use of their trade marks and commercial image, reserve the right to fix the prices applicable to the products marketed. 

The income does not incur any specific payment obligations towards the granting state, without prejudice to the obligation to comply with the general tax regime.

The same is true for companies that operate refineries, storage plants and service stations, which are subject only to the applicable tax regime.

The same federal, provincial and municipal taxes detailed in 2.4 Income or Profits Tax Regime: Upstream apply to the income or profits generated by the operation of pipelines, plants and retail and wholesale marketing. Although the tax stability guarantee at the provincial and municipal levels provided for in Law 17,319 does not apply to these sectors, licensees of natural gas transportation and distribution services may request of Enargas that any increase in the tax burden of the service be reflected in a corresponding variation in the tariffs they charge.

Tax on Fuels

In general terms, this tax is applied on the transfer (either for a consideration or not) and import of gasoline, gas oil, diesel oil, kerosene, crude naphtha, turpentine and solvent. 

Law 27,430, effective from January 2018, ensured this tax is no longer calculated as a percentage of sales, but rather as a fixed amount per the volume of products sold. Such fixed amounts are subject to periodical adjustments in accordance with the increase in the inflation rate.

The taxpayers are the refineries, traders (under certain conditions) and importers of the levied products. The transfer of levied products that are to be exported is exempted from the tax.

Tax on Carbon Dioxide

Law 27,430 replaced the tax on diesel oil with a tax on carbon dioxide, which is applied to the transfer (either for a consideration or not) of the above-mentioned fuels and also to fuel oil, coke and mineral carbon.

This tax is also calculated by applying certain fixed amounts (adjusted periodically in accordance with inflation) for each product, per measurement unit sold. 

Monitoring and Control Contributions

A monitoring and control contribution must be paid to the relevant government agency (Enargas) by the holders of gas transportation and distribution licences. The contribution is calculated relative to the cost of rendering such services and the gross income accrued by the relevant licence holder.

There are no national oil or gas companies holding special rights in connection with downstream licences.

Law No 27,437, which passed in May 2018 and established a preference regime for the acquisition of goods and services originating in the country, applies to a number of entities, including:

  • governmental entities;
  • state-owned entities; or
  • entities holding public utility concessions.

This law also established an obligation for such entities to develop national suppliers when performing petroleum activities. Similar requirements could be applied at a local level (eg, provinces and municipalities).

The holders of petroleum transportation authorisations under the Hydrocarbons Law must receive, transport and deliver the petroleum in a diligent and timely manner. If the transportation capacity is insufficient, the same shall be prorated among the chargers in proportion to the volume that each charger intends to inject into the system and taking into account the average volumes already loaded by them during the six-month period prior to the time when the capacity became insufficient.

Transportation systems must operate in a continuous and uninterrupted manner. The operators are responsible for the loss or deterioration of the petroleum transported, except for events of force majeure. 

Holders of licences for transportation through the trunk pipelines system and distribution of natural gas are bound by duties and obligations similar to the aforementioned. The tariffs to be paid by the users should allow the holders to bear their operational costs, taxes and amortisations, as well as make a reasonable profit. In practice, the system has oscillated between periods of government intervention in the mechanisms used for establishing tariffs and times where a gradual return to market prices was favoured.

On 18 December 2023, the current administration issued Decree No 55/2023 whereby an emergency in the national energy sector was declared until 31 December 2024, in respect of (i) the generation, transportation and distribution of electricity subject to federal jurisdiction, and (ii) the transportation and distribution of natural gas. The decree instructed the Secretariat of Energy to adopt mechanisms for the establishment of prices that maintain income levels and cover investment needs. It also launched the integral tariff revision process (RTI) provided by Article 43 of Law 24,065 and Article 42 of Law 24,076, and provides that the new tariffs resulting therefrom shall enter into effect no later than 31 December 2024. The Decree also ordered the administrative intervention of ENRE and ENARGAS (electricity and gas regulators, respectively) and empowered the comptrollers of such regulators to be appointed by the government to conduct the RTI procedures and to approve temporary adjustments of tariffs aimed at securing the continuity and normality of the services, which adjustments shall be taken into account in the tariffs resulting from the RTI procedures.

Pursuant to the Hydrocarbons Law, transportation concessionaires can reach an agreement with the surface landowners to develop activities on their surface land by paying them compensation for damages caused to their properties by these transportation activities. The amount of compensation can be determined by mutual agreement between the landowner and concessionaires or by the local court. 

If concessionaires cannot reach an agreement with the landowner, they are entitled to obtain an easement on the surface land from the competent enforcement entity, as the Hydrocarbons Law considers hydrocarbons activities to be of national interest. 

Pursuant to Law 24,076, natural gas transportation and distribution licensees have the same easement rights established in the Hydrocarbons Law.

The substantive regulations applicable to hydrocarbon transportation activity are sanctioned by the national state, as well as the rest of the substantive regulations applicable to the industry. The Hydrocarbons Law and Decree 44/91 (and its amendment by Decree 115/19) in the case of liquid hydrocarbons, as well as Law 24,076 and Decree 1738/92 for natural gas, are the rules that set the basis for the regulation of this matter.

The authorisations for the transportation of liquid hydrocarbons applicable to facilities that transcend the limits of a province, or that are dedicated to export, are of national jurisdiction, under the terms of Law 26,197. In this case, the regulation and control are under the charge of the National Secretariat of Energy. In the rest of the cases in which the facilities are located entirely within the same province, the application authority is the Energy Secretariat or similar agency of the relevant province.

The activity of transportation and distribution of natural gas is under the control of ENARGASD, created by Law 24,076.

Holders of petroleum transportation authorisations must receive and transport petroleum substances from third parties on a non-discriminatory basis, including for a non-discriminatory price under the same circumstances, provided that there is still transportation capacity available in the pipeline after satisfying the concessionaire’s needs. Holders of transportation authorisations may not carry out acts that imply unfair competition or abuse of their dominant position in the market. 

Those authorised to process hydrocarbons shall process them from third parties up to a maximum of 5% of the capacity of their facilities, provided that the safety of the process is not compromised, that the parties reach an agreement for the service to be rendered and that the applicant is responsible for the cost associated with the connection to the plant. This percentage may be increased by agreement between the parties at any time and/or by the enforcement authority after four years from the commercial licence for the plant, provided there is still unused capacity.

