34 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.362 - Labor Relating to Increasing Capacity in a Production Unit in a Petrochemical Refinery or Chemical Plant
(a) Definitions.
The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the
following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Allied chemical product--A consumer or
end-user product manufactured from basic or intermediate chemicals. Examples
include drugs, soaps, detergents, paints and agricultural chemical
formulations.
(2) Basic or
intermediate chemical--Basic chemicals are the initial building blocks or raw
materials that are processed and combined to manufacture intermediate
chemicals. Intermediate chemicals are products that are manufactured from basic
chemicals and other intermediate chemicals and are manufactured into finished
chemical products. Examples of basic chemicals include alkalies, chlorine,
nitrogen, sulfur, benzene, ethylene, propylene methane, and sodium carbonate.
Examples of intermediate chemicals include synthetic fibers, polymers, resins,
elastomers, dyes, and pigments.
(3)
Chemical plant--
(A) A facility that in a
single continuous operation or using a batch processing method manufactures a
basic or an intermediate chemical.
(B) A chemical plant may be either a single
facility existing by itself or a facility within a chemical plant complex
consisting of a number of separate chemical plants each of which produces a
single basic or intermediate chemical product. A chemical plant complex may
include any combination of distinct facilities that manufacture basic
chemicals, intermediate chemicals, or allied chemical products. In a chemical
plant complex, each facility is considered individually to determine whether it
qualifies as a chemical plant.
(C)
The term does not include:
(i) a facility
that manufactures "allied chemical products"; or
(ii) a facility, other than one that produces
a basic or an intermediate chemical, that generates any chemical as a waste
product or a by-product.
(4) Crude oil--A mixture of hydrocarbons that
exists in liquid phase in underground reservoirs and remains liquid at
atmospheric pressure after passing through surface-separating facilities. The
term includes liquid condensate and liquid hydrocarbons produced from tar
sands, gilsonite, and oil shale. Drip gases are also included, but topped crude
oil (residual oil) and other unfinished oils are excluded. Liquids produced at
natural gas processing plants and mixed with crude oil are likewise excluded
where identifiable.
(5) Increased
capacity--
(A) Increasing the capability of
the manufacturing or processing production unit to produce:
(i) more of the same product measured by
units per hour or units per year; or
(ii) a new product.
(B) Increasing a unit's capability to produce
more of an existing product and less of another existing product is not
increasing the unit's capacity unless the overall production unit capability is
increased. For example, if a production unit that produces 50 units of product
X and 50 units of product Y is modified so that it produces 60 units of product
X and 40 units of product Y, the production unit's capacity has not been
increased.
(6)
Manufacturing or processing production unit--A group of manufacturing and
processing machines and ancillary equipment that together are necessary to
create or produce a physical or chemical change beginning with the first
processing of the raw material and ending with a finished product. Examples of
such equipment include reactors, distillation columns, catalytic crackers,
fractionators, or other primary process equipment, and ancillary equipment such
as heat exchangers, cooling towers, computer control units, piping, valves, and
actuators. Another example of ancillary equipment is quality control equipment
that is used during the manufacturing process, but not equipment used to test
products before the process begins or after it is completed. The production
unit does not include maintenance equipment; research and development
laboratory equipment; waste handling or treatment equipment; equipment for the
storage of feedstock, catalysts, or finished products; loading and unloading
equipment; or any other equipment that is not used in the actual processing or
manufacturing operation.
(7) New
product--A product that has different product properties and a different
commercial application than the product previously manufactured or processed by
that production unit. Examples of new products include chlorine produced from
sodium chloride; styrene from benzene; aqueous hydrogen chloride (HCl) from
anhydrous HCl; and soft polyethylene from hard polyethylene if the soft
polyethylene is used to manufacture different end products than the hard
polyethylene. Producing gasoline with a 91-octane rating instead of an
89-octane rating for use in motor vehicle engines is not producing a new
product. Changes caused by straining or purifying an existing product or
cosmetic changes such as adding or removing color or odor to or from an
existing product will not create a new product. For example, the manufacture of
a different grade of the same product, such as technical sulfuric acid which is
colored and contains impurities and anhydrous 100% sulfuric acid which is
colorless and odorless, does not qualify one as a new or different product from
the other.
(8) Petrochemical
refinery--A facility that manufactures finished petroleum products from crude
oil, unfinished oils, natural gas liquids, other hydrocarbons, and oxygenates.
Products of these refineries include gasoline, diesel, kerosene, distillate
fuel oils, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), residual fuel oils, lubricants, and
other products refined through alkylation, coking, cracking, dewaxing,
desulphurization, distillation, hydrotreating, isomerization, polymerization,
or other chemical processes. These facilities also produce petrochemical
feedstock for use by chemical plants. The term does not include facilities at
an oil or gas lease site that remove water or other impurities and merely make
the product more marketable.
(b) Tax responsibilities of persons who make
improvements to a manufacturing or processing production unit of a
petrochemical refinery or chemical plant.
