{"id":"C1921A00026","name":"Excise Tariff Act 1921","slug":"excise-tariff-act-1921","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"commonwealth","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"26 of 1921","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":456,"registerId":"C2024C00257","compilationNumber":"56","startDate":"2024-07-01","status":"InForce","reasons":[{"affect":"Amend","markdown":"sch 1 (items 168, 192-198) of the [Excise and Customs Legislation Amendment (Streamlining Administration) Act 2024](/C2024A00051)","dateChanged":null,"amendedByTitle":null,"affectedByTitle":{"name":"Excise and Customs Legislation Amendment (Streamlining Administration) Act 2024","year":2024,"number":51,"titleId":"C2024A00051","provisions":"sch 1 (items 168, 192-198)","seriesType":"Act","optionalSeriesNumber":null}}],"registeredAt":"2024-07-04T14:41:04.249Z"},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title","content":"#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Excise Tariff Act 1921.","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1A","sectionType":"section","heading":"General administration of Act","content":"#### 1A General administration of Act\n\n  The CEO has the general administration of this Act.","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain Acts to be read as one with this Act","content":"#### 2 Certain Acts to be read as one with this Act\n\n  The Excise Act 1901, the Petroleum Revenue Act 1985 and the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987 shall be read as one with this Act.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 3 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> area includes:\n\n    (a) a part of the surface of the earth and the subsoil beneath that part; and\n    (b) a part of the surface of the earth and a part of the subsoil beneath that part.\n\n> biodiesel means mono‑alkyl esters of fatty acids of a kind used as a fuel, derived from animal or vegetable fats or oils whether or not used.\n\n> blended tobacco goods has the meaning given by subsection 6AAC(1).\n\n> CEO means the Commissioner of Taxation.\n\n> delayed‑entry oil means stabilised crude petroleum oil or condensate (other than oil or condensate in respect of which subitem 20.1 or 21.1 of the Schedule applies) produced from a prescribed source, but not entered for home consumption, before the operative day for that source.\n\n> delayed‑entry oil rate, in relation to delayed‑entry oil, has the meaning given by section 6E.\n\n> diesel does not include biodiesel.\n\n> exempt offshore area means a production area, within the meaning of section 5B:\n\n    (a) that is outside the outer limits of the territorial sea of Australia; and\n    (b) that is not, and has not been, a prescribed source.\n\n> exempt offshore condensate means condensate that is included in exempt offshore oil and condensate.\n\n> exempt offshore field means a field:\n\n    (a) that is prescribed by By‑law; and\n    (b) that consists of, or encompasses, an exempt offshore area or 2 or more exempt offshore areas.\n\n> exempt offshore oil means stabilised crude petroleum oil that is included in exempt offshore oil and condensate.\n\n> exempt offshore oil and condensate means the first 4767.3 megalitres of:\n\n    (a) if a particular exempt offshore field produces stabilised crude petroleum oil and condensate—the stabilised crude petroleum oil and condensate that is produced from the field; or\n    (b) if a particular exempt offshore field produces either stabilised crude petroleum oil or condensate (but not both)—the stabilised crude petroleum oil or condensate (as the case requires) that is produced from the field;\n  being a field from which neither petroleum oil nor condensate was produced before 1 July 1987.\n\n> exempt oils and hydraulic fluids means goods described in subsection (6).\n\n> exempt onshore condensate means condensate that is included in exempt onshore oil and condensate.\n\n> exempt onshore oil means stabilised crude petroleum oil that is included in exempt onshore oil and condensate.\n\n> exempt onshore oil and condensate means:\n\n    (a) if a particular onshore field produces stabilised crude petroleum oil and condensate—stabilised crude petroleum oil and condensate produced from the field after 30 June 1987 that is included in the first 4767.3 megalitres of stabilised crude petroleum oil and condensate produced from the field before, on or after 30 June 1987; or\n    (b) if a particular onshore field produces stabilised crude petroleum oil but not condensate—stabilised crude petroleum oil produced from the field after 30 June 1987 that is included in the first 4767.3 megalitres of stabilised crude petroleum oil produced from the field before, on or after 30 June 1987; or\n    (c) if a particular onshore field produces condensate but not stabilised crude petroleum oil—condensate produced from the field after 30 June 1987 that is included in the first 4767.3 megalitres of condensate produced from the field before, on or after 30 June 1987.\n\n> fuel oil means a petroleum product, whether obtained through a process of blending or otherwise, that has the physical characteristics described in subsection (4).\n\n> installation means a subsea installation, for the production of petroleum oil or condensate, that is connected to a fixed platform, a floating production system or any other petroleum collection system.\n\n> intermediate area means an area declared by the Resources Minister, by notice in writing published in the Gazette, to be an intermediate area for the purposes of this Act, being an area that contains at least one old accumulation but that does not contain a relevant accumulation which was developed before 23 October 1984.\n\n> intermediate oil means stabilized crude petroleum oil (other than new oil, delayed‑entry oil or oil in respect of which subitem 20.1 of the Schedule applies) produced from an intermediate area.\n\n> liquefied petroleum gas means:\n\n    (a) liquid propane; or\n    (b) a liquid mixture of propane and butane; or\n    (c) a liquid mixture of propane and other hydrocarbons that consists mainly of propane; or\n    (d) a liquid mixture of propane, butane and other hydrocarbons that consists mainly of propane and butane.\n\n> new oil means stabilized crude petroleum oil (other than delayed‑entry oil or oil in respect of which subitem 20.1 of the Schedule applies) produced from:\n\n    (a) a relevant accumulation that was discovered on or after 18 September 1975 and before 1 July 1983 by drilling a well that was classified by the Minister, for the purposes of Excise By‑law No. 78, as:\n    (i) a new field discovery; or\n    (ii) a new pool (pay) discovery; or\n    (iii) a deeper‑pool discovery; or\n    (iv) a shallower‑pool discovery;\n    subsequent to a determination of the well type by the relevant Energy Minister after drilling and before 1 July 1983; or\n    (b) a relevant accumulation that was discovered on or after 18 September 1975 and before 1 July 1983 by drilling a well that was not determined by the relevant Energy Minister before 1 July 1983 to be a well of any particular type; or\n    (c) a relevant accumulation that was discovered on or after 1 July 1983.\n\n> oil producing region:\n\n    (a) has the same meaning as in the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) includes:\n    (i) a production area within the meaning of section 5B, being an area from which condensate is obtained and that is prescribed by the regulations as an oil producing region; or\n    (ii) 2 or more production areas within the meaning of that section from which condensate is obtained, being areas that are together so prescribed.\n\n> Note: Part IA of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987 gives that Act operation in relation to condensate in addition to its operation in relation to stabilised crude petroleum oil. Paragraph (b) of this definition ensures that the definition covers production areas from which condensate is obtained.\n\n> old accumulation means a relevant accumulation that was discovered before 18 September 1975.\n\n> onshore field means a field:\n\n    (a) that is prescribed by By‑law; and\n    (b) that consists of, or encompasses, a production area (within the meaning of section 5B), or 2 or more production areas, that:\n    (i) is in a State or Territory or inside the outer limits of the territorial sea of Australia; and\n    (ii) is not, and has not been, a prescribed source.\n\n> operative day, in relation to a prescribed source, means the 1 July that is the day prescribed petroleum produced from that source on or after which is exempt from Excise duty because of the Petroleum Revenue Act 1985.\n\n> platform means a platform for the production of petroleum oil or condensate.\n\n> pre‑operative year, in relation to a prescribed source, means the financial year immediately preceding the operative day for that source.\n\n> prescribed source means:\n\n    (a) a prescribed production area within the meaning of section 6B; or\n    (b) a prescribed new production area within the meaning of section 6C; or\n    (ba) a prescribed condensate production area within the meaning of section 6CA; or\n    (c) a prescribed intermediate production area within the meaning of section 6D;\n  prescribed petroleum produced from which after 1 July in a particular year is exempt from Excise duty because of the Petroleum Revenue Act 1985.\n\n> relevant accumulation means a naturally occurring discrete accumulation of oil, of gas, or of both.\n\n> relevant Energy Minister means:\n\n    (a) on and after 18 September 1975 and before 5 October 1976—the Minister for Minerals and Energy; and\n    (b) on and after 5 October 1976 and before 20 December 1977—the Minister for National Resources; and\n    (c) on and after 20 December 1977 and before 8 December 1979—the Minister for National Development; and\n    (d) on and after 8 December 1979 and before 11 March 1983—the Minister for National Development and Energy; and\n    (e) on and after 11 March 1983 and before 1 July 1983—the Minister for Resources and Energy.\n\n> Resource Rent Tax area means an area that, for the purposes of the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax Assessment Act 1987, is:\n\n    (a) the exploration permit area of an exploration permit other than one of the North West Shelf exploration permits; or\n    (b) the retention lease area of a retention lease that is related to an exploration permit other than one of the North West Shelf exploration permits; or\n    (c) the production licence area of a production licence that is related to an exploration permit other than one of the North West Shelf exploration permits.\n\n> Statistician means the Australian Statistician.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, a relevant accumulation shall be taken to be developed when petroleum, within the meaning of section 5B, is recovered from the accumulation for the purpose of:\n    (a) the sale of the petroleum; or\n    (b) the production from the petroleum of a product for sale.\n  (3) Without affecting the meaning of any reference to a month in any other provision of this Act or in any other Act, a reference in section 6AB, 6B, 6C, 6CA, 6D or 6E to a month is a reference to one of the 12 months of a calendar year.\n  (4) The physical characteristics of fuel oil are:\n    (a) a density equal to or greater than 920.0 kg/cubic metre at 15 degrees Celsius as determined by either ASTM D1298 or ASTM D4052; and\n    (b) a carbon residue, on the whole sample, of at least 2.0 percent mass as determined by ASTM D189 (Conradson Carbon Residue) or by ASTM D4530 (Carbon Residue‑Micro Method); and\n    (c) a minimum kinematic viscosity of 10 centistokes (millimetres squared per second) at 50 degrees Celsius as determined by ASTM D445.\n  (5) In subsection (4), a reference to ASTM followed by a number is a reference to a test so numbered as prescribed by the American Society for Testing and Materials and set out in Section 5 of the Annual Book of ASTM Standards (1986 revision) published in 1986 by the American Society for Testing and Materials at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States of America.\n  (6) Exempt oils and hydraulic fluids are:\n    (a) food grade white mineral oil that complies with:\n    (i) Sec. 21 CFR 172.878 of Title 21, Volume 1 of the United States Code of Federal Regulations (regulations made by the Food and Drug Administration of the United States); and\n    (ii) Sec. 21 CFR 178.3620 (a) of Title 21, Volume 1 of the United States Code of Federal Regulations (regulations made by the Food and Drug Administration of the United States); and\n    (b) polyglycol brake fluids that meet the requirements of Australian Standard AS 1960.1—2005 Motor vehicle brake fluids—Non‑petroleum type; and\n    (c) aromatic process oils that meet all of the criteria in the following table:\n\n| Column 1Property         | Column 2Test Method | Column 3Value     |\n| ------------------------ | ------------------- | ----------------- |\n| Density at 15°C          | ASTM D1298 or D4502 | 0.9gm/cm3 minimum |\n| Aniline point            | ASTM D611           | 70°C maximum      |\n| Refractive index at 20°C | ASTM D1298 or D1747 | 1.490 minimum     |\n| Pour point               | ASTM D97            | ‑9°C minimum      |\n| Viscosity index          | ASTM D2270          | 80 maximum        |","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"3A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Ministerial guidelines relating to fields","content":"#### 3A Ministerial guidelines relating to fields\n\n  (1) The Resources Minister may, by legislative instrument signed by the Minister, make guidelines to be taken into account by the CEO in making By‑laws prescribing a field for the purposes of the definition of onshore field or exempt offshore field.\n  (2) In making By‑laws for a purpose described in subsection (1), the CEO must have regard to the guidelines in force at the time.