The maximum tariff that the holder of an authorisation (or, before the enactment of the Bases Law, the holder of a transportation concession) may charge to third parties is determined by the enforcement authority, in accordance with the terms of the authorisation (or the concession, as the case may be). Where firm capacity was sold in advance to finance new pipelines (or the expansion of existing ones), the concessionaire’s open access obligation is limited to the portion of the transportation capacity that has not been reserved on a firm basis or that, despite having been reserved, is not used. Also in such cases, the tariff can be freely negotiated with transporters looking to secure firm transportation capacity in the new facilities. 

Holders of licences for the transportation and distribution of natural gas must guarantee third parties open access, on a non-discriminatory basis, to the remaining transportation capacity that has not already been committed as part of firm transportation agreements.

Producers, operators of storage facilities, distributors and users of the transportation system who purchase gas directly from the producers are banned from having a controlling interest in the holder of a gas transportation licence. Producers, operators of storage facilities and transporters who purchase gas directly from producers in the same geographic area as a distributor are also banned from having a controlling interest in that distributor.

There are no restrictions on the sale of oil by-products into the local market, provided that such products comply with the regulations regarding technical specifications and general fair trade and antitrust provisions. 

Holders of licences for the transportation of natural gas cannot purchase or sell it – unless the gas is purchased for their own consumption and necessary to keep the transportation system operational. Consumers in general must acquire natural gas from the distributor or sub-distributor serving each area, but large industrial consumers must purchase the fluid directly from the producers.

The Bases Law amended Articles 6 and 7 of the Hydrocarbons Law, which now provide for the right to freely trade and export hydrocarbons, subject to certain regulations to be issued by the National Executive, which regulations shall take into account, (i) the sufficiency of technically proved resources, and (ii) the Secretariat of Energy’s ability to object to intended exports within 30 days after the Secretariat’s receipt of a notice informing an export transaction. An objection shall be based on technical or economic reasons related to the “security of supply” (although not mentioned by the bill, it is understood that this refers to the supply of the domestic market).

Based on these provisions establishing certain limits to the Secretariat’s ability to object to exports of hydrocarbons, it is reasonable to expect that the secondary legislation to be issued by the Secretariat of Energy will effectively limit such ability, so as to allow producers to enter into mid- or long-term firm purchase and sale agreements with offtakers abroad, provided the Secretariat has not objected to the intended exports commitment based on actual technical and economic reasons within the 30-day term mentioned above. 

As an exception to the Secretariat of Energy’s limited ability to object to sales to the external market, exports of products resulting from any project admitted to the Large Investments Incentives Regime created by the Bases Law shall not be subject to any kind of restriction or obstacle and owners of projects admitted to the regime shall not be subject to any domestic market priority supply, even if such priority is established by legislation in force as of the date on which the project owner adheres to the incentives regime, except when such priority is expressly and specifically included in the Enforcement Agency’s administrative act by which the project is admitted to the regime.

Until secondary legislation is issued in accordance with the amendments to the Hydrocarbons Law introduced by the Bass Law, crude oil exports should be offered to the domestic market first, as per the procedure outlined in Decree 645/2002, former Secretary of Hydrocarbon Resources Resolution No 241/2017 and Secretariat of Energy Resolution No 175/23.

The Bases Law also made amendments to Law 24,076, which now provides, as a general principle, that the export of natural gas will be regulated without the condition that domestic supply has been safeguarded. Again, the secondary legislation to be passed in accordance with the amendments made by the Bases Law will probably change the rules that have governed natural gas exports. Such rules provide that exports of gas require governmental approval in accordance with Section 3 of Law 24,076 and Secretariat of Energy Resolution No 360/21, as amended by Resolution No 774/22. The exports considered in this resolution are:

  • firm exports, which are in turn subdivided into:
    1. Plan Gas.Ar firm exports;
    2. firm exports derived from additional injections during the winter within the Plan Gas.Ar; and
    3. firm exports of surplus production in a basin;
  • interruptible exports;
  • operational exchanges (with a subsequent obligation to reimport the same volumes that have been exported); and
  • assistance agreements.

Volumes for which an export authorisation is required must be made available to:

  • ENARSA (the state-owned company that administers imports of natural gas and LNG);
  • CAMMESA (a state-controlled company that administers the wholesale electricity market);
  • power generators;
  • distributors; and
  • sub-distributors.

All volumes contemplated in the authorisation request must also be made available to the natural compressed gas sector, which will have a preferential right to purchase them under the same terms and conditions, provided the natural gas purchased is used to supply domestic demand. Authorisation requests for firm Plan Gas.Ar exports shall have priority vis-à-vis other authorisation requests.

Per Decree 488/20, exports of by-products are subject to the same scheme of export duties that applies to petroleum. The existence of the aforementioned preference and export duties results in a domestic price that is lower than the export price.

The importation of liquid hydrocarbons and by-products may be carried out to ensure the priority consumption of those produced in Argentina. There is currently no regulation in force in this regard. Law 24,076 authorises the importation of natural gas without the need for any kind of approval.

In connection with LNG requirements, please see 7.2 Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG).

Transfers of transportation authorisations under the Hydrocarbons Law are subject to the authorisation procedure already prescribed in the context of upstream licences. Transfers of licences for transportation of gas through the trunk pipelines system require the national executive branch’s consent.

Enargas approval is required for any change in control of natural gas transportation and distribution companies subject to its jurisdiction. Before issuing an approval, Enargas will verify that the proposed change in control does not infringe any of the vertical or horizontal integration restrictions contained in the natural gas regulatory framework and that the financial and technical requirements will continue to be met after the proposed change in control.

Assets that are indispensable for the transportation or distribution of natural gas cannot be transferred without prior authorisation from Enargas.

No specific requirements apply to the transfer of other midstream or downstream licences or assets.

No foreign investment approvals or restrictions apply to investments in hydrocarbons. 

There are no specific foreign investment protections for investment in hydrocarbons. However, as a general principle, any foreign investor in Argentina has the same legal rights and guarantees as any domestic investor, owing to an “equal treatment” principle established by Article 20 of the National Constitution. 