(1)
Persons who repair, remodel, restore, or modify a manufacturing or processing
production unit of a petrochemical refinery or chemical plant to increase the
capacity in the production unit are not performing a taxable real property
repair and remodeling service. Such persons are governed by the provisions of
§
3.291 of this title (relating to
Contractors).
(A) Contractors performing
lump-sum contracts as defined in §
3.291 of this title (relating to
Contractors) are consumers of all materials, consumable items, and equipment
used or incorporated into a customer's property. As a consumer, a contractor
must pay tax to on all such all materials, consumable items, and equipment. See
§
3.291 of this title (relating to
Contractors) for more information on lump-sum contracts. Contractors performing
lump-sum contracts for persons having direct payment permits may not accept a
direct payment exemption certificate from those persons. When performing
lump-sum contracts for a direct payment permit holder, the contractor must pay
sales tax to the supplier or accrue and remit sales tax on incorporated
materials removed from a tax-free inventory for incorporation into the direct
payment permit holder's realty. Direct payment permit holders cannot authorize
the contractor or any other person to purchase any taxable item using their
permit. See §
3.288 of this title (relating to
Direct Payment Procedures and Qualifications).
(B) Contractors performing separated
contracts as defined in §
3.291 of this title (relating to
Contractors) are considered retailers of all materials physically incorporated
into the realty being improved. As a retailer, a contractor must collect tax
from the customer based upon the agreed contract price of the incorporated
materials. See §
3.291 of this title (relating to
Contractors) for more information on separated contracts. Contractors
performing separated contracts for persons having direct payment permits may
accept a direct payment exemption certificate from those persons in lieu of tax
for all tangible personal property incorporated into customer's realty. A
direct payment exemption certificate may not be accepted for tax liability
incurred by the contractor on machinery or equipment rented or leased by the
contractor and used in the performance of the contract. See §
3.288 of this title (relating to
Direct Payment Procedures and Qualifications).
(2) Repairs, remodeling, restorations, or
modifications other than to the processing production unit or that do not
increase the capacity of the processing production unit are governed by the
provisions of §
3.357 of this title (relating to
Labor Relating to Nonresidential Real Property Repair, Remodeling Restoration,
Maintenance, New Construction, and Residential Property).
(3) Persons who perform repair, remodeling,
maintenance, or restoration services on tangible personal property are governed
by the provisions of §
3.292 of this title (relating to
Repair, Remodeling, Maintenance, and Restoration of Tangible Personal
Property). These services may be exempt under the Tax Code, §
151.3111, that exempts
services performed on tangible personal property if the property is exempt
because of the nature of the property, its use, or a combination of its nature
and its use.
(4) Where increased
capacity improvements and taxable services are sold or purchased for a single
charge and the portion relating to taxable services represents more than 5.0%
of the total charge, the total charge is presumed to be taxable. The
presumption may be overcome by the service provider at the time the transaction
occurs by separately stating to the customer a reasonable charge for the
taxable services. However, if the charge for the taxable portion of the
services is not separately stated at the time of the transaction, the service
provider or the purchaser may later establish for the comptroller, through
documentary evidence, the percentage of the total charge that relates to
nontaxable unrelated services. Examples of acceptable documentation include
written contracts detailing the scope of work, bid sheets, tally sheets,
schedules of values, and blueprints.
(5) When both increased capacity improvements
and taxable services are being performed under the same contract, the parties
to the contract should separately identify taxable from nontaxable labor in a
contract and the charges applicable to each or the entire contract will be
presumed to be for taxable services. Documentation which clearly defines the
work being performed should be retained by both parties to show that had the
increased capacity improvements and taxable services been done independently of
each other, the cost of each would be reasonably near the allocation of
charges. Examples of acceptable documentation include written contracts which
detail the scope of work, bid sheets, tally sheets, schedules of values, and
blueprints. If there is not a written contract signed by both parties clearly
showing agreement as to the taxable and nontaxable work being performed, the
customer and the service provider must prepare, at the time of the transaction,
a written certification verifying the allocation of charges for increased
capacity improvements and taxable services. The comptroller may recalculate the
charges if the allocation appears unreasonable and either party may be held
responsible for the additional tax due.
(6) A service provider's customer must be
able to substantiate by way of documentary evidence that repair, remodeling,
restoration, or modification services performed on a production unit increase
the unit's capacity as defined in subsection (a)(5) of this section. If the
person performing the service does not have the certification set out in
paragraph (5) of this subsection, the service provider must presume that the
service is taxable and collect tax. If the service provider's customer has
documentation to prove that the labor increases the capacity of a production
unit, the customer may issue an exemption certificate in lieu of paying tax to
the service provider. The certificate must state that the labor increases the
production unit's capacity as defined in subsection (a)(5) of this section, and
that the customer will be liable for any additional tax due in the event that
it is determined that taxable services were performed. A service provider who
accepts such a certificate should follow the guidelines set out in paragraph
(1) of this subsection and §
3.291 of this title (relating to
Contractors).
Notes
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