OPINION
Prеsently before the Court are the Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment, filed on November 15, 1999, and the Defendant’s motion for summary judgment, filed on May 18, 2000. The Court holds that hydrocarbons produced by means of enhanced recovery techniques in commercial use prior to April 2, 1980 are crude oil under Title I of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act and cannot be oil produced from tar sands for the purpose of the section 29 tax credit for nonconventional fuels.
1. Introduction
Pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7422 and 28 U.S.C. § 1491, the Plaintiffs seek a refund of federal income tax for taxable calendar years 1988 and 1989 under the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Tax Act (“COWPTA”), Pub.L. 96-223, 94 Stat. 229 (1980), codified in relevant part at 26 U.S.C. §§ 4991-4993 (repealed), for oil produced from 8 of its reservoirs which they claim to be “oil produced from tar sands,” thereby qualifying for a tax credit for the prоduction of fuel from nonconventional sources under § 29 of COWPTA.
The several rock types that contain an extremely viscous hydrocarbon which is not recoverable in its natural state by conventional oil well production methods including currently used enhanced recovery techniques. The hydrocarbon-bearing rocks are variously known as bitumen-rocks, oil impregnated rocks, oil sands and rock asphalt.
Synthetic Fuels Processed From Oil Shale and Tar Sands, 41 Fed.Reg. 25886 (June 26, 1976) (emphasis added). This definition was adopted by another court in a previous lawsuit between the parties. Shell Petroleum, Inc. v. United States,
II. The Plaintiffs Are Estopped From Re-litigating The Issue Of Whether Hydrocarbons Produced By Enhanced Recovery Techniques In Use Prior To April 2, 1980, Are Crude Oil And Not Oil Produced From Tar Sands For The Purposes Of The Section 29 Tax Credit.
A. Introduction
Defendant argues that the meaning of “currently used enhanced recovery teeh-
B. Whether Steam Drive Injection and Cyclic Steam Injection Techniques Are “Currently Used Enhanced Recovery Methods” Pursuant to the Definition of a Tar Sand
To understand the significance of the Defendant’s somewhat complex argument in favor of applying issue preclusion, it is necessary, first, to explain the parties’ substantive arguments regarding whether steam drive injection and cyclic steam injection are “currently used enhanced recovery techniques.”
Essentially, Defendant argues: (1) “taxable” crude oil and oil from tar sands are mutually exclusive; (2) taxable crude oil includes oil produced by steam drive injection and cyclic steam injection techniques; and (3) therefore, the Plaintiffs did not produce oil from tar sands from the 8 reservoirs in question because they used steam drive injection and cyclic steam injection techniques, and they cannot prove that they did not combine them with another production method that was not used in the petroleum industry before April 2, 1980. Furthermore, Defendant argues that since steam drive injection and cyclic steam injection techniques were recognized in the June 1979 energy regulations
Defendant’s argument that taxable crude oil and oil from tar sands are mutually exclusive is based on the purposes of COWPTA. The purpose of Title I of COWPTA, enacted in 1980, was to impose an excise tax on revenue produced from sales of crude oil in order to recapture “windfall profits” received by domestic oil producers that would result from the Carter Administration’s decision in 1979 to phase out price controls (“Mandatory Petroleum Allocation and Price Regulations”) on crude oil.