With regard to stability provisions, the general principle is that nobody has a legal right to claim that a specific legal framework must remain unchanged. However, any beneficiary of contractual rights granted by the government pursuant to a specific regime shall be able to exercise such rights even after such regulations have been abrogated or amended. The rights are considered part of the patrimony of the beneficiary, and the wholeness of such patrimony is protected by law (Article 14 of the National Constitution and related regulations).

As an exception to the principle, the Hydrocarbons Law grants the holders of exploitation concessions a right to enjoy certain stability regarding provincial and municipal taxes.

The National Constitution acknowledges everybody’s right to use and dispose of their property. In addition, such property shall not be violated; although it can be subject to expropriation if:

  • the “public use” of the property under expropriation is declared by law; and
  • compensation (considering the actual value of the asset) is paid to the affected party prior to the transfer of ownership (Articles 14 and 17 of the National Constitution).

There are more than 60 bilateral investment treaties in force between Argentina and other countries.

Upstream licences are governed by Argentine law, and any disputes in relation thereto should be submitted to the jurisdiction of provincial or federal Argentine courts.

Arbitration – either national or international – can be agreed upon between private parties, including YPF SA (a stock company that is state-controlled but ruled by the regulations applicable to private companies). Although arbitration provisions were included in a few association agreements with private-owned companies some time ago, the rule now is that any disputes must be submitted to the provincial courts.

There are no sanctions in place with respect to investing in oil and gas assets in foreign jurisdictions or conducting business in the oil and gas sector with foreign counterparties or governments or in certain jurisdictions.

National Regulations

The hydrocarbons sector is governed at national level by general regulations containing minimum environmental protection standards – such as Law 25,675 (General Environmental Law) and Law 24,501 (Hazardous Waste Law) – and by general regulations and minimum standards specifically applied to hydrocarbon activities by the enforcement authority, which exercises powers delegated by the Hydrocarbons Law to that effect. Such authority is held by the Secretariat of Energy, currently within the scope of the Ministry of the Economy. Other regulations could also be issued by the Secretariat of the Environment and Sustainable Development and Enargas. 

The main applicable regulations include the following.

  • Policies and procedures for the protection of the environment contained in Resolution SE 105/92, which:
    1. requires the submission of a prior environmental study before drilling the first exploratory well and beginning to develop the reserves;
    2. provides for the annual monitoring of works and tasks; and
    3. sets out detailed technical guidelines to be followed in the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons.
  • Annual Environmental Monitoring Reports – Resolution SE 25/04 defines and describes the technical characteristics, structure and scope of environmental studies and annual environmental monitoring reports. 
  • Contingency plans and information about incidents must meet the guidelines provided under Resolution SE 342/93, and the enforcement authority must be informed within the deadlines and satisfactory to requirements established by Resolution SE 24/04.
  • Emission (“venting”) of gas to the atmosphere – Resolution SE 143/98 establishes guidelines and mandatory limits on this matter and the certain justified circumstances in which such limits can be exceed.
  • Safety conditions for transport – Resolution SRH E No 120/17 approved the Technical Regulations for Transportation of Liquid Hydrocarbons by Pipeline, which applies to pipelines and ancillary facilities subject to a transportation concession and Disposition 123/06 of the Undersecretariat of Fuels provides for the Environmental Protection rules applicable to them.
  • The set of technical rules named NAG 100 and NAG 153 of Enargas are the technical regulations that apply to the transportation of natural gas by pipelines. In particular, NAG-153 provides for criteria and minimum requirements for: (i) identifying and quantifying environmental impacts; (ii) establishing preventive and corrective measures in relation to such impacts; and (iii) establishing common parameters for the preparation of environmental assessments and reports required for different stages of a project.
  • Safety conditions and maintenance of storage tanks of crude oil and by-products – Decree 10,877/60 describes the active and passive defences to be implemented in these facilities and Decree 2407/83 provides for the security rules to be followed by service stations and other operators in the downstream sector. Resolution SE 785/05 created the Programme for the Control of Spills from Surface Storage Tanks, which established that companies with such facilities have to register and inspect such tanks. Companies must also comply with a maintenance plan, report any incidents and report the abandonment of the tanks.
  • Safety auditing service – Resolution SE 419/93 and other supplementary regulations obligate refineries, storage companies and operators of service stations to hire safety auditing services to certify compliance with the applicable safety regulations on an annual basis.

Provincial Regulations

The provinces have the authority to supplement federal regulations with local regulations, as long as they do not overstep the principle of federal law pre-eminence established by Section 31 of the National Constitution. Provincial regulations have been passed establishing regimes for environmental matters such as:

  • gaseous emissions control;
  • subterranean water exploitation;
  • groundwater exploitation; and
  • pressurised devices control.

An environmental study must be prepared prior to the development of a new project and submitted to the relevant (provincial or national) environmental enforcement authority. Upon the approval of the study, the operation can begin and the operator must comply with recommendations, restrictions and conditions (if any) contained in such approval (Resolution SE 105/92 and related regulations).

Additionally, the operator must:

  • obtain an authorisation for the use of water in the project, which should include the origin of the water and the conditions under which it shall be used;
  • register with the National Hazardous Waste Generators Registry; and
  • be issued an Annual Environmental Certificate (Law 24/051, Decree 831/93 and other regulations).

Joint Resolution No 3/19, issued by the Secretariat of Energy and the Secretariat of Environment and Sustainable Development, was published in the Official Gazette on 27 November 2019. It outlined a set of rules governing the environmental impact assessments to be conducted in connection with exploration and exploitation activities in the continental shelf, subject to federal jurisdiction (beyond 12 nautical miles from the coastline).

The proceedings potentially include a public hearing, in accordance with the rules established in Law 25,675 (General Environment Law).

Resolution 5/96, issued by the Secretariat of Energy, established rules and procedures for the abandonment of oil and gas wells, including a timetable for the abandonment of certain wells.

On an annual basis, the operator should report the decommissioning works performed in the past year and those to be performed in the following year. Four years before the respective concessions expire, or as of the date all or part of an exploitation block is relinquished, the concessionaire must submit a technical and economic study explaining the reasons why the abandonment of each inactive well might be inconvenient.