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Time of imposition of Duties of Excise","content":"#### 4 Time of imposition of Duties of Excise\n\n  The time of imposition of the Duties of Excise imposed by this Act is the twenty‑fifth day of March, One thousand nine hundred and twenty at nine o’clock in the forenoon reckoned according to the standard time in the State of Victoria, and this Act shall be deemed to have come into operation at that time.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of Excise","content":"#### 5 Duties of Excise\n\n  (1) The Duties of Excise specified in the Schedule are hereby imposed in accordance with the Schedule, as from the time of the imposition of such duties or such later dates as are mentioned in the Schedule in regard to any particular items, and such duties shall be deemed to have been imposed at such time or dates, and shall be charged, collected, and paid to the use of the King for the purposes of the Commonwealth, on the following goods, namely:\n    (a) all goods dutiable under the Schedule and manufactured or produced in Australia after the time or dates when such duties are deemed to have been imposed; and\n    (b) all goods dutiable under the Schedule and manufactured or produced in Australia before the time or dates when such duties are deemed to have been imposed, and which were at that time or those dates subject to the CEO’s control, or in the stock, custody, or possession of, or belonging to, any distiller or manufacturer thereof, and on which no duty of Excise had been paid before the time or dates when such duties are deemed to have been imposed.\n\n> Note: Sections 6A and 6AA effectively change certain rates of duty that appear on the face of the Schedule.\n\n  (2) Where a section of another Act, whether passed before or after the commencement of this subsection, amends the Schedule to this Act, then, unless the contrary intention appears:\n    (a) that section imposes duties of Excise in accordance with the Schedule as so amended;\n    (b) where that section comes, came, or is deemed to have come, into operation on a particular day, the duties of Excise so imposed shall be charged, collected and paid:\n    (i) on all goods dutiable under the Schedule, as amended and in force on that day, and manufactured or produced in Australia on or after that day; and\n    (ii) on all goods dutiable under the Schedule, as amended and so in force, and manufactured or produced in Australia before that day, being goods:\n    (A) that, on that day, were subject to the CEO’s control, or, on that day, were in the stock, custody or possession of, or belonged to, a manufacturer or producer of the goods; and\n    (B) on which no duty of Excise had been paid before that day; and\n    (c) where that section comes, came, or is deemed to have come, into operation at a particular time, the duties of Excise so imposed shall be charged, collected and paid:\n    (i) on all goods dutiable under the Schedule, as amended and in force at that time, and manufactured or produced in Australia at or after that time; and\n    (ii) on all goods dutiable under the Schedule, as amended and in force at that time, and manufactured or produced in Australia before that time, being goods:\n    (A) that, at that time, were subject to the CEO’s control, or, at that time were in the stock, custody or possession of, or belonged to, the manufacturer or producer of the goods; and\n    (B) on which no duty of Excise had been paid before that time.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"5B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Petroleum","content":"#### 5B Petroleum\n\n  (1) In this section:\n\n> petroleum means petroleum oil or petroleum gas and includes condensate or liquid petroleum gas.\n\n> prescribed petroleum means petroleum other than stabilized oil.\n\n> production area means:\n\n    (a) a prescribed production area within the meaning of section 6B; or\n    (b) a prescribed new production area within the meaning of section 6C; or\n    (ba) a prescribed condensate production area within the meaning of section 6CA; or\n    (c) a prescribed intermediate production area within the meaning of section 6D.\n\n> stabilized oil means stabilized crude petroleum oil.\n\n  (2) Subject to subsections (3) and (3A), for the purposes of this Act, where a mixing of 2 or more kinds of petroleum has occurred and the resulting mixture takes on the essential character of petroleum of one of those kinds (in this subsection referred to as petroleum of the principal kind), the petroleum in the mixture shall be deemed to be petroleum of the principal kind.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Act, where a person enters for home consumption a mixture of, or obtained from, stabilized oil and prescribed petroleum (other than condensate), the petroleum in the mixture shall be deemed to be stabilized oil.\n\n> Note: A mixture of, or obtained from, stabilized oil and condensate is covered by subsection (2).\n\n  (3A) For the purposes of this Act, if a person enters for home consumption a mixture of, or obtained from, condensate and prescribed petroleum, the petroleum in the mixture is taken to be condensate.\n\n> Note: A mixture of, or obtained from, stabilized oil and condensate is covered by subsection (2).\n\n  (4) For the purposes of this Act, where stabilized oil or condensate is obtained from prescribed petroleum produced from a particular production area, that oil or condensate (as the case requires) shall be taken to have been produced from that production area.\n  (4A) For the purposes of this Act, where stabilized oil or condensate is obtained from prescribed petroleum produced from a Resource Rent Tax area, that oil or condensate (as the case requires) shall be taken to have been produced from that area.\n  (5) For the purposes of this Act, where a quantity of stabilized oil consists of oil obtained from prescribed petroleum produced from different production areas:\n    (a) the prescribed petroleum produced from each of those production areas shall be deemed to have resulted in the production of a discrete part of that quantity of stabilized oil; and\n    (b) the part of that quantity of stabilized oil that is to be taken to have been obtained from prescribed petroleum produced from such a production area is so much of that quantity of stabilized oil as bears to that quantity the same proportion as the quantity of prescribed petroleum produced from that production area bears to the total quantity of prescribed petroleum produced from all the production areas from which that quantity of stabilized oil was so obtained.","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"6A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Indexation of CPI indexed rates","content":"#### 6A Indexation of CPI indexed rates\n\n  (1) If the indexation factor for an indexation day is greater than 1, each CPI indexed rate is, on that day, replaced by the rate of duty worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula CPI indexed rate on the day before the indexation day times Indexation factor for the indexation day end formula](image.002.png)\n\n> Note: For indexation factor see subsection (3). For CPI indexed rate and indexation day see subsection (10).\n\n  (2) The amount worked out under subsection (1) is to be rounded to the same number of decimal places as the CPI indexed rate was on the day before the indexation day (rounding up if the next decimal place is 5 or more).\n  Indexation factor\n  (3) The indexation factor for an indexation day is the number worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction Index number for the most recent reference quarter before the indexation day over Index number for the base quarter end fraction end formula](image.003.png)\n\n> Note: For index number, reference quarter and base quarter see subsection (10).\n\n  (4) The indexation factor is to be worked out to 3 decimal places (rounding up if the fourth decimal place is 5 or more).\n  Effect of delay in publication of index number\n  (5) If the index number for the most recent reference quarter before the indexation day is published by the Statistician on a day (the publication day) that is not at least 5 days before the indexation day, then, despite subsection (1), any replacement of a CPI indexed rate under subsection (1) happens on the fifth day after the publication day.\n  Effect of Excise Tariff alteration\n  (6) If an Excise Tariff alteration proposed in the Parliament proposes to substitute, on and after a particular day, a rate for a CPI indexed rate, treat that substitution as having had effect on and after that day for the purposes of this section.\n  Changes to CPI index reference period and publication of substituted index numbers\n  (7) Amounts are to be worked out under this section:\n    (a) using only the index numbers published in terms of the most recently published index reference period for the Consumer Price Index; and\n    (b) disregarding index numbers published in substitution for previously published index numbers (except where the substituted numbers are published to take account of changes in the index reference period).\n  Application of replacement rate\n  (8) If a CPI indexed rate is replaced under this section on a particular day, the replacement rate applies in relation to goods entered for home consumption on or after that day.\n  Publication of replacement rate\n  (9) The CEO must, on or as soon as practicable after the day a CPI indexed rate is replaced under this section, publish a notice in the Gazette advertising the replacement rate and the goods it applies to.\n  Definitions\n  (10) In this section:\n\n> base quarter means the June quarter or December quarter that has the highest index number of all the June quarters and December quarters that occur:\n\n    (a) before the most recent reference quarter before the indexation day; and\n    (b) after the June quarter of 1983.\n\n> CPI indexed rate means:\n\n    (a) a rate of duty set out in item 1, 2 or 3 of the Schedule; or\n    (b) a rate of duty set out in item 10 of the Schedule, other than in:\n    (i) subitem 10.6 or 10.17; or\n    (ii) subitem 10.7, 10.12, 10.20, 10.21 or 10.30; or\n    (c) the rate set out in step 3 of the method statement in subsection 6G(1) (about duty payable on blended goods).\n\n> December quarter means a period of 3 months starting on 1 October.\n\n> indexation day means each 1 February and 1 August.\n\n> index number, for a quarter, means the All Groups Consumer Price Index number that is the weighted average of the 8 capital cities and is published by the Statistician in relation to that quarter.\n\n> June quarter means a period of 3 months starting on 1 April.\n\n> reference quarter means the June quarter or December quarter.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"6AAA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rounding of fuel duty rates","content":"#### 6AAA Rounding of fuel duty rates\n\n  (1) Despite subsection 6A(2), the amount to be worked out under subsection 6A(1) in respect of an indexation day for a CPI indexed rate covered by subsection (3) of this section is to be rounded to 3 decimal places (rounding up if the next decimal place is 5 or more).\n  (2) For the purposes of section 6A, determine the CPI indexed rate on the day before the indexation day as mentioned in subsection 6A(1) on the assumptions that:\n    (a) the operation of subsection (1) of this section was disregarded in respect of all previous indexation days (if any); and\n    (b) subsection 6A(2) permitted amounts worked out under subsection 6A(1) in respect of those indexation days to be rounded to 5 decimal places (rounding up if the next decimal place was 5 or more).\n  (3) This subsection covers the following CPI indexed rates:\n    (a) a rate of duty set out in item 10 of the Schedule, other than in:\n    (i) subitem 10.6 or 10.17; or\n    (ii) subitem 10.7, 10.12, 10.20, 10.21 or 10.30;\n    (b) the rate set out in step 3 of the method statement in subsection 6G(1) (about duty payable on blended goods).\n  (4) In this section:\n\n> CPI indexed rate has the same meaning as in section 6A.\n\n> indexation day has the same meaning as in section 6A.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"6AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Indexing of tobacco duty rate under subitem 5.1 of the Schedule","content":"#### 6AA Indexing of tobacco duty rate under subitem 5.1 of the Schedule\n\n  (1) If the indexation factor for an indexation day is at least 1, the rate of duty set out in subitem 5.1 of the Schedule (the tobacco duty rate) is, on that day, replaced by the rate of duty worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula Tobacco duty rate on the day before the indexation day times Indexation factor for the indexation day times Additional factor for the indexation day end formula](image.004.png)\n\n> Note: For indexation factor see subsections (3) and (5), for indexation day see subsection (12) and for additional factor see subsection (6).\n\n  (2) The amount worked out under subsection (1) is to be rounded to 5 decimal places (rounding up if the sixth decimal place is 5 or more).\n  Indexation factor\n  (3) The indexation factor for an indexation day is the number worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction AWOTE amount for the most recent reference quarter before the indexation day over AWOTE amount for the base quarter end fraction end formula](image.005.png)\n\n> Note: For AWOTE amount, reference quarter and base quarter see subsection (12).\n\n  (4) The indexation factor is to be worked out to 3 decimal places (rounding up if the fourth decimal place is 5 or more).\n  (5) Despite subsection (3), treat the indexation factor for 1 September 2023, 1 September 2024 and 1 September 2025 as 1 if, on that day, it would otherwise be less than 1.