Defendant notes that, according to COWP-TA, if an oil recovery project used cyclic steam injection or steam drive injection techniques, the oil produced is a category of taxable crude oil known as “Tier 3 Oil.” Tier 3 Oil includes “incremental tertiary oil.” § 4991(a)(C). “Incremental tertiary oil” is defined (with qualifications not relevant here) as the difference between the amount of oil removed from a reservoir in a month using a “qualified tertiary project” and the average monthly oil production from that reservoir prior to the passage of COWPTA § 4993(a)-(b). A “qualified tertiary recovery project” is one that, among other requirements not relevant here, uses one or more “tertiary recovery methods.” § 4993(c)(2)(A). A “tertiary recovery method” refers to “any method which is described in subparagraphs (1) through (9) of section 212.78(c) of the June 1979 energy regulations.” 26 U.S.C. § 4993(d)(1)(A). Section 212.78(c) of the June 1979 energy regulations, relevant to the reservoirs in this proceeding, contains “steam drive injection” and “cyclic steam injection” as methods for “a project for the enhanced recovery of crude oil” or a “qualified tertiary enhanced recovery project.” 10 C.F.R. 212.78(c)(2) & (6) (1980). Thus, oil produced using one of these “tertiary recovery methods” or “tertiary enhanced recovery methods” for a “qualified tertiary (enhanced) recovery project” under the June 1979 regulations, according to the Defendant, can only be “taxable crude oil” under Title I of COWPTA. Furthermore, because the tertiary enhanced recovery methods such as steam drive injection and cyclic steam injection as listed in the June 1979 energy regulations were manifestly in use before April 2, 1980, any use of such production methods that were not combined with another enhanced recovery method not available in 1980 could not possibly be a tar sand under the FEA Ruling.
The Defendant notes further that Congress’s intent in COWPTA — to distinguish crude oil subject to the WPT tax from crude oil substitutes such as oil from tar sands not subject to the WPT and eligible for the section 29 tax credit for nonconventional fuels— is further confirmed by the intent of the FEA Ruling to distinguish “crude oil” that was subject to the Mandatory Petroleum Allocation and Price Regulations from “crude oil substitutes” or “synthetic products.”
In contrast, the Plaintiffs argue that the FEA Ruling is satisfied, thereby making any recovery of “oil produced from tar sands” subject to the section 29 tax credit if: (a) the rocks from which the oil are to be extracted contain a highly viscous hydrocarbon and (b) a portion of that hydrocarbon cannot be recovered at all or that hydrocarbon cannot be produced without changing its natural state. (Pis.’ May 3, 2001, Resp. at 2.) The term “natural state,” according to the Plaintiffs, refers to the “physical properties” of the extremely viscous hydrocarbons as they existеd in the ground before drilling. (Pis.’ Mot. for Partial Summ. J. at 17.) Theoretically then, under the Plaintiffs’ interpretation of the FEA Ruling, oil recovered from a reservoir using an enhanced recovery technique which changes the physical properties of highly viscous hydrocarbons by raising the temperature of the hydrocarbons, such as steam drive injection or cyclic steam injection, but does so in conjunction with an incremental change in technology not commercially available in 1980, would satisfy the FEA definition of a tar sand and therefore be eligible for the section 29 tax credit for oil produced from tar sands.
The application of issue preclusion, as the Defendant seeks, would make it extremely difficult for the Plaintiffs to prove that their oil was an oil produced from a tar sand unless they could prove that they used enhanced recovery techniques not available in 1980. However, the Plaintiffs claim that they recovered oil from extremely viscous hydrocarbons not recoverable in their natural state by means of “enhanced recovery technologies” that were not available in 1980. In conjunction with cyclic steam and steam drive injection, the Plaintiffs claim that they used the following methods characterized as “enhanced recovery technology” or “new technology.” The “new technology” or “enhanced recovery technology” advanced by the Plaintiffs include: “advanced modeling tools to design, monitor, and optimize the process, sophisticated surveillance procedures to maintain the process, advanced drill
The “advanced modeling tools to design, monitor, and optimize the thermal process” include two major components. The first component consists of “numerical thermal simulators” which are “mathematical models (computer software) sophisticated enough to predict the behavior of a reservoir under various conditions.” (Pis.’ Statement of Genuine Issues (“PSGI”) at 3.) The Plaintiffs allege that it was not until after 1980 when these simulators became sufficiently reliable to be useful in the fiеld. Id. The second component consists of a mathematical formula known as the “Vogel model,” apparently developed in the 1980s, which determined the best steam injection rate for a steam flood property. Id. at 4.