Recommended techniques for performing definitive abandonment are detailed in the same resolution. The technical conditions that apply to the abandonment of gas pipelines and ancillary facilities are established in resolutions NAG 100 and NAG 153 of ENARGAS. The abandonment of these facilities requires prior consent from ENARGAS, which will evaluate whether there is a general interest in keeping the facilities operative.

On the other hand, the conditions for the temporary closure and eventual removal of tanks, pipelines and other related facilities for the storage and dispatch of hydrocarbons and by-products are regulated by Resolution 1102/04 of the Secretariat of Energy.

There is no requirement to pay any costs associated with the abandonment of wells and facilities. 

Although not regulated specifically, the non-operator owner of an interest in an upstream licence or transportation concession can be held liable in connection with abandoned assets by third parties (including the enforcement authority) in the event of non-compliance with the applicable decommissioning obligations. Even after fully divesting an ownership interest, the former owner of the asset similarly may be liable towards third parties if there is evidence that it breached an obligation to carry out abandonment works before such divestiture, and that the breach resulted in damage to the environment.

Argentina has ratified:

  • the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) (Law 24,295);
  • the Kyoto Protocol (Law 25,438); and
  • the Paris Agreement (Law 27,270). 

Certain actions have been taken in Argentina to align with the objectives of such conventions (although they do not specifically enforce them). These measures include:

  • enacting a regime that promotes the production of biofuels by establishing that fossil fuels commercialised in the country must be blended with biofuels, in proportions that have been increased gradually (Law 27,640 and other supplementary regulations); and
  • modifying the technical specifications of fossil fuels (including a reduction in the maximum sulphur content in fuel oil and diesel oil used in power generation) to reduce the emissions of substances that cause acid rain and particulate matter (Resolution SRH No 5/16).

As described in 5.1 Environmental Laws and Environmental Regulator(s), the power to issue basic rules on environmental matters that apply to the whole country rests with the federal state (congress and executive branch). However, the provinces may supplement the federal regulations with local regulations, provided that they do not overstep the principle of federal law pre-eminence established by Section 31 of the National Constitution.

Argentina has ratified several international conventions and agreements with respect to climate change, such as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (CMNUCC), treaties such as the Kyoto protocol and the Paris Convention, the Convention on Biodiversity, the United Nations Convention to Fight Desertification, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sendai Framework for the Reduction of the Risk of Disasters.

Law No 27,520 on Minimum Standards for Adaptation and Mitigation of Global Climate Change was enacted in 2019, in accordance with the general principles contained in Article 41 of the National Constitution. The objectives of the law are, among others, to (i) establish strategies, measures, politics and instruments in relation to the assessment of the impact, vulnerability and adaptation to climate change that can guarantee the development of human beings and ecosystems; and (ii) assist and promote the development of strategies for mitigation and reduction of greenhouse gases in the country. The law creates a National Climate Change cabinet which shall prepare a National Plan for the Adaptation to and Mitigation of Climate Change (the “Climate Change Plan”), which plan shall be reviewed every five years. The law provides that the Cabinet, through the Climate Change Plan, and the competent authorities in each jurisdiction, shall establish actual mitigation measures and actions, including, among others, (i) establishing minimum emissions reduction or elimination goals, (ii) the progressive increase in the utilisation of renewable energies, (iii) designing and promoting fiscal and financing incentives for the investment in low emissions technology, processes and products, and (iv) implementing measures supporting carbon capture and storage.

As established by Law 27,520, a Climate Change Plan was approved by Resolution No 146/2023 of the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable development. The plan contains an assessment of the climate change situation and effects in the Argentine territory and established strategies divided in several strategic lines, including, among others, sustainable mobility and energy transmission, and actions to be taken under each strategic line. The document states that the energy transmission shall be planned and executed in a harmonised manner, so as to not affect the access to reliable energy sources, a fair transition process, and economic and tecno-industrial development. In connection with energy transition, the document establishes, as measures to be implemented, the replacement of fossil fuels by natural gas, the development of hydrogen and the promotion of low emissions energy, including the incorporation of new nuclear generation into the system.

Resolution No 1036/2021 approved the Guidelines for an Energy Transition Plan to 2030. As an example, the plan considers reducing greenhouse gas emissions produced by electricity generation, through the installation of renewable generation plants. Resolution 518/2023 approved the guidelines to 2050, with long-term objectives to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

In 2006, Law 26,190 (amended by Law 27,191) declared the national interest in the generation of electricity from renewable energy sources, as well as the research for the technological development and manufacture of equipment for this purpose. In 2017, Law 27,424 was passed, together with secondary regulations contained in Decrees No 986/2018 and No 471/2023, whereby a regime for the promotion of distributed generation of renewable energy integrated into the public electricity grid was established.

Resolution No 385/2023 from the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development, issued on 14 November 2023, approved the National Strategy for the Utilisation of Carbon Markets and instructs the Secretariat of Climate Change, Sustainable Development and Innovation to take actions aimed at implementing such strategy.

Resolution No 970/23 from the Secretariat of Energy, issued on 30 November 2023, created the National Programme for Measurement and Reduction of Fugitive Emissions Derived from Hydrocarbons Exploration and Production. The objectives of the programme are, (i) to promote actions for the detection, measurement and validation of fugitive emissions at facilities associated with the exploration and production of hydrocarbons; (ii) to organise and systematise the information obtained from the measurements of fugitive emissions in the industry, and (iii) promote he implementation of plans for the mitigation and reduction of fugitive emissions derived from the petroleum industry. The resolution provides that upstream companies shall submit to the enforcement authority an annual plan for the measurement of fugitive emissions, and an integral five-year plan for the reduction and/or capture of fugitive emissions, such plans to be prepared and submitted in accordance with secondary regulations to be issued by the enforcement authority. To such end, companies shall implement actual measures prioritising the efficiency and use of gas resources, and the reduction and/or capture of emissions.

Energy transition issues are not yet affecting the development and use of oil and gas upstream and midstream assets. Preliminary studies show Argentina’s potential for carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) projects involving underground storage in hydrocarbons wells. One study estimates that the Neuquén Basin could be able to store the CO₂ emissions generated by thermal power plants in the provinces of Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Mendoza, Neuquén and Río Negro (which account for most of the total thermal generation CO₂ emissions in the country) for 15 years. There is not a specific regulatory framework on CCUS yet. Most of the existing CCUS projects in Argentina relate to forestation developments such as the project started a decade ago by Novartis.