\n  Additional factor\n  (6) The additional factor for an indexation day is:\n    (a) 1.05, if the indexation day is 1 September 2023, 1 September 2024 or 1 September 2025; or\n    (b) 1, for each other indexation day.\n  Effect of delay in publication of AWOTE amount\n  (7) If the AWOTE amount for the most recent reference quarter before the indexation day is published by the Statistician on a day (the publication day) that is not at least 5 days before the indexation day, then, despite subsection (1), any replacement of a tobacco duty rate under subsection (1) happens on the fifth day after the publication day.\n  Effect of Excise Tariff alteration\n  (8) If an Excise Tariff alteration proposed in the Parliament proposes to substitute, on and after a particular day, a rate for a tobacco duty rate, treat that substitution as having had effect on and after that day for the purposes of this section.\n  Publication of substituted AWOTE amounts\n  (9) If the Statistician publishes an estimate of full‑time adult average weekly ordinary time earnings for persons in Australia for a period for which such an estimate was previously published by the Statistician, the publication of the later estimate is to be disregarded for the purposes of this section.\n  Application of replacement rate\n  (10) If a tobacco duty rate is replaced under this section on a particular day, the replacement rate applies in relation to goods entered for home consumption on or after that day.\n  Publication of replacement rate\n  (11) The CEO must, on or as soon as practicable after the day a tobacco duty rate is replaced under this section, publish a notice in the Gazette advertising the replacement rate and the goods it applies to.\n  Definitions\n  (12) In this section:\n\n> AWOTE amount, for a quarter, means the estimate of the full‑time adult average weekly ordinary time earnings for persons in Australia for the middle month of the quarter published by the Statistician in relation to that month.\n\n> base quarter means the June quarter or December quarter that has the highest AWOTE amount of all the June quarters and December quarters that occur:\n\n    (a) before the most recent reference quarter before the indexation day; and\n    (b) after the December quarter of 2012.\n\n> December quarter means a period of 3 months starting on 1 October.\n\n> indexation day means each 1 March and 1 September.\n\n> June quarter means a period of 3 months starting on 1 April.\n\n> reference quarter means the June quarter or December quarter.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"6AAB","sectionType":"section","heading":"Tobacco duty rate under subitem 5.5 of the Schedule","content":"#### 6AAB Tobacco duty rate under subitem 5.5 of the Schedule\n\n  (1) For the purposes of subitem 5.5 of the Schedule, the applicable rate on a day is the amount worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction The rate of duty under subitem 5.1 of the Schedule on that day over The weight conversion factor on that day end fraction end formula](image.006.png)\n  (2) The weight conversion factor is:\n    (a) for a day on or after the first replacement day and before the second replacement day—0.000675; or\n    (b) for a day on or after the second replacement day and before the third replacement day—0.00065; or\n    (c) for a day on or after the third replacement day and before the fourth replacement day—0.000625; or\n    (d) for a day on or after the fourth replacement day—0.0006.\n  Rounding\n  (3) The amount worked out under subsection (1) is to be rounded to 2 decimal places (rounding up if the third decimal place is 5 or more).\n  Replacement days\n  (4) For the purposes of this section, the first replacement day is 1 September 2023.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, the second replacement day is:\n    (a) 1 September 2024; or\n    (b) if, in relation to the indexation day that is 1 September 2024, subsection 6AA(7) has the effect of replacing a rate of duty on a later day—that later day.\n  (6) For the purposes of this section, the third replacement day is:\n    (a) 1 September 2025; or\n    (b) if, in relation to the indexation day that is 1 September 2025, subsection 6AA(7) has the effect of replacing a rate of duty on a later day—that later day.\n  (7) For the purposes of this section, the fourth replacement day is:\n    (a) 1 September 2026; or\n    (b) if, in relation to the indexation day that is 1 September 2026, subsection 6AA(7) has the effect of replacing a rate of duty on a later day—that later day.\n  Application of applicable rate\n  (8) If the applicable rate changes on a particular day, the changed rate applies in relation to goods entered for home consumption on or after that day.\n  Publication\n  (9) The CEO must, on or as soon as practicable after the day the rate of duty set out in subitem 5.1 of the Schedule is replaced under section 6AA, publish a notice in the Gazette advertising:\n    (a) the rate of duty under subitem 5.5 of the Schedule on that day; and\n    (b) the goods to which subitem 5.5 of the Schedule applies.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"6AAC","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duty payable on blended tobacco goods","content":"#### 6AAC Duty payable on blended tobacco goods\n\n  (1) Work out the duty payable under this Act on goods (the blended tobacco goods) that would, apart from this section, be classified to subitem 5.1 or 5.5 of the Schedule and that consist of constituents that are classified to either of those subitems, or to subitem 5.8 of the Schedule because of a previous operation of this section, as follows:\n\nMethod statement\n\nStep 1. Work out the amount of duty that would, apart from this section, be payable on the blended tobacco goods.\n\nStep 2. Add up the amount of duty previously payable on each constituent that is classified to subitem 5.1, 5.5 or 5.8 of the Schedule.\n\nStep 3. Subtract the result of step 2 from the result of step 1.\n\nStep 4. The duty payable on the blended tobacco goods is:\n\n(a) the result of step 3; or\n\n(b) if the result of step 3 is less than zero—zero.\n\n  (2) If a constituent of the blended tobacco goods was imported, assume for the purposes of subsection (1) that:\n    (a) the constituent was manufactured in Australia when it was imported; and\n    (b) if customs duty was paid on the constituent—there was a payment of Excise duty equal to the lesser of the following amounts (or either of them if they are equal):\n    (i) the amount of Excise duty that would have been payable on the constituent had it been manufactured in Australia when it was imported;\n    (ii) the amount of the customs duty paid.","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"6AB","sectionType":"section","heading":"Applicable petroleum prices","content":"#### 6AB Applicable petroleum prices\n\n  For the purposes of section 6B, 6C, 6CA or 6D, at any particular time the applicable petroleum price for a month occurring after 30 June 1997 in respect of stabilized crude petroleum oil or condensate, obtained from a production area, that is a prescribed production area, a prescribed new production area, a prescribed condensate production area or a prescribed intermediate production area, as the case requires, for the purposes of that section, is:\n    (a) if at that time the final VOLWARE price for stabilized crude petroleum oil or condensate (as the case requires) for the month and an oil producing region that constitutes or includes that production area has been determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987—that final VOLWARE price; or\n    (b) if at that time the final VOLWARE price for stabilized crude petroleum oil or condensate (as the case requires) has not been so determined—the interim VOLWARE price for stabilized crude petroleum oil or condensate (as the case requires) determined under that section for the month and an oil producing region that constitutes or includes that production area.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"6AC","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of section 6B, 6C, 6CA or 6D to different oil producing regions","content":"#### 6AC Application of section 6B, 6C, 6CA or 6D to different oil producing regions\n\n  If:\n    (a) a final VOLWARE price or an interim VOLWARE price for stabilized crude petroleum oil or condensate (as the case requires) has been, or is taken to have been, determined under the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987 for a month and an oil producing region; and\n    (b) that oil producing region is constituted by or includes:\n    (i) a particular prescribed production area within the meaning of section 6B; or\n    (ii) a particular prescribed new production area within the meaning of section 6C; or\n    (iii) a particular prescribed condensate production area within the meaning of section 6CA; or\n    (iv) a particular prescribed intermediate production area within the meaning of section 6D;\n  that determination is taken to have effect, and, at all material times to have had effect, in the application of that section in respect of stabilized crude petroleum or condensate (as the case requires) obtained from that production area, as if it were also a determination of that price made in respect of that particular production area.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"6B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of excise on old oil","content":"#### 6B Duties of excise on old oil\n\n  Definitions\n  (1) In this section:\n\n> adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of old oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that are, at the end of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> non‑adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of old oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that were, immediately before the commencement of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> old oil means stabilised crude petroleum oil in respect of which subitem 20.7 of the Schedule applies.\n\n> prescribed production area means a petroleum production area prescribed by by‑laws (which, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, may be a relevant accumulation, a well, an oilfield or a gas field).\n\n  Introduction\n  (2) The amount of duty in respect of old oil ascertained in accordance with this section shall be ascertained by reference to the prescribed production area from which the oil is produced and to the month of a financial year during which the oil is entered for home consumption.\n  The amount of duty\n  (3) Subject to subsection (3A), the amount of duty in respect of old oil produced from a prescribed production area and entered for home consumption during a month of a financial year commencing on or after 1 July 2001 is the amount worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula Notional duty plus Debited adjustment amount minus open bracket Duty paid plus Credited adjustment amount close bracket end formula](image.007.png)\n  where:\n\n> credited adjustment amount is the credited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5C).\n\n> debited adjustment amount is the debited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5B).\n\n> duty paid is the amount of duty (if any) paid in respect of old oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month.\n\n> notional duty is the amount of notional duty in respect of old oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (4).\n\n  Disregarding certain amounts when working out amount of duty\n  (3A) In working out, for the purposes of subsection (3), the amount of duty paid in respect of old oil produced from a prescribed production area and entered for home consumption during a period starting at the start of a financial year and ending at the end of a month of that year, the following amounts are to be disregarded:\n    (a) any increases in the amount of duty paid as a result of the addition of debited adjustment amounts for that area for any of the preceding months of that year;\n    (b) any decreases in that amount as a result of the subtraction of credited adjustment amounts for that area for any of those months.\n  The total amount of notional duty\n  (4) The amount of notional duty in respect of old oil produced from a particular prescribed production area and entered for home consumption during a particular period is the sum of the amounts of notional duty in respect of:\n    (a) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 4B end formula](image.008.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 6B end formula](image.009.png); and\n    (b) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 6B end formula](image.009.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 8B end formula](image.010.png); and\n    (c) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 8B end formula](image.010.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 10B end formula](image.011.png); and\n    (d) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 10B end formula](image.011.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png); and\n    (e) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png);\n  where:\n\n> A is the number of days in the period.\n\n> B is:\n\n    (a) where the period is in a year in which there are 365 days—136.98630 kilolitres; or\n    (b) where the period is in a year in which there are 366 days—136.61202 kilolitres.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of oil—one petroleum price\n  (5) Subject to subsections (6) and (9), the amount of notional duty in respect of a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (7)) of the product of:\n    (a) the amount specified in the price that is, at the end of the period referred to in subsection (4) in relation to the quantity of oil, the applicable petroleum price for the month in which the period comes to an end; and\n    (b) the number of kilolitres in that quantity;\n  calculated to the nearest cent.