What the Plaintiffs describe as “sophisticated surveillance tools” is in fact a fancy term for desktop computers and the sophisticated database software that was used on the computers that developed in the 1980s, logging tools and techniques, as well as interdisciplinary team-based management of oil well projects. Id. at 6-7. All of these technologies, according to the Plaintiffs, were not available in 1980. The Plaintiffs’ “advanced drilling and well completion projects” are terms for methods of preparing oil wells for production or injection. Id. at 8. These techniques were, according to the Plaintiffs, significantly improved and changed after 1980. These techniques included improved steam injector completion techniques, improved casing designs, sand control, and improved drilling techniques. Id. at 8-9. “Advanced facilities design” includes facilities at a reservoir that are ancillary to thе oil wells themselves. These include such things as automated controls, energy cost reduction techniques, steam distribution equipment, well test equipment, production flow lines, dehydration facilities, and water treatment facilities. Id. at 10. The Plaintiffs claim that they made improvements to these facilities with technology that was not available in 1980. These improvements included the use of computers, an energy efficiency study to reduce costs, a new natural gas turbine to drive an electric generator to make steam, and a device which the Plaintiffs invented and patented for distributing steam uniformly among reservoir injectors. Id. at 10. All of these improvements, so the Plaintiffs argue, were “enhanced recovery technology” not available in 1980.
C. The Issue of Whether Hydrocarbons Produced By Means of Enhanced Recovery Techniques In Use Prior to April 2,1980, Are “Crude Oil” and Not “Oil Produced from Tar Sands” for the Purpose of the Section 29 Tax Credit Was Raised and Litigated in Shell I.
In Shell I, the Third Circuit, as in this case, was presented with the issue of what is the proper definition of “tar sands.” In that case, the Third Circuit held that the meaning of “oil produced from tar sands” had to be divined frоm the statutory language and legislative history of COWPTA. After interpreting and analyzing the statutory language and legislative history of COWPTA, the Third Circuit held that the definition of “tar sands” in the FEA Ruling was “the one most compatible with congressional intent,” Shell I,
The Third Circuit’s rationale for finding that oil extracted by means of currently used enhanced recovery techniques in use prior to 1980 are crude oil and not oil produced from tar sands mirrors the Defendant’s argument that the oil produced by steam drive injection and cyclic steam injection, both enhanced (tertiary) recovery methods, from the reservoirs at issue in the present case must be crude oil and not oil produced from tar sands for the purpose of the section 29 tax credit.
All of the above issues raised in Shell I are issues that are present in this case. First, as argued in Shell I, the Defendant maintains that the legislative history of COWPTA establishes that Congress сonsidered “oil produced from tar sands” to be a synthetic fuel and not “crude oil.” (Def.’s Reply at 5.) Second, as in Shell I, the Defendant here argues that the legislative history of COWP-TA shows that Congress enacted the section 29 tax credit to increase alternative energy sources that involved fuels that were not being produced when Congress enacted COWPTA. (Def.’s Mot. at 8-9.) Third, the Defendant maintains, as it did in Shell I, that Congress intended that the same hydrocarbons classified as “crude oil” under Title I of COWPTA cannot also be classified as “oil produced from tar sands” under section 29. Id. Finally, the Defendant argues here, as it did in Shell I, that the FEA Ruling effectuates the intent of Congress to encourage the development of new technologies and to limit the section 29 credit to “crude oil substitutes” that could not be obtained using conventional oil recovery methods, including enhanced recovery techniques. (Def.’s Reply at 14.)
Therefore, so the Defendants argue, Shell I decided that oil produced by means of enhanced recovery techniques that were in use prior to enactment of COWPTA, April 2, 1980, must be crude oil and not oil produced from tar sands, which is identical to an issue in the present case.