Notwithstanding the lack of specific laws, programmes or incentives focused on incentivising greenhouse gases reduction (such as tax credits) the fact is that most of the mid-size and large operators have been implementing measures to that effect, such as using electricity generated from renewable sources (mostly wind and solar) to supply their operations’ needs. Due to the country’s underground carbon storage potential mentioned above, several industry players have pointed out the convenience to pass legislation establishing a new carbon storage concession, to be granted on depleted hydrocarbon wells. Resolution No 970/23 referred to in 6.1 Energy Transition Laws and Regulations, provides for the upstream companies’ obligation to prepare and implement carbon capture plans, which obligation shall be subject to certain secondary regulations that have not yet been passed.

There are no other considerations.

The amendments made to the Hydrocarbons Law by Law 27,007, passed in 2014, included several provisions specifically related to unconventional resources. As previously discussed, these include longer exploration periods and the creation of an unconventional exploitation concession with a longer term and the possibility of annexing a field adjacent to an unconventional concession area where there is geological continuity. 

The amendment to the collective bargaining agreement for the Neuquén Basin set forth certain rules that were designed to achieve more efficient operations and reduce labour costs, specifically in unconventional operations. As a result, a similar amendment was entered into regarding the collective bargaining agreement for the Austral Basin.

The Bases Law, passed on 28 June 2024, created a Large Investments Incentives Regime, described in 7.3 Unique or Interesting Aspects of the Hydrocarbon Industry, applicable to large projects in certain sectors, including oil and gas, provides the conditions for large LNG projects, like the liquefaction and maritime terminal project envisioned in a Memorandum of Understanding signed by YPF and Petronas in 2022, or a modular liquefaction project announced by TGS.

Law 24,076, as amended by the Bases Law, provides that firm LNG exports authorisations can be granted for 30 years.

Secretariat of Energy Resolution No 706/21, issued on 23 July 2021, created the LNG Operators Registry and set forth regulations applicable to short- and long-term LNG exports. Per this resolution, LNG exports that are not subject to a long-term export permit must be offered to the domestic market first.

The main obstacles to the massive and timely development of the country’s world-class shale resources continue to be the lack of sufficient infrastructure and stringent foreign exchange restrictions that discourage investment and financing of projects.

The infrastructure deficit is being dealt with by expanding the existing midstream facilities and building new midstream infrastructure. The construction of the 585-kilometre first stage of the President Néstor Kirchner natural gas pipeline and the re-commissioning of the Trasandino oil pipeline to Chile, which had been idle for 16 years, have been completed already.

The works for the first stage of the expansion of the Oldelval crude oil pipeline and Oiltanking Ebytem storage and shipment facilities, crucial to market the increasing Vaca Muerta oil production, are being executed and are scheduled to be completed by the second semester of 2024. These expansions are being carried out by the private companies holding the existing transportation concessions under the open season scheme established by Decree No 115/19, whereby freely negotiated firm capacity contracts are signed between the carrier/terminal operator and the shippers.

The reversion of the north gas pipeline operated by TGN to take gas produced in Vaca Muerta to northern Argentina to replace the declining imports from Bolivia is also being executed. Once completed, this project will allow natural gas from Vaca Muerta to be exported to Brazil through Bolivia, using spare capacity in the Bolivian transportation system.

YPF has begun the execution of the first stage of its Vaca Muerta Sur project, a new oil pipeline that, once Stage 1 and Stage 2 are completed, will run from southern Vaca Muerta to Allen, Río Negro (Stage 1) and to a new maritime terminal in the Province of Río Negro (Stage 2) for the transportation of between 30,000 and 120,000 cubic meters/day of crude oil.

Midstream projects to be launched shortly include, among others, the second 467-kilometres stage of the President Nestor Kirchner gas pipeline.

Finally, a large-scale LNG export project, contemplated in a Memorandum of Understanding entered into by YPF and Petronas in 2022, could finally become a reality now that the recently passed Bases Law has created a Large Investments Incentives Regime (RIGI).

The RIGI, applicable to investments involving capital expenditures exceeding USD200 million in the petroleum, mining, forest-industrial, energy and technology sectors, will likely induce other companies in the petroleum upstream, midstream and downstream sectors to investment in new projects in Argentina. The main benefits contemplated in the regime include the following.

  • An exemption from the obligation to repatriate into Argentina and exchange for Argentine Pesos the following percentages of exports proceeds: 20% from the second year, 40% from the third year and 100% from the fourth year, starting from the project commencement date. Projects classified as “long-term strategic export” projects will benefit from such exemptions from the first, second and third years, respectively. These benefits shall apply to the extent that there is not a more favourable regime in force.
  • Guaranteed right to access the foreign exchange market for the payment of external financing or capital repatriation and to pay dividends, by accessing the foreign exchange market without any restriction whatsoever, provided that the investment entered the country and was exchanged for Pesos at the foreign exchange market.
  • Reduced Income Tax rate (25%, as opposed to the 35% general rate).
  • Accelerated amortisation of the investment and elimination of time-limitations to compute tax losses.
  • The import of new capital goods, supplies and consumable goods will be exempt from import duties and any other charge or withholding of national or provincial taxes. 
  • Guaranteed right to export the production generated by the project.
  • 0% export duties after three years from the commencement of the project.
  • Tax, regulatory and foreign exchange stability for 30 years.
  • The beneficiaries’ ability to submit disputes to international arbitration under PCA, ICC or ICSID rules, at the beneficiary’s option.

In addition to the Regulations mentioned in 7.3 Unique or Interesting Aspects of the Hydrocarbon Industry, it is worth mentioning that the Bases Law contains a chapter with several amendments to the Hydrocarbons Law, described in the relevant sections of this report. These amendments, together with certain delegated powers given for one year to the National Executive, aim at deregulating the petroleum industry and to subjecting it to market prices, eliminating or drastically reducing any potential state intervention in this respect, either through regulations or by using YPF’s dominant market share in the domestic downstream sector. This is aligned with the current administration’s general view of the economy and the role to be played by the state.