\n  The debited adjustment amount\n  (5B) Where:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for stabilised crude petroleum oil for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed production area for that first‑mentioned month is greater than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a debited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that adjusted previous year’s duty and that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The credited adjustment amount\n  (5C) Where:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for stabilised crude petroleum oil for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed production area for that first‑mentioned month is less than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a credited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty and that adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of oil—more than one petroleum price\n  (6) Where, at the end of a period in a financial year, the applicable petroleum prices for the months in which the period occurs and a particular prescribed production area are not all the same, the amount of the notional duty in respect of a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (7)) of the sum of the amounts calculated in respect of each such applicable petroleum price in operation during the period in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction P times Q times K over KT end fraction end formula](image.013.png)\n  where:\n\n> P is the amount specified in the applicable petroleum price.\n\n> Q is the number of kilolitres in the quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4).\n\n> K is the number of kilolitres of old oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during that part of the period during which the applicable petroleum price was in operation.\n\n> KT is the number of kilolitres of old oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period.\n\n  Relevant percentage for a quantity of oil\n  (7) For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), the relevant percentage in relation to a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) is:\n    (a) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(a) applies—20%; and\n    (b) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(b) applies—30%; and\n    (c) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(c) applies—40%; and\n    (d) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(d) applies—50%; and\n    (e) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(e) applies—55%.\n  Rounding the number of kilolitres in a quantity of oil\n  (8) For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), the number of kilolitres in a quantity of oil shall be taken to be a number equal to:\n    (a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 1 decimal place; or\n    (b) where the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 2 decimal places ends in a number greater than 4—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 1 decimal place increased by 0.1.\n  The amount of notional duty—dealing with the first year of production\n  (9) Where no old oil produced from a particular prescribed production area was ever entered for home consumption before the expiration of the first month of a particular financial year, then, in ascertaining, in accordance with subsections (4), (5) and (7) or (4), (6) and (7), the notional duty in respect of old oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during a later month (in this subsection referred to as the relevant month) of that financial year, those subsections have effect in relation to the old oil as if each reference in a paragraph of subsection (4) to B were a reference to the product of B and the factor ascertained in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction G over H end fraction end formula](image.014.png)\n  where:\n\n> G is the number of days in the period commencing on the day on which old oil produced from the prescribed production area was first entered for home consumption and ending on the expiration of the relevant month; and\n\n> H is the number of days in the period commencing on the first day of the financial year and ending on the expiration of the relevant month.\n\n  Interpretation of the Schedule\n  (10) The words set out after “, if higher,” in the column headed “Rate of Duty” in subitem 20.7 of the Schedule shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act or any other law of the Commonwealth, to be a rate of duty.","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"6C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of excise on new oil","content":"#### 6C Duties of excise on new oil\n\n  Definitions\n  (1) In this section:\n\n> adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed new production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of new oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that are, at the end of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> non‑adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed new production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of new oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that were, immediately before the commencement of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> prescribed new production area means a new petroleum production area prescribed by by‑laws (which, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, may be a relevant accumulation, a well, an oilfield or a gas field).\n\n  Introduction\n  (2) The amount of duty in respect of new oil ascertained in accordance with this section shall be ascertained by reference to the prescribed new production area from which the oil is produced and to the month of a financial year during which the oil is entered for home consumption.\n  The amount of duty\n  (3) Subject to subsection (3A), the amount of duty in respect of new oil produced from a prescribed new production area and entered for home consumption during a month of a financial year commencing on or after 1 July 2001 is the amount worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula Notional duty plus Debited adjustment amount minus open bracket Duty paid plus Credited adjustment amount close bracket end formula](image.015.png)\n  where:\n\n> notional duty is the amount of notional duty in respect of new oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (4).\n\n> debited adjustment amount is the debited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5A).\n\n> duty paid is the amount of duty (if any) paid in respect of new oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month.\n\n> credited adjustment amount is the credited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5B).\n\n  Disregarding certain amounts when working out amount of duty\n  (3A) In working out, for the purposes of subsection (3), the amount of duty paid in respect of new oil produced from a prescribed new production area and entered for home consumption during a period starting at the start of a financial year and ending at the end of a month of that year, the following amounts are to be disregarded:\n    (a) any increases in the amount of duty paid as a result of the addition of debited adjustment amounts for that area for any of the preceding months of that year;\n    (b) any decreases in that amount as a result of the subtraction of credited adjustment amounts for that area for any of those months.\n  The total amount of notional duty\n  (4) The amount of notional duty in respect of new oil produced from a particular prescribed new production area and entered for home consumption during a particular period is the sum of the amounts of notional duty in respect of:\n    (a) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 10B end formula](image.016.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png);\n    (b) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 14B end formula](image.017.png);\n    (c) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 14B end formula](image.017.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 16B end formula](image.018.png); and\n    (d) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 16B end formula](image.019.png);\n  where:\n\n> A is the number of days in the period.\n\n> B is:\n\n    (a) where the period in a year in which there are 365 days—136.98630 kilolitres; or\n    (b) where the period is in a year in which there are 366 days—136.61202 kilolitres.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of oil—one petroleum price\n  (5) Subject to subsections (6) and (9), the amount of notional duty in respect of a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (7)) of the product of:\n    (a) the amount specified in the price that is, at the end of the period referred to in subsection (4) in relation to the quantity of oil, the applicable petroleum price for the month in which the period comes to an end; and\n    (b) the number of kilolitres in that quantity;\n  calculated to the nearest cent.\n  The debited adjustment amount\n  (5A) Where:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for stabilised crude petroleum oil for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed new production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed new production area for that first‑mentioned month is greater than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a debited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that adjusted previous year’s duty and that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The credited adjustment amount\n  (5B) Where:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for stabilised crude petroleum oil for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed new production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed new production area for that first‑mentioned month is less than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a credited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty and that adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of oil—more than one petroleum price\n  (6) Where, at the end of a period in a financial year, the applicable petroleum prices for the months in which the period occurs and a particular prescribed new production area are not all the same, the amount of the notional duty in respect of a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (7)) of the sum of the amounts calculated in respect of each such applicable petroleum price in operation during the period in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction P times Q times K over KT end fraction end formula](image.020.png)\n  where:\n\n> P is the amount specified in the applicable petroleum price.\n\n> Q is the number of kilolitres in the quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4).\n\n> K is the number of kilolitres of new oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during that part of the period during which the applicable petroleum price was in operation.\n\n> KT is the number of kilolitres of new oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period.\n\n  Relevant percentage for a quantity of oil\n  (7) For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), the relevant percentage in relation to a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) is:\n    (a) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(a) applies—10%; and\n    (b) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(b) applies—15%; and\n    (c) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(c) applies—20%; and\n    (d) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph 4(d) applies—30%.\n  Rounding the number of kilolitres in a quantity of oil\n  (8) For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), the number of kilolitres in a quantity of oil shall be taken to be a number equal to:\n    (a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 1 decimal place; or\n    (b) where the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 2 decimal places ends in a number greater than 4—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 1 decimal place increased by 0.1.\n  The amount of notional duty—dealing with the first year of production\n  (9) When no new oil produced from a particular prescribed new production area was ever entered for home consumption before the expiration of the first month of a particular financial year, then, in ascertaining, in accordance with subsections (4), (5) and (7) or (4), (6) and (7), the notional duty in respect of new oil produced from the production area and entered for home consumption during a later month (in this subsection referred to as the relevant month) of that financial year, those subsections have effect in relation to the new oil as if each reference in a paragraph of subsection (4) to B were a reference to the product of B and the factor ascertained in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction M over N end fraction end formula](image.021.png)\n  where:\n\n> M is the number of days in the period commencing on the day on which new oil produced from the prescribed new production area was first entered for home consumption and ending on the expiration of the relevant month; and\n\n> N is the number of days in the period commencing on the first day of the financial year and ending on the expiration of the relevant month.\n\n  Interpretation of the Schedule\n  (10) The words set out after “, if higher,” in the column headed “Rate of Duty” in subitem 20.5 of the Schedule shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act or any other law of the Commonwealth, to be a rate of duty.","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"6CA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of excise on condensate","content":"#### 6CA Duties of excise on condensate\n\n  Definitions\n  (1) In this section:\n\n> adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed condensate production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of condensate produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that are, at the end of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> non‑adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed condensate production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of condensate produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that were, immediately before the commencement of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> prescribed condensate production area has the meaning given by subsection (1A).