However, the Plaintiffs argue that the only issue deсided in Shell I was that the FEA Ruling was the proper definition of a tar sand as opposed to the alternative definition of tar sand oil they provided, namely, the supposed definition used in the petroleum industry that tar sand oil consisted of hydrocarbons which have a viscosity greater than 10,000 eentipoise, measured at original reservoir temperature. Shell I at 218. However, the extent of the Third Circuit’s holding is much greater than the Plaintiffs concede. It is clear as outlined above, that the Third Circuit held that the FEA Ruling was the correct definition of a “tar sand” precisely because it held that “crude oil” and “tar sand oil” under COWPTA are not the same thing. Id. at 223. (“The logic and structure of the act also demonstrate that crude oil is not tar sand oil.”). Similarly, the Third Circuit accepted the FEA Ruling as the correct definition of a tar sand, precisely because it held that oil produced through enhanced recovery techniques could not be tar sand oil and that any other holding would be contrary to both the statutory structure of COWPTA and the congressional intent of COWPTA as found in legislative history. “Shell’s proposed definition, unlike DOE’s, would classify oil producible through enhanced recovery techniques as tar sand oil. Because this classification would be contrary to the statutory scheme and to congressional intent, the District Court properly adopted the definition from DOE Ruling 1976-4.” Id. at 223-24. This holding by the Third Circuit is particularly
In another bid to stave off the application of issue preclusion, the Plaintiffs argue that in Shell I they conceded that they were jurisdictionally precluded from arguing that their hydrocarbons would qualify as tar sand under the FEA Ruling because they failed to raise the issue in their claim for a refund. (Pis.’ Opp’n at 8 n. 3.) Because it could not argue at that time that its hydrocarbons would satisfy the definition of the FEA Ruling, it should have the opportunity to do so now by arguing that its hydrocarbons meet the “literal” definition of the FEA Ruling. It is difficult, however, to see how their supposed concession is at all relevant tо this case. The Plaintiffs were, according the Third Circuit, only precluded from arguing that their hydrocarbons satisfied the FEA Ruling because they could not contest that their oil in Shell I was anything other than “tertiary oil.” Shell I,
Furthermore, the Third Circuit opinion in Shell I itself clearly evidences that the Plaintiffs argued in the prior proceeding that oil produced using enhanced (tertiary) recovery methods could be classified as tar sand oil as well as crude oil. Shell I,
Finally, the Plaintiffs maintain that issue preclusion is inappropriate in this tax refund case because, pointing to an exception to the doctrine of issue preclusion in tax cases, the facts in the previous case must be identical to those in the second case and the legal issue in both cases must be inseparable. Commissioner v. Sunnen,
However, the Plaintiffs fail to mention in their briefs the case of Montana v. United States,
In the present ease the Plaintiffs have not pointed to (nor has the Court found) any change in the controlling legal principles of the section 29 tax credit between the tax years at issue in Shell I and the tax year’s at issue in the present case. Moreover, while it is true that there are more reservoirs at issue in the present case than in Shell I, the outcome of the legal issue for which the Defendant seeks preclusive effect — namely, that hydrocarbons produced by enhanced recovery methods available in 1980 are crude oil for the purposes of the section 29 tax credit and cannot be oil produced from tar sands — does not depend on which reservoirs are at issue in any particular case. Oil recovered by means of pre-1980 enhanced recovery methods either qualify as oil produced from tar sands under section 29 or they do not so qualify, no matter which reservoirs are at issue and no matter which tax year is at issue.
Therefore, this Court holds that the issue of whether hydrocarbons that аre produced by means of enhanced recovery techniques in use prior to April 2,1980, are “crude oil” and
D. The Third Circuit’s holding that hydrocarbons produced by enhanced recovery techniques in use prior to April 2, 1980, are, for the purpose of the section 29 tax credit, “crude oil” and not “oil produced from tar sands” was necessary to the judgment.