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Trends and Developments


Authors



Bomchil is considered one of the leading full-service law firms in Argentina. Since the firm’s foundation in 1923, it has participated in some of the country’s most complex and significant transactions and disputes. Bomchil’s oil and gas practice is a market leader, with partners that have broad experience counselling local and foreign companies, with solid knowledge of the local industry and unmatched connections in the international field. It has a deep understanding of the industry’s regulatory environment and has been involved in some of the most important investment and infrastructure projects and M&A transactions, representing international and local companies. Clients include the likes of Chevron, Litoral Gas and Refinor.

Introduction

In November 2023, Javier Milei obtained 54% of the votes in the second-round election and became Argentina’s new president. His administration was inaugurated shortly thereafter, on 10 December 2023.

Mr Milei is an economist that was a complete outsider to Argentine politics until 2021, when he became a congressman, as representative for the City of Buenos Aires. His brand-new party, La Libertad Avanza, has a very reduced structure, holding just a few seats at the House of Representatives and the Senate. However, Mr Milei’s charisma and his harsh criticism of traditional parties have allowed him to retain a significant percentage of approval (more than 50%, according to recent polls) despite the rather unpopular measures taken by his administration to eliminate fiscal deficit and avoid a hyperinflation scenario. During the presidential campaign, Mr Milei repeatedly stated that, if he were elected, he would immediately implement a drastic reduction of public spending, subsidies and currency emission, so as to abruptly reduce fiscal deficit. Unlike most of the presidents elected in Argentina since the reinstatement of democracy in 1983, shortly after taking office he did exactly what he had announced during the campaign. The first measures taken by the current administration included a 118% devaluation of the local currency (actually, an adjustment of its real value, which had been kept artificially high by the exiting administration during 2023), cancellation of any public works that did not have secured external financing from multilateral financing entities, a 50% reduction of the monetary base (the previous government had flooded the market with pesos during the presidential campaign), interruption of federal assistance to provinces and an adjustment of energy prices, including significant increases of electricity, gas tariffs and fuel prices.

The government’s objective, after dealing with the urgent issues affecting the country’s macroeconomy, is to deregulate and open the economy, promoting free trade and market-oriented policies. As an essential part of this process, the government intends to lift, or at least significantly soften, the stringent foreign exchange restrictions inherited from the previous administration as soon as reasonably possible, probably by the end of 2024 or in early 2025.

The latest milestone of the current administration was the passing by the National Congress of the Law of Bases and Starting Points for the Liberty of Argentines, known as the “Bases Law”, after seven months of negotiations with centre-right sectors of the opposition parties, which allowed the government to overcome its unfavourable situation at the National Congress, where it controls less than one third of the House of Representatives and the Senate. The Bases Law contains amendments to, among other regulatory frameworks, Law 17,319 (the “Federal Hydrocarbons Law”) and Law 24,076 (the “Gas Law”), as well as a Large Investments Incentives Regime.

Vaca Muerta: Infrastructure and Regulatory Challenges

More than a decade after the beginning of operations, Vaca Muerta has become a proven world-class shale resource. Currently, with approximately 20% of its 30,000 square kilometres acreage being developed, Vaca Muerta produces nearly 700,000 bbl/day of oil and 150 Nm3/day of natural gas, representing approximately 50% and 60%, respectively, of the country’s total oil and gas production, which share is expected to continue to grow steadily in years to come.

However, Vaca Muerta’s promising future depends on overcoming certain challenges, namely, (i) insufficient midstream infrastructure, (ii) trade restrictions, and (iii) foreign exchange restrictions.

Midstream infrastructure

The infrastructure deficit is being dealt with by expanding the existing midstream facilities and building new pipelines. The construction of the 585-kilometre first stage of the President Néstor Kirchner natural gas pipeline, with an 11 cubic meter/day capacity, was undertaken by the state-owned ENARSA, which was granted a natural gas transportation concession by a decree issued by the National Executive. The construction was completed last year. A substantial portion of the financing for this project came from a one-time special tax on large fortunes.

The re-commissioning of the Trasandino oil pipeline to Chile, which had been idle for 16 years, was completed earlier this year. The investment required to resume operations was provided by the operator’s shareholders, YPF, ENAP and Chevron.

The works for the first stage of the expansion of the Oldelval crude oil pipeline and Oiltanking Ebytem storage and shipment facilities, crucial to market the increasing Vaca Muerta oil production, are being executed and are scheduled to be completed by the second semester of 2024. These expansions are being carried out by the private companies holding the existing transportation concessions under the open season scheme established by Decree No 115/19, whereby freely negotiated firm capacity contracts are signed between the carrier/terminal operator and the shippers. The financing for these projects was obtained from the prepayments made by the shippers that executed firm capacity reserve agreements and, in the case of Oldelval, through the issuance of bonds too.

The reversion of the northern gas pipeline operated by TGN to take gas produced in Vaca Muerta to northern Argentina to replace the declining imports from Bolivia is also being executed. Once completed, this project will allow natural gas from Vaca Muerta to be exported to Brazil through Bolivia, using spare capacity in the Bolivian transportation system.

YPF has begun the execution of the first stage of its Vaca Muerta Sur project, a new oil pipeline that, once Stage 1 and Stage 2 are completed, will run from southern Vaca Muerta to Allen, Río Negro (Stage 1) and to a new maritime terminal in the Province of Río Negro (Stage 2) for the transportation of between 30,000 and 120,000 cubic meters/day of crude oil.

Midstream projects to be started shortly also include the second 467-kilometre stage of the President Nestor Kirchner gas pipeline.

The incentives established by the RIGI should facilitate the launch of additional midstream and downstream projects. Some of the projects mentioned above in their initial stages could also benefit from the benefits established by the Large Investments Incentives Regime.

Trade restrictions

According to Mr Milei’s pro-market ideology, the government has announced its intention to apply deregulation and free trade ideas to the energy sector in general and to the petroleum sector in particular. For the time being, it has allowed YPF, the state-controlled company holding the largest share in the domestic fuels market, to increase its fuels’ prices freely, to cover its costs and obtain a reasonable profit, with the purpose of aligning domestic prices with import-parity prices. The rest of the downstream companies operating in the country did the same shortly thereafter.