\n\n  (1A) Prescribed condensate production area means any of the following:\n    (a) a condensate production area prescribed by by‑laws (which, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, may be a relevant accumulation, a well, an oilfield or a gas field);\n    (b) the Rankin Trend (see subsection (1B)).\n\n> Note: A by‑law may be expressed to commence before the day it is registered under the Legislation Act 2003 (see subsection 12(1A) of that Act).\n\n  (1B) The Rankin Trend means the area that includes the following:\n    (a) the reservoirs, or groups of reservoirs, known as:\n    (i) North Rankin; and\n    (ii) Perseus; and\n    (iii) Searipple; and\n    (iv) Goodwyn; and\n    (v) Keast/Dockrell; and\n    (vi) Echo/Yodel;\n    (b) other reservoirs, or groups of reservoirs, (if any) that are specified in the regulations made for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (1C) Before the Governor‑General makes a regulation specifying a reservoir, or a group of reservoirs, for the purposes of paragraph (1B)(b):\n    (a) the Resources Minister must be satisfied that the reservoir, or the group of reservoirs, is part of the same field as a reservoir or group of reservoirs mentioned in paragraph (1B)(a); and\n    (b) if the Resources Minister is so satisfied—the Resources Minister must consider the effect of specifying the reservoir, or the group of reservoirs, on the efficient exploitation of the resource related to the reservoir, or to the group of reservoirs.\n  (1D) Subsection 12(2) (retrospective application of legislative instruments) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to regulations specifying a reservoir, or a group of reservoirs, for the purposes of paragraph (1B)(b) of this section.\n  (1E) Subsection (1D) does not apply to regulations that create, modify or otherwise affect a provision that makes a person liable to an offence or civil penalty.\n  Introduction\n  (2) The amount of duty in respect of condensate ascertained in accordance with this section is to be ascertained by reference to the prescribed condensate production area from which the condensate is produced and to the month of a financial year during which the condensate is entered for home consumption.\n  The amount of duty\n  (3) Subject to subsection (4), the amount of duty in respect of condensate produced from a prescribed condensate production area and entered for home consumption during a month of a financial year is the amount worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula Notional duty plus Debited adjustment amount minus open bracket Duty paid plus Credited adjustment amount close bracket end formula](image.015.png)\n  where:\n\n> credited adjustment amount is the credited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (8).\n\n> debited adjustment amount is the debited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (7).\n\n> duty paid is the amount of duty (if any) paid in respect of condensate produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month.\n\n> notional duty is the amount of notional duty in respect of condensate produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5).\n\n  Disregarding certain amounts when working out amount of duty\n  (4) In working out, for the purposes of subsection (3), the amount of duty paid in respect of condensate produced from a prescribed condensate production area and entered for home consumption during a period starting at the start of a financial year and ending at the end of a month of that year, the following amounts are to be disregarded:\n    (a) any increases in the amount of duty paid as a result of the addition of debited adjustment amounts for that area for any of the preceding months of that year;\n    (b) any decreases in that amount as a result of the subtraction of credited adjustment amounts for that area for any of those months.\n  The total amount of notional duty\n  (5) The amount of notional duty in respect of condensate produced from a particular prescribed condensate production area and entered for home consumption during a particular period is the sum of the amounts of notional duty in respect of:\n    (a) the quantity (if any) of the condensate that exceeds ![Start formula A times 10B end formula](image.011.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png);\n    (b) the quantity (if any) of the condensate that exceeds ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.022.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 14B end formula](image.023.png);\n    (c) the quantity (if any) of the condensate that exceeds ![Start formula A times 14B end formula](image.024.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 16B end formula](image.025.png); and\n    (d) the quantity (if any) of the condensate that exceeds ![Start formula A times 16B end formula](image.025.png);\n  where:\n\n> A is the number of days in the period.\n\n> B is:\n\n    (a) where the period in a year in which there are 365 days—136.98630 kilolitres; or\n    (b) where the period is in a year in which there are 366 days—136.61202 kilolitres.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of condensate—one petroleum price\n  (6) Subject to subsections (9) and (12), the amount of notional duty in respect of a quantity of condensate referred to in subsection (5) is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (10)) of the product of:\n    (a) the amount specified in the price that is, at the end of the period referred to in subsection (5) in relation to the quantity of condensate, the applicable petroleum price for the month in which the period comes to an end; and\n    (b) the number of kilolitres in that quantity;\n  calculated to the nearest cent.\n  The debited adjustment amount\n  (7) If:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for condensate for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed condensate production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed condensate production area for that first‑mentioned month is greater than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a debited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that adjusted previous year’s duty and that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The credited adjustment amount\n  (8) If:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for condensate for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed condensate production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed condensate production area for that first‑mentioned month is less than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a credited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty and that adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of condensate—more than one petroleum price\n  (9) If, at the end of a period in a financial year, the applicable petroleum prices for the months in which the period occurs and a particular prescribed condensate production area are not all the same, the amount of the notional duty in respect of a quantity of condensate referred to in subsection (5) produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (10)) of the sum of the amounts calculated in respect of each such applicable petroleum price in operation during the period in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction P times Q times K over KT end fraction end formula](image.020.png)\n  where:\n\n> K is the number of kilolitres of condensate produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during that part of the period during which the applicable petroleum price was in operation.\n\n> KT is the number of kilolitres of condensate produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period.\n\n> P is the amount specified in the applicable petroleum price.\n\n> Q is the number of kilolitres in the quantity of condensate referred to in subsection (5).\n\n  Relevant percentage for a quantity of condensate\n  (10) For the purposes of subsections (6) and (9), the relevant percentage in relation to a quantity of condensate referred to in subsection (5) is:\n    (a) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (5)(a) applies—10%; and\n    (b) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (5)(b) applies—15%; and\n    (c) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (5)(c) applies—20%; and\n    (d) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (5)(d) applies—30%.\n  Rounding the number of kilolitres in a quantity of condensate\n  (11) For the purposes of subsections (6) and (9), the number of kilolitres in a quantity of condensate is taken to be a number equal to:\n    (a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to one decimal place; or\n    (b) if the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 2 decimal places ends in a number greater than 4—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to one decimal place increased by 0.1.\n  The amount of notional duty—dealing with the first year of production\n  (12) When no condensate produced from a particular prescribed condensate production area was ever entered for home consumption before the end of the first month of a particular financial year, then, in ascertaining, in accordance with subsections (5), (6) and (10) or (5), (9) and (10), the notional duty in respect of condensate produced from the production area and entered for home consumption during a later month (the relevant month) of that financial year, those subsections have effect in relation to the condensate as if each reference in a paragraph of subsection (5) to B were a reference to the product of B and the factor ascertained in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction M over N end fraction end formula](image.021.png)\n  where:\n\n> M is the number of days in the period commencing on the day on which condensate produced from the prescribed condensate production area was first entered for home consumption and ending on the end of the relevant month.\n\n> N is the number of days in the period commencing on the first day of the financial year and ending on the end of the relevant month.\n\n  (13) Subsection 12(2) (retrospective application of legislative instruments) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to a by‑law prescribing a condensate production area.\n  (13A) Despite section 169 of the Excise Act 1901, a by‑law prescribing a condensate production area may have the effect of imposing duty, in relation to condensate entered for home consumption before the date on which the by‑law is published in the Gazette, at a rate higher than the rate of duty payable in respect of the condensate on the day on which the condensate was entered for home consumption.\n  Interpretation of the Schedule\n  (14) The words set out after “, if higher,” in the column headed “Rate of Duty” in subitem 21.3 of the Schedule are taken, for the purposes of this Act or any other law of the Commonwealth, to be a rate of duty.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"6D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duties of excise on intermediate oil","content":"#### 6D Duties of excise on intermediate oil\n\n  Definitions\n  (1) In this section:\n\n> adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed intermediate production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of intermediate oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that are, at the end of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> non‑adjusted previous year’s duty, in relation to a prescribed intermediate production area in relation to a month of a financial year, means the amount of duty that, at the end of the financial year immediately preceding the financial year in which that month occurs, would have been payable in respect of intermediate oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during that preceding year if, for the prices that were, at the end of that preceding year, the applicable petroleum prices for all of the months of that preceding year, there had been substituted the prices that were, immediately before the commencement of that first‑mentioned month, the respective applicable petroleum prices for all of those months.\n\n> prescribed intermediate production area means an intermediate petroleum production area prescribed by by‑laws (which, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, may be a relevant accumulation, a well, an oilfield or a gas field).\n\n  Introduction\n  (2) The amount of duty in respect of intermediate oil ascertained in accordance with this section shall be ascertained by reference to the prescribed intermediate production area from which the oil is produced and to the month of a financial year during which the oil is entered for home consumption.\n  The amount of duty\n  (3) Subject to subsection (3A), the amount of duty in respect of intermediate oil produced from a prescribed intermediate production area and entered for home consumption during a month of a financial year commencing on or after 1 July 1997 is the amount worked out using the formula:\n  ![Start formula Notional duty plus Debited adjustment amount minus open bracket Duty paid plus Credited adjustment amount close bracket end formula](image.026.png)\n  where:\n\n> notional duty is the amount of notional duty in respect of intermediate oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (4).\n\n> debited adjustment amount is the debited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5A).\n\n> duty paid is the amount of duty (if any) paid in respect of intermediate oil produced from that area and entered for home consumption during the period starting at the start of that financial year and ending at the end of that month.\n\n> credited adjustment amount is the credited adjustment amount (if any) for that area and that month, worked out in accordance with subsection (5B).\n\n  Disregarding certain amounts when working out amount of duty\n  (3A) In working out, for the purposes of subsection (3), the amount of duty paid in respect of intermediate oil produced from a prescribed intermediate production area and entered for home consumption during a period starting at the start of a financial year and ending at the end of a month of that year, the following amounts are to be disregarded:\n    (a) any increases in the amount of duty paid as a result of the addition of debited adjustment amounts for that area for any of the preceding months of that year;\n    (b) any decreases in that amount as a result of the subtraction of credited adjustment amounts for that area for any of those months.\n  The total amount of notional duty\n  (4) The amount of notional duty in respect of intermediate oil produced from a particular prescribed intermediate production area and entered for home consumption during a particular period is the sum of the amounts of notional duty in respect of:\n    (a) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 6B end formula](image.009.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 8B end formula](image.027.png);\n    (b) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 8B end formula](image.010.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 10B end formula](image.011.png);\n    (c) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 10B end formula](image.011.png) but does not exceed ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png); and\n    (d) the quantity (if any) of the oil that exceeds ![Start formula A times 12B end formula](image.012.png);\n  where:\n\n> A is the number of days in the period.\n\n> B is:\n\n    (a) where the period is in a year in which there are 365 days—136.98630 kilolitres; or\n    (b) where the period is in a year in which there are 366 days—136.61202 kilolitres.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of oil—one petroleum price\n  (5) Subject to subsections (6) and (9), the amount of notional duty in respect of a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (7)) of the product of:\n    (a) the amount specified in the price that is, at the end of the period referred to in subsection (4) in relation to the quantity of oil, the applicable petroleum price for the month in which the period comes to an end; and\n    (b) the number of kilolitres in that quantity;\n  calculated to the nearest cent.\n  The debited adjustment amount\n  (5A) Where:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for stabilized crude petroleum oil for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed intermediate production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed intermediate production area for that first‑mentioned month is greater than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a debited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that adjusted previous year’s duty and that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The credited adjustment amount\n  (5B) Where:\n    (a) during a month of a financial year, a VOLWARE price for stabilized crude petroleum oil for a month of the immediately preceding financial year and a particular prescribed intermediate production area is determined under section 7 of the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987; and\n    (b) the adjusted previous year’s duty for that prescribed intermediate production area for that first‑mentioned month is less than the non‑adjusted previous year’s duty for that area for that first‑mentioned month;\n  there is a credited adjustment amount for that area for that first‑mentioned month, being an amount equal to the difference between that non‑adjusted previous year’s duty and that adjusted previous year’s duty.\n  The amount of notional duty for a quantity of oil—more than one petroleum price\n  (6) Where, at the end of a period in a financial year, the applicable petroleum prices for the months in which the period occurs and a prescribed intermediate production area are not all the same, the amount of the notional duty in respect of a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period is an amount equal to the relevant percentage (set out in subsection (7)) of the sum of the amounts calculated in respect of each such applicable petroleum price in operation during the period in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction P times Q times K over KT end fraction end formula](image.020.png)\n  where:\n\n> P is the amount specified in the applicable petroleum price.\n\n> Q is the number of kilolitres in the quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4).\n\n> K is the number of kilolitres of intermediate oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during that part of the period during which the applicable petroleum price was in operation.\n\n> KT is the number of kilolitres of intermediate oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during the period.\n\n  Relevant percentage for a quantity of oil\n  (7) For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), the relevant percentage in relation to a quantity of oil referred to in subsection (4) is:\n    (a) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (4)(a) applies—15%;\n    (b) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (4)(b) applies—30%;\n    (c) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (4)(c) applies—50%; and\n    (d) in the case of a quantity to which paragraph (4)(d) applies—55%.\n  Rounding the number of kilolitres in a quantity of oil\n  (8) For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), the number of kilolitres in a quantity of oil shall be taken to be a number equal to:\n    (a) unless paragraph (b) applies—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 1 decimal place; or\n    (b) where the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 2 decimal places ends in a number greater than 4—the number of kilolitres in that quantity calculated to 1 decimal place increased by 0.1.\n  The amount of notional duty—dealing with the first year of production\n  (9) Where no intermediate oil produced from a particular prescribed intermediate production area was ever entered for home consumption before the expiration of the first month of a particular financial year, then, in ascertaining, in accordance with subsections (4), (5) and (7) or (4), (6) and (7), the notional duty in respect of intermediate oil produced from that production area and entered for home consumption during a later month (in this subsection referred to as the relevant month) of that financial year, those subsections have effect in relation to the intermediate oil as if each reference in a paragraph of subsection (4) to B were a reference to the product of B and the factor ascertained in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction R over S end fraction end formula](image.028.png)\n  where:\n\n> R is the number of days in the period commencing on the day on which intermediate oil produced from the prescribed intermediate production area was first entered for home consumption and ending on the expiration of the relevant month; and\n\n> S is the number of days in the period commencing on the first day of the financial year and ending on the expiration of the relevant month.\n\n  Interpretation of the Schedule\n  (10) The words set out after “, if higher,” in the column headed “Rate of Duty” in subitem 20.6 of the Schedule shall be deemed, for the purposes of this Act or any other law of the Commonwealth, to be a rate of duty.","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"6E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delayed‑entry oil rate","content":"#### 6E Delayed‑entry oil rate\n\n  (1) In this section:\n\n> applicable petroleum price has the same meaning as it has for the purposes of section 6AB.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the delayed‑entry oil rate that applies to delayed‑entry oil from a particular prescribed source is the amount per kilolitre ascertained in accordance with the formula:\n  ![Start formula start fraction T times U over W end fraction end formula](image.029.png)\n  where:\n\n> T is the applicable petroleum price in relation to the month in which the operative day for that delayed‑entry oil occurs and to the production area constituting that prescribed source if the oil had continued to be covered by section 6B, 6C, 6CA or 6D, whichever is applicable, on and after the operative day.\n\n> U is the number of dollars, calculated to 2 decimal places, in the amount of the duties of Excise paid in respect of the crude petroleum oil produced from that source that was entered for home consumption during the pre‑operative year for that source.\n\n> W is:\n\n    (a) if the applicable petroleum price was the same in relation to all months of the pre‑operative year and to the production area that is the prescribed source from which the oil was produced—the product of the number of kilolitres of the stabilised crude petroleum oil produced from that source that was entered for home consumption during that pre‑operative year and the number of dollars, calculated to 2 decimal places, in the amount specified in the applicable petroleum price; or\n    (b) if the applicable petroleum price was not the same in relation to all months of the pre‑operative year and to that production area—the number ascertained by:\n    (i) working out, in respect of each applicable petroleum price in operation in relation to a month or months of that pre‑operative year and to that production area, the product of the number of dollars, calculated to 2 decimal places, in the amount specified in the applicable petroleum price and the number of kilolitres of the crude petroleum oil produced from that prescribed source that was entered for home consumption during that month or those months; and\n    (ii) adding the products calculated under subparagraph (i).","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"6FAA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Change in duty rate of certain liquefied petroleum gases, liquefied natural gases and compressed natural gases","content":"#### 6FAA Change in duty rate of certain liquefied petroleum gases, liquefied natural gases and compressed natural gases\n\n  (1) This Act has effect as if, on 1 July 2015:\n    (a) the rate of duty in subitem 10.19A of the Schedule is replaced by:\n    (i) $0.126 per litre; or\n    (ii) if the indexed rate worked out under subsection (2) is greater than $0.126 per litre—that indexed rate; and\n    (b) the rate of duty in subitem 10.19B of the Schedule is replaced by:\n    (i) $0.2644 per kilogram; or\n    (ii) if the indexed rate worked out under subsection (2) is greater than $0.2644 per kilogram—that indexed rate; and\n    (c) the rate of duty in subitem 10.19C of the Schedule is replaced by:\n    (i) $0.2644 per kilogram; or\n    (ii) if the indexed rate worked out under subsection (2) is greater than $0.2644 per kilogram—that indexed rate.\n  (2) To work out the indexed rate, index the rate mentioned in paragraph (1)(a), (b) or (c) (as applicable) on 1 February 2015 under section 6A, on the assumptions that:\n    (a) the rate is a CPI indexed rate for the purposes of that section; and\n    (b) the amount of that rate on the day before 1 February 2015 is the amount set out in subparagraph (1)(a)(i), (b)(i) or (c)(i) (as applicable).","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"6G","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duty payable on certain fuel blended goods","content":"#### 6G Duty payable on certain fuel blended goods\n\n  (1) Work out the duty payable under this Act on goods (the blended goods) that are classified to subitem 10.7, 10.12 or 10.30 of the Schedule as follows:\n\nMethod statement\n\nStep 1. Add up the amount of duty that would, at the time the duty on the blended goods is payable, be payable on each constituent of the blended goods, that is classified to item 10 of the Schedule, if the constituent had not been included in the blended goods.\n\nStep 2. Work out the volume, in litres, of the blended goods that is not attributable to those constituents or to water added to manufacture the blended goods.\n\nStep 3. Multiply the result of step 2 by $0.386.\n\n> Note: The rate set out in this step is indexed under section 6A.\n\nStep 4. Total the results of steps 1 and 3.\n\nStep 5. Subtract from the total any duty paid on a constituent of the blended goods that is classified to item 10 or 15 of the Schedule.