The recent enactment of the Bases Law, described in further detail below, which has put at the top of the objectives of the national petroleum policy the maximisation of revenue generated from the exploitation of hydrocarbon resources and the unrestricted free trade of oil, gas and their by-products, has given the government the tools it needs to make amendments to the oil and gas regulatory frameworks, to effectively implement this new set of basic principles, eliminating or reducing to the extent possible any restrictions affecting the free trade of petroleum products and the ability to charge prices relatively aligned with international market prices.

Foreign exchange restrictions

The stringent foreign exchange restrictions established since 2011 (except for the 2016–2019 period during Mauricio Macri’s administration) have posed, and continue to pose, a tremendous obstacle to attract foreign direct investment to Argentina. Foreign investors’ reluctance to invest large amounts of money in Argentina under these conditions is completely logical considering the inflow and, especially, outflow restrictions in force, given that, as an example, a company willing to invest in a long-term project in Argentina has no certainty as to whether its subsidiary will be able to freely remit dividends to its shareholders abroad, or repay interest and principal of its intercompany debt, without needing to implement complicated and costly financial strategies to do so (blue chip swaps and other mechanisms), instead of doing so by accessing the official exchange market.

Softening and eventually removing these intricate legal frameworks is of the essence in order to provide investors and financial entities the comfort they need to invest in Argentina. This applies to investment decisions of any kind and magnitude in all sectors of the economy, including the petroleum industry.

Government officials expect to lift foreign exchange restrictions gradually during the second semester of 2024 and completely remove any remaining restrictions by the end of the current year or within the first quarter of 2025.

Without prejudice to the aforementioned, the recently sanctioned Bases Law contains a Large Investment Incentives Regime, described in further detail below, which, among other incentives, provides for the free availability of export proceeds and unrestricted access to the foreign exchange market to pay dividends and repay debt.

Bases Law

On 28 June 2024, the National Congress passed the Bases Law. As of 2 July 2024, the law had not yet been enacted by the National Executive and published in the Official Gazette.

The law aims at deregulating, or providing the national executive the tools to deregulate several sectors and reduce state intervention in the economy.

Among other aspects, the law includes modifications to energy, petroleum, mining and labour legislation, establishes the Large Investments Incentives Regime to promote large investments in certain sectors, and authorises the National Executive to privatise certain state-owned companies.

Two titles of the law are especially relevant to the petroleum industry: Title VI, which modifies several sections of the Federal Hydrocarbons Law and the Federal Gas Law, and Title VII, which establishes the Large Investments Incentives Regime.

Amendments to the petroleum legislation

The law amends several sections of the Federal Hydrocarbons Law and the Gas Law with a focus on liberalising the free trade of petroleum products to the domestic and international markets for freely agreed upon prices in accordance with prevailing market conditions. The law establishes the maximisation of revenue obtained from the exploitation of petroleum resources and the free trade of petroleum products as main objectives of the national petroleum policy. Self-sufficiency and, to the extent possible, domestic market priority are no longer included in such main objectives. 

The most relevant amendments to the Federal Hydrocarbons Law are as follows.

  • The amended Article 3 establishes, as a main objective of the national petroleum policy, the maximisation of the revenue obtained from the exploitation of the resources and the satisfaction of domestic demand, although the requirement to satisfy domestic demand with domestic production was eliminated from this provision.
  • The amended Article 6 establishes that producers shall be able to freely trade their hydrocarbons and by-products. The requirement that such trading should take into consideration the convenience of the domestic market, as well as other limitations to the trading of hydrocarbons, were eliminated. The amended provision also states that the state shall refrain from establishing prices of any petroleum products. As regards exports, the Secretariat of Energy shall be able to object to them only based on technical and economic reasons and within 30 days after the receipt of a notice describing the intended export transaction. The amended Article 7 reinforces this idea, mentioning that the international trade of hydrocarbons shall be free.
  • The right to renew exploitation concessions has been eliminated, so that upon the expiry of the concession, the asset will be offered to the market through a competitive tender procedure. This provision does not affect existing concessions, which shall be renewable, in the terms of the rules applicable when they were granted.
  • The right that holders of conventional exploitation concessions have to split a portion of the concession area and request the grant of an unconventional exploitation concession over the split area shall be available until 31 December 2028.
  • The owners of projects or facilities for the treatment, processing or liquefaction of hydrocarbons shall have the right to obtain a transportation authorisation to carry the hydrocarbons to their facilities, which authorisation shall not be subject to any term.
  • A new licence for underground storage of natural gas has been created.
  • In new licences granted through competitive tenders, a base 15% royalty rate shall be included as reference, but bidders will be able to propose to pay a higher or lower rate. The royalty rate that will apply to the licence will be the one proposed by the winning bidder and accepted by the granting authority. 

The amendments to the Gas Law include the following.

  • A provision whereby the export of natural gas will be regulated without the condition that domestic supply has been safeguarded.
  • A regulation specifically applicable to firm LNG export authorisations, that will be granted for 30 years.
  • Natural gas transportation and distribution companies will be able to store natural gas as a way of assuring the supply under their uninterruptible services. 

Large Investments Incentives Regime (RIGI)

For the last few years, several sectors, including the petroleum industry, have been pointing out that, given Argentina’s track record, a comprehensive and stable incentives regime would be important to encourage companies to engage in large projects that will develop through several presidential periods. Title VII of the Bases Law contains a Large Investments Incentives Regime (RIGI) that sets forth an unprecedented package of incentives that include tax, customs and foreign exchange benefits, a 30-year stability provision and international arbitration for the resolution of disputes with the government.

The main aspects of the RIGI are as follows.

  • The regime contemplates projects in the tourism, infrastructure, mining, technology, forestry, steel, energy and petroleum sectors.
  • A sole purpose vehicle is required (SPV). This vehicle shall own the project and enjoy the benefits.
  • The term to submit projects and apply for the benefits is two years as from the entry into force of the law (it can be extended for one year by the national executive).
  • Minimum investment requirement: USD200 million, although the enforcement agency will be able to increase such figure to up to USD900 million for certain sectors, sub-sectors or stages of projects; 40% of the minimum investment required shall be spent within the first two years of the project.
  • Certain long-term strategic projects, exceeding USD1 billion, shall be entitled to certain increased benefits.
  • The right to enjoy the benefits provided in the regime shall be vested rights and shall not be revoked or affected by any governmental decision, law or regulation.
  • The incentives include foreign exchange benefits and tax and customs benefits.