\n\n  (2) If a constituent of the blended goods was imported, assume for the purposes of subsection (1) that:\n    (a) the constituent was manufactured in Australia when it was imported; and\n    (b) if customs duty was paid on the constituent, there was a payment of excise duty equal to the lesser of the following amounts (or either of them if they are equal):\n    (i) the amount of excise duty that would have been payable on the constituent had it been manufactured in Australia when it was imported;\n    (ii) the amount of the customs duty paid.","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"6H","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of duty payable on denatured ethanol","content":"#### 6H Rate of duty payable on denatured ethanol\n\n  (1) For the purposes of subitem 10.20 of the Schedule, the rate of duty is the following rate rounded to 3 decimal places (rounding up if the next decimal place is 5 or more):\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.5pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Rate for denatured ethanol for use as fuel in an internal combustion engine</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>For the financial year starting on:</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>the rate is the rate per litre equal to this percentage of the rate in subitem</span><span> </span><span>10.5 of the Schedule:</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2015</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>0%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2016</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6.554%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2017</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>13.108%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2018</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>19.662%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2019</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>26.216%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2020 or a later 1</span><span> </span><span>July</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>32.770%</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The rate in subitem 10.5 of the Schedule is the rate for gasoline (other than for use as fuel in aircraft). That rate is indexed under section 6A.\n\n  (2) A rate of duty worked out using a table item in subsection (1) applies to goods manufactured or produced in Australia during a financial year referred to in that item, and goods for which all the following conditions are met:\n    (a) the goods were manufactured or produced in Australia before a financial year referred to in that item;\n    (b) at the start of that financial year, the goods were either:\n    (i) subject to the CEO’s control; or\n    (ii) in the stock, custody or possession of, or belonged to, a manufacturer or producer of the goods;\n    (c) no duty of excise had been paid on the goods before that financial year.\n  This subsection has effect despite subsection 5(2).","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"6J","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rate of duty payable on biodiesel","content":"#### 6J Rate of duty payable on biodiesel\n\n  Rate of duty\n  (1) For the purposes of subitem 10.21 of the Schedule, the rate of duty is the following rate rounded to 3 decimal places (rounding up if the next decimal place is 5 or more):\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.5pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Rate for biodiesel</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>For the financial year starting on:</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>the rate is the rate per litre equal to this percentage of the rate in subitem</span><span> </span><span>10.10 of the Schedule:</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2015</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>0%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2016</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3.333%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2017</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6.667%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2018</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>10%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2019</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>13.333%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2020</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>16.667%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2021</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>20%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2022</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>23.333%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2023</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>26.667%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2024</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>30%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2025</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>33.333%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2026</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>36.667%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>13</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2027</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>40%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>14</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2028</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>43.333%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>15</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2029</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>46.667%</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>16</span></p></td><td style=\"width:123.35pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span><span> </span><span>July 2030 or a later 1</span><span> </span><span>July</span></p></td><td style=\"width:173.65pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>50%</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The rate in subitem 10.10 of the Schedule is the rate for diesel. That rate is indexed under section 6A.\n\n  (2) A rate of duty worked out using a table item in subsection (1) applies to goods manufactured or produced in Australia during a financial year referred to in that item, and goods for which all the following conditions are met:\n    (a) the goods were manufactured or produced in Australia before a financial year referred to in that item;\n    (b) at the start of that financial year, the goods were either:\n    (i) subject to the CEO’s control; or\n    (ii) in the stock, custody or possession of, or belonged to, a manufacturer or producer of the goods;\n    (c) no duty of excise had been paid on the goods before that financial year.\n  This subsection has effect despite subsection 5(2).","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"6K","sectionType":"section","heading":"Temporary reduction—CPI indexed fuel rates","content":"#### 6K Temporary reduction—CPI indexed fuel rates\n\n  Temporary rate reduction\n  (1) Despite any other provision of this Act, each CPI indexed fuel rate is, during a rate reduction period, a rate equal to 50% of the rate that it would have been during that period apart from this section (including because of the operation of section 6A).\n\n> Note: For CPI indexed fuel rate and rate reduction period, see subsection (8).\n\n  (2) An amount worked out under subsection (1) is to be rounded to 3 decimal places (rounding up if the next decimal place is 5 or more).\n  (3) A CPI indexed fuel rate that applies under subsection (1) during a rate reduction period applies to:\n    (a) goods manufactured or produced in Australia during that period; and\n    (b) goods manufactured or produced in Australia before the start of that period if:\n    (i) at the start of the period, the goods were either subject to the CEO’s control, or were in the stock, custody or possession of, or belonged to, a manufacturer or producer of the goods; and\n    (ii) no duty of excise had been paid on the goods before the start of the period.\n  (4) Subsection (3) has effect despite subsection 5(2).\n  Restoration of rates\n  (5) This Act has effect as if, on 29 September 2022, each CPI indexed fuel rate is a rate equal to the rate that it would have been on the August adjustment day apart from subsection (1) (including because of the operation of section 6A).\n\n> Note 1: For August adjustment day, see subsection (8).\n\n> Note 2: A rate that applies under this subsection is subject to later indexation under section 6A.\n\n  (6) A CPI indexed fuel rate that applies under subsection (5) applies to:\n    (a) goods manufactured or produced in Australia on or after 29 September 2022; and\n    (b) goods manufactured or produced in Australia before 29 September 2022 if:\n    (i) on 29 September 2022, the goods were either subject to the CEO’s control, or were in the stock, custody or possession of, or belonged to, a manufacturer or producer of the goods; and\n    (ii) no duty of excise had been paid on the goods before 29 September 2022.\n  (7) Subsection (6) has effect despite subsection 5(2).\n  Definitions\n  (8) In this section:\n\n> August adjustment day means the following:\n\n    (a) 1 August 2022, unless paragraph (b) applies;\n    (b) if, in relation to the indexation day that is 1 August 2022, the replacement under section 6A of a rate of duty happens on another day in accordance with subsection 6A(5)—that other day.\n\n> CPI indexed fuel rate means a rate covered by paragraph (b) or (c) of the definition of CPI indexed rate in subsection 6A(10).\n\n> rate reduction period: each of the following is a rate reduction period:\n\n    (a) the period beginning on 30 March 2022 and ending at the end of the day before the August adjustment day;\n    (b) the period beginning on the August adjustment day and ending at the end of 28 September 2022.","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations","content":"#### 7 Regulations\n\n  The Governor‑General may make regulations prescribing matters required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed.","sortOrder":25}],"analysis":{"summary":{"complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act originated in 1921 as a straightforward excise tariff on a limited range of goods. Over a century of amendments it has grown to encompass highly complex petroleum production taxation regimes (added from the 1970s–1980s as Australian offshore oil was discovered), biofuel concessions reflecting modern energy policy, and tobacco duty escalation tied to public health objectives. The scope has expanded dramatically from a simple tariff schedule to a multi-regime tax instrument covering energy policy, environmental policy, and public health goals simultaneously."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple distinct taxation regimes operating simultaneously (fuel, tobacco, crude oil, condensate, biofuels) each with different rate-setting mechanisms","Petroleum excise uses sliding-scale percentage rates based on production volume thresholds with complex mathematical formulas involving variables A, B, P, Q, K, KT","Oil classification system distinguishes between 'old oil', 'new oil', 'intermediate oil', 'condensate', and 'delayed-entry oil' — each with different duty calculations tied to historical discovery dates","Two separate indexation systems: CPI-based (for fuel, twice yearly) and AWOTE wage-based with additional 5% uplift factor (for tobacco)","Cross-references to at least three other Acts (Excise Act 1901, Petroleum Revenue Act 1985, Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987) that must be read together","Retrospective provisions and deemed commencement dates going back to 1920","VOLWARE price adjustment mechanism requiring recalculation of prior years' duty when final prices are determined — creating debited and credited adjustment amounts","Specific named geographic areas (e.g., Rankin Trend reservoirs) embedded in the legislation itself","Numerous defined terms with highly technical petroleum engineering and chemistry content (e.g., ASTM test standards, physical property thresholds for fuel oil classification)","Phase-in tables for biodiesel and ethanol with annually escalating percentage rates calculated relative to other subitems' rates","Rounding rules specified to varying decimal places depending on the calculation type"],"plain_english_summary":"## Excise Tariff Act 1921 — What It Does and Who It Affects\n\n### The Big Picture\nThis is one of Australia's core tax laws. It sets the **excise duties** (a type of tax on goods *made* in Australia, as opposed to customs duties which apply to *imported* goods) on a wide range of everyday products. Think of it as the government's price list for taxing Australian-made goods before they reach you.\n\n### What Gets Taxed?\nThe Act covers several major product categories:\n\n- **Fuel** — petrol, diesel, jet fuel, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), liquefied natural gas (LNG), biodiesel, and ethanol. If you fill up your car, some of what you pay at the pump includes excise duty collected under this Act.\n- **Tobacco** — cigarettes and other tobacco products. Tobacco is subject to particularly aggressive tax increases (an extra 5% on top of inflation adjustments each year from 2023–2025).\n- **Crude petroleum oil and condensate** — a complex system of taxes applies to oil and gas extracted from Australian oilfields, with different rates depending on when and where the field was discovered.\n- **Alcohol** — beer, spirits, and other alcoholic beverages (referenced in the Schedule).\n\n### How Are the Rates Set?\n**Most fuel duties** are adjusted twice a year (1 February and 1 August) based on the **Consumer Price Index (CPI)** — the same measure used for inflation. So when prices generally rise, fuel excise rises too.\n\n**Tobacco duty** is adjusted differently — twice a year (1 March and 1 September) based on **average weekly wages**, AND an extra 5% annual increase was added for 2023, 2024, and 2025 to deliberately push up cigarette prices.\n\n**Oil and gas excise** uses a complicated sliding-scale system based on how much oil a field produces and what the oil's market price is (called the VOLWARE price). Higher-producing fields pay proportionally more.\n\n### Who Does This Affect?\n- **Ordinary Australians** — indirectly, through the price of petrol, diesel, cigarettes, and alcohol at the shop. You don't pay excise directly; manufacturers and producers do, but they pass the cost to you.\n- **Fuel manufacturers and distributors** — must collect and pay excise to the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) before goods can be sold domestically.\n- **Tobacco companies** — face escalating tax obligations that the government uses as a public health tool to discourage smoking.\n- **Oil and gas companies** — face a separate, elaborate excise system depending on which oilfield they operate, when it was discovered, and current oil prices.\n- **Biofuel producers** (biodiesel and ethanol) — received a graduated phase-in of excise duty from 2015 to 2020+, giving the industry time to adjust.\n\n### Special Exemptions Worth Knowing\n- Certain **offshore oil fields** (outside Australian territorial waters, never previously taxed) are exempt from excise up to 4,767.3 megalitres of production.\n- Some **specialty oils and hydraulic fluids** (like food-grade white mineral oil and polyglycol brake fluids) are exempt.\n- **Biodiesel and ethanol** were given concessional rates to encourage adoption of alternative fuels.\n\n### The Bottom Line\nThis Act is the mechanism by which the Australian government raises billions of dollars annually from fuel, tobacco, and petroleum production. Every time you buy petrol or cigarettes in Australia, this Act is part of why it costs what it does."},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"completionTokens":911},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act has expanded dramatically from its original 1921 purpose of imposing simple excise duties on locally manufactured goods. It now encompasses: (1) a sophisticated petroleum revenue system with price-linked duties and field-specific incentives; (2) multiple biofuel transition schemes with 15-year phase-in periods; (3) complex tobacco indexation tied to wages rather than prices; (4) temporary COVID-era fuel duty reductions (section 6K); and (5) extensive blending and anti-avoidance provisions. The petroleum provisions alone (sections 6B–6E) represent a complete parallel taxation system that would normally warrant standalone legislation."},"complexity_factors":["47+ defined terms in section 3 alone, many with nested sub-definitions","Multiple petroleum categories (old oil, new oil, intermediate oil, condensate, delayed-entry oil) each with distinct duty calculation formulas","Extensive cross-referencing to the Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987 for VOLWARE price determinations","Tiered duty rates with volume thresholds (e.g., 10%/15%/20%/30% for new oil at different production levels)","Complex indexation formulas with multiple variables, rounding rules, and publication timing provisions","Retrospective adjustment mechanisms (debited/credited adjustment amounts) for petroleum duties when prices are finalised","Blending provisions with multi-step method statements and hypothetical calculations","Multiple parallel indexation systems (CPI for fuel, AWOTE for tobacco, specific percentage tables for biofuels)","Temporal complexity: different rules apply based on discovery dates (before/after 1975, 1983, 1987), financial years, and specific operative days","Nested exceptions and deeming provisions throughout (e.g., section 5B on petroleum mixing rules)"],"plain_english_summary":"This Act sets out **excise duties** (taxes) on goods manufactured or produced in Australia, with a heavy focus on **fuel and petroleum products**, plus **tobacco**.\n\n**What it covers:**\n- **Petroleum products** — crude oil, condensate, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), and various fuel types (petrol, diesel, biodiesel, ethanol). The Act uses complex formulas to calculate duty based on oil prices, production volumes, and whether oil comes from \"old,\" \"new,\" \"intermediate,\" or offshore fields.\n- **Tobacco** — indexed duty rates that increase twice yearly based on wages growth, plus additional 5% increases in 2023–2025.\n- **Alcohol** — though the Schedule (not fully shown) would contain spirits, beer, and other alcoholic beverages.\n\n**Key features:**\n- **Indexation**: Most fuel duties automatically adjust every 6 months (February and August) based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI). Tobacco duties adjust every March and September based on average weekly earnings.\n- **Petroleum price mechanism**: For crude oil and condensate, duty depends on \"VOLWARE prices\" — official prices determined under a separate Act (the *Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987*).\n- **Graduated rates**: Oil from newer fields pays less duty than oil from older fields, to encourage exploration. Different percentage rates apply to different production volume thresholds (e.g., 10% on the first tier of new oil, rising to 30% on higher volumes).\n- **Blending rules**: Special calculations apply when fuels or tobaccos are blended — duty is worked out based on constituents, with adjustments to avoid double taxation.\n- **Biofuel transition**: Ethanol and biodiesel had phased-in duty rates starting from 2015, gradually increasing to 50% of the diesel rate by 2030.\n\n**Who it affects:**\n- Oil and gas producers (onshore and offshore)\n- Fuel refiners, importers, and blenders\n- Tobacco manufacturers\n- The Australian Taxation Office (ATO), which administers the Act\n\n**Why it matters:**\nThis is one of Australia's oldest revenue statutes (dating to 1921) and remains central to how the Commonwealth taxes domestically manufactured goods. The petroleum provisions in particular are extraordinarily complex, reflecting decades of policy tweaks to balance revenue needs against industry incentives for exploration and production."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The text of the Act, as presented, embeds numerous later mechanisms that extend its operation beyond a single static tariff schedule: it now contains formulaic indexation of many rates (sections 6A, 6AA), petroleum pricing linkages and production‑area‑specific duty formulas (sections 6AB, 6B–6E, 6CA, 6D), staged and tabled rates for biofuels and gases (sections 6H, 6J, 6FAA), special blend‑allocation rules (sections 6G, 6AAC) and explicit delegations to by‑laws, ministerial guidelines and regulations to prescribe fields and production areas (sections 3A, 6B, 6C, 6CA, 7). These instruments alter both how and when duties are calculated and create administrative discretion and technical compliance obligations that go beyond the Act’s original single‑line imposition of duties set out in the Schedule (section 5)."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross‑references to other Acts and to a Schedule that sets rates (section 2; section 5).","Multiple indexation regimes with different statistical bases, adjustment formulas and publication timing rules (sections 6A, 6AA, 6AAA, 6AAB).","Highly detailed, multi‑step formulae for petroleum duty across categories (old, new, intermediate, condensate, delayed‑entry) that depend on production area, monthly prices and historical adjustments (sections 6B, 6C, 6D, 6CA, 6E).","Special rules for blends and constituents (fuel blends, blended tobacco) that require reconstructing constituent duties and handling imports as if manufactured locally (sections 6G, 6AAC).","Multiple rounding and timing rules that affect rate application and computational precision (sections 6A(2), 6AAA, 6AAB(2), 6K(2)).","Delegated decision‑making via by‑laws, ministerial guidelines and regulations which interact with the duty regime and can affect retrospective application (sections 3A, 6CA(1A,13,13A), 7).","Publication and timing provisions where delayed statistical publication changes effective dates for rate replacements (sections 6A(5), 6AA(7)).","Legacy and staged transitional provisions for specific fuels and biofuels that change rates over time according to tables (sections 6H, 6J, 6FAA).","A broad scope of goods covered (petroleum, condensate, LPG, diesel, biodiesel, ethanol, tobacco, etc.) requiring industry‑specific treatments throughout the Act."],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does, who it affects, and why it matters\n\n- What the instrument does mechanically\n  - Imposes excise duties listed in the Schedule on goods manufactured or produced in Australia and on certain goods held under the Commissioner of Taxation’s control (section 5). It treats the Excise Act 1901 and two petroleum Acts as part of the same legal machinery (section 2). The Commissioner of Taxation (CEO) administers the Act (section 1A).  \n  - Many specific rules set how duty is calculated for particular products (for example, tobacco, fuels, biodiesel, ethanol, liquefied gases and condensate) and for petroleum produced from named production areas (see sections 6A, 6AA, 6AAC, 6G, 6H, 6J, 6FAA, 6B–6E, 6CA).  \n  - Several provisions automatically change rates over time by indexation to published statistics (CPI or AWOTE) and by fixed timetables for particular fuels and biofuels (sections 6A, 6AA, 6AAA, 6AAB, 6J, 6FAA). Notices of rate changes are to be published in the Gazette (sections 6A(9), 6AA(11), 6AAB(9)).  \n  - The Act contains detailed, formula‑based methods for working out the duty on petroleum and condensate by reference to production areas, monthly prices and historical adjustments (sections 6B, 6C, 6CA, 6D, 6E). It also contains special methods for blended fuels and blended tobacco goods (sections 6G, 6AAC).  \n\n- Who pays and who decides\n  - Primary payers are manufacturers and producers of dutiable goods produced in Australia and importers treated as if manufactured in Australia for duty purposes (section 5 and subsections in 6G and 6AAC).  \n  - Petroleum producers pay duties allocated by reference to prescribed production areas using complex notional‑duty and adjustment calculations (sections 6B, 6C, 6CA, 6D, 6E).  \n  - The CEO administers the Act and publishes indexation/replacement notices (section 1A; 6A(9); 6AA(11); 6AAB(9)). The Resources Minister can issue guidelines for the CEO about prescribing fields (section 3A). By‑laws and regulations can (and are authorised to) prescribe production areas or fields (see definitions and sections 6B, 6C, 6CA and 7).  \n\n- Why it matters (mechanical effects, incentives and trade‑offs)\n  - Price and production incentives: duties on fuels and tobacco change retail/producer economics because rates are applied per unit or by reference to petroleum prices (sections 6A, 6AA, items in the Schedule). Indexation links duties to inflation or wages (CPI or AWOTE) which preserves real duty levels over time (sections 6A, 6AA). Specific, staged rates for biodiesel and ethanol create changing relative costs across years (sections 6J and 6H). Blended‑goods rules allocate duty between constituents and the blend, affecting producers’ choices about formulation (sections 6G, 6AAC).  \n  - Concentrated vs diffuse effects: obligations and benefits tied to particular prescribed production areas are concentrated on the owners/operators of those fields (see the definitions of prescribed source/production area and the detailed area‑by‑area duty calculations in sections 6B, 6C, 6CA, 6D). Fuel and tobacco duties are borne widely through higher retail prices (see section 5 and the indexed rates provisions).  \n  - Compliance burden and administrative cost: the Act requires producers to apply multi‑step arithmetic formulas, keep production‑area records, track applicable petroleum prices and calculate credited/debited adjustments (sections 6B–6E, 6E). Indexation and rounding rules add technical requirements (sections 6A, 6AAA, 6AAB). CEOs must publish notices and manage by‑laws and prescriptions (sections 6A(9), 6AA(11), 7).  \n  - Bureaucratic discretion and rule‑making: the Act delegates significant practical choice to executive instruments — by‑laws to identify prescribed production areas/fields (see definitions and sections 6B, 6C, 6CA), ministerial guidelines to shape those by‑laws (section 3A), and regulations to fill out procedural matters (section 7). That delegation makes administrative decisions important to how duties apply.  \n  - Implementation timing and operational risk: several provisions treat publication or delayed publication of statistical inputs as affecting the effective date of new rates (6A(5) and 6AA(7)). The Act provides for retrospective or pre‑operative treatments in narrow cases (for example, delayed‑entry oil formulas in section 6E and the special by‑law rules in section 6CA(13)–(13A)). Those mechanisms change the timing and quantum of duties depending on administrative actions and published data.  \n\n- Opportunity costs and substitution effects (mechanics only)\n  - Producers may shift product mixes or sourcing (e.g. blending decisions, biodiesel/ethanol use) in response to relative duty rates set or indexed under the Act (sections 6G, 6J, 6H).  \n  - The Act’s linking of petroleum duty calculations to market prices and to production‑area prescriptions means duty liabilities can change with market price movements and with administrative reclassification of areas (sections 6AB, 6B–6E, 6CA).  \n\n- Concrete implementation points to watch (section citations)\n  - CEO administers and must publish rate changes (section 1A; 6A(9); 6AA(11); 6AAB(9)).  \n  - Indexation: CPI for many fuel rates (section 6A); AWOTE for tobacco (section 6AA).  \n  - Petroleum duties: detailed notional duty calculations and monthly price links for old, new, intermediate and condensate production areas (sections 6B, 6C, 6D, 6CA).  \n  - Blended goods rules for fuel and tobacco to allocate duty between constituents and blends (sections 6G, 6AAC).  \n  - Delegation to by‑laws and regulations to prescribe fields and production areas (sections 3A, 6B, 6C, 6CA, 7), including a rule that some by‑laws may not be applied retrospectively in certain ways (6CA(13)–(13A)).\n\nThis summary sets out the Act’s operational mechanics, who carries the costs, where decision‑making power sits, and the main compliance overheads and incentives created by the text (sections cited above)."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/excise-tariff-act-1921","history":"/api/acts/excise-tariff-act-1921/history","analysis":"/api/acts/excise-tariff-act-1921/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/excise-tariff-act-1921/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/excise-tariff-act-1921/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/excise-tariff-act-1921/documents"}}