Foreign exchange benefits

  • SPVs shall be exempted from the obligation to repatriate into Argentina and exchange for Argentine pesos the following percentages of exports proceeds: 20% from the second year, 40% from the third year and 100% from the fourth year, starting from the SPV’s commencement date. Projects classified as “long-term strategic export” projects will benefit from such exemptions from the first, second and third years, respectively. These benefits shall apply to the extent that there is not a more favourable regime in force.
  • SPVs will not be obligated to repatriate to Argentina or exchange for pesos foreign currency obtained under other transactions different from exports, including capital contributions, indebtedness or services rendered by the SPV to non-residents. In addition, they will have free availability of such currency.
  • Foreign exchange regulations restricting access to the foreign exchange market for the payment of external financing or capital repatriation will not apply to SPVs provided such payments do not exceed the amount of foreign currency entered into Argentina and exchanged for Pesos as debt, capital contributions or direct investments in the SPV.
  • Guaranteed right to pay dividends by accessing the foreign exchange market without any restriction whatsoever, provided that the investment entered the country and was exchanged for pesos at the foreign exchange market.

Tax and customs benefits 

  • The income tax rate for SPVs will be a reduced 25%, as opposed to the 35% general rate.
  • Accelerated amortisation in income tax.
  • Elimination of the applicable five-year term for computation of tax losses and possibility that after five years without being absorbed by taxable income, they may be transferred to third parties.
  • Adjustment of tax losses by the inflation index.
  • The import of new capital goods, supplies and consumable goods will be exempt from import duties.
  • Exports will be exempt from export duties after three years have elapsed from the commencement of the project.
  • No restrictions may be imposed on the import and export of goods and services by the SPV, which includes direct restrictions, quotas and any governmental measure that alters the value of exported or imported merchandise. 
  • Tax, customs and foreign exchange stability for 30 years.
  • Disputes with the state concerning the regime can be submitted to international arbitration under PCA, ICC or ICSID rules, at the SPV’s choice, without need to bring such claims to the local courts of justice.

Several aspects of the RIGI need to be complemented or clarified by the secondary legislation to be issued by the national executive, the Central Bank and the Federal Public Revenue Agency. The government has announced that completing the secondary legislation to implement the incentives might take approximately two months (early September of 2024).

Closing Remarks

Argentina’s new administration has brought to the forefront of the political and public opinion agenda the need to address and solve certain basic issues that, after years of denial, a large portion of the political class now sees as a main obstacle for attracting private investment and achieving economic growth, such as the country’s chronic fiscal deficit and foreign exchange restrictions, and the lack of regulatory stability.

Mr Milei has decided to attack these problems aggressively and promptly, assuming the political cost of taking unpopular measures, including a sharp reduction of public spending and subsidies, substantial increase of utilities tariffs and fuels prices, which had been frozen or kept artificially low for more than four years, and a steep devaluation of the Argentine peso, which devaluation rate was maintained notoriously behind the inflation rate by the previous government during the 2023 presidential campaign. These initial measures were consistent with what Mr Milei has announced he would do if he were elected president and, so far, the population is stoically accepting the consequences (recession) derived from this “take no prisoners” approach in the understanding that a sustainable increase in the economic activity and income is not possible if the macroeconomy fundamentals are not fixed.

If we focus on the petroleum sector, there is a huge potential, mainly based on, although not limited to, Vaca Muerta’s shale resources. In order to unleash this potential, significant investment will be required in upstream, midstream and downstream projects, which might provide plenty of business opportunities.

The RIGI created by the recently passed Bases Law will provide a set of previously unseen incentives and guarantees that will likely trigger significant investment decisions. In this respect, certain large projects that have been waiting for an incentives regime to be enacted should be launched or accelerated in the following months. Among others, the multi-billion YPF-Petronas LNG liquefaction plant and maritime terminal project and YPF’s Vaca Muerta Sur crude oil pipeline (the LNG project and, probably, the Vaca Muerta Sur project, will be open to other companies willing to participate), further expansions of the natural gas transportation system to supply northern Argentina and southern Brazil, downstream projects, as well as developments of upstream resources related to such midstream and downstream projects.

The Bases Law has also amended certain basic principles contained in the Federal Hydrocarbons Law and the Gas Law, establishing, as main objectives of the national petroleum policy, the maximisation of the revenue obtained from the exploitation of hydrocarbon resources, the free and unrestricted trade of hydrocarbons and their by-products, both at domestic and international markets, and the non-intervention of the state in pricing. Consistent with this, the Bases Law eliminated the self-sufficiency and domestic market priority supply as drivers of national policy.

These amendments will give the National Executive a stronger legal base to implement policies and regulations for the effective deregulation of the sector which, along with the gradual lifting of general foreign exchange restrictions, should encourage investment in large, mid-size and small projects, mainly in or related to Vaca Muerta, but also in other conventional operations in the Neuquén, Golfo San Jorge and Austral basins.

Bomchil

Corrientes 420 (C1043AAR)
Buenos Aires
Argentina

+54 11 4321 7500

+54 11 4321 7500

contacto@bomchil.com www.bomchil.com
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Law and Practice

Authors



Bomchil is considered one of the leading full-service law firms in Argentina. Since the firm’s foundation in 1923, it has participated in some of the country’s most complex and significant transactions and disputes. Bomchil’s oil and gas practice is a market leader, with partners that have broad experience counselling local and foreign companies, with solid knowledge of the local industry and unmatched connections in the international field. It has a deep understanding of the industry’s regulatory environment and has been involved in some of the most important investment and infrastructure projects and M&A transactions, representing international and local companies. Clients include the likes of Chevron, Litoral Gas and Refinor.

Trends and Developments

Authors



Bomchil is considered one of the leading full-service law firms in Argentina. Since the firm’s foundation in 1923, it has participated in some of the country’s most complex and significant transactions and disputes. Bomchil’s oil and gas practice is a market leader, with partners that have broad experience counselling local and foreign companies, with solid knowledge of the local industry and unmatched connections in the international field. It has a deep understanding of the industry’s regulatory environment and has been involved in some of the most important investment and infrastructure projects and M&A transactions, representing international and local companies. Clients include the likes of Chevron, Litoral Gas and Refinor.

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