If a matter of law or fact has been decided by a court and is necessary to its judgment, then that “decision is conclusive in a subsequent suit based on a different cause of action involving a party to the prior litigation.” United States v. Mendoza,
The Plaintiffs argue that the Third Circuit’s interpretation of the FEA Ruling is dicta because the only question before the Third Circuit was which of the two competing definitions of a tar sand applied to the section 29 tax credit, namely, whether the FEA Ruling or the industry standard was the correct definition. (Pls.’ Resp. at 9.) Thus, the Third Circuit’s holding that hydrocarbons produced by means of enhanced (tertiary) recovery techniques in use prior to April 2, 1980, cannot be an oil produced from a tar sand consists of only, according to the Plaintiffs, “generalized discussions about technologies not necessary to the application of the words of FEA 1976-4.” (Pls.’ Resp. at 10.)
However, this Court cannot accept the Plaintiffs’ sweeping view of the nature of dicta. Dicta are “[wjords of an opinion entirely unnecessary for the decision of the case.” King v. Erickson,
Therefore, the Court finds that the Third Circuit’s holding that hydrocarbons which are produced by means of currently used enhanced recovery techniques in use prior to April 2, 1980, are “crude oil” and not “oil produced from tar sands” for the purpose of the section 29 tax credit was necessary to the judgment.
There can be no dispute that the Plaintiffs had a full and fair opportunity to litigate this issue in Shell I. The Plaintiffs were fully represented by counsel during the course of Shell I. Shell I,
Consequently, the Court holds that the Plaintiffs are estopped from relitigating the issue of whether hydrocarbons produced by enhanced recovery techniques in use prior to April 2, 1980, are crude oil and not oil produced from tar sands for the purposes of the section 29 tax credit. Thus, the Court holds that hydrocarbons produced from the reservoirs at issue using enhanced recovery techniques in use prior to April 2,1980, are crude oil under Title I of COWPTA and not oil produced from tar sands. Having accepted the FEA Ruling as the proper definition of a tar sand; and having accepted that hydrocarbons produced by “currently used enhanced recovery methods” in use prior to 1980, including steam drive injection and cyclic steam techniques, as such do not satisfy the FEA Ruling’s definition of a tar sand but instead are crude oil under Title I of COWP-TA; and, finally, having accepted the reasoning of Shell I that hydrocarbons which satisfy the definition of “crude oil” under Title I of COWPTA cannot satisfy the FEA Ruling either, the Court now turns to the issue of whether there is an absence of evidence that the Plaintiffs produced anything other than crude oil, and whether there is an absence of evidence that Plaintiffs produced oil from tar sands. To do so, the Court must determine whether incremental changes in technology (“new technology”) or “enhanced recovery technology” used by the Plaintiffs, as described in § 11(B) supra, in conjunction with enhanced recovery methods already in commercial use prior to 1980 can be considered to be a currently used enhanced recovery technique. These issues will be discussed in more detail in the following sections.
III. Standard for Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. RCFC 56(c); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
IV. The Plaintiffs Do Not Have Sufficient Evidence To Show That The Hydrocarbons They Produced Are Oil From Tar Sands And Not Crude Oil.
The Defendant maintains that the Plaintiffs cannot prove certain essential ele-
It is undisputed by the Plaintiffs that they used cyclic steam injection or steam drive injection methods in producing hydrocarbons from the reservoirs at issue. Following the Court’s prior determination that such methods in use prior to 1980 produced crude oil and not oil from tar sands, in the absence оf evidence that the cyclic steam and steam drive injection techniques used by the Plaintiffs were not in commercial use prior to 1980, the Plaintiffs cannot prove that what they produced was anything other than crude oil and not oil produced from tar sands. The Plaintiffs, however, maintain that they produced oil from the reservoirs at issue by means of enhanced recovery “technology” not available in 1980. First, they maintain that if they used “new technology” not available in 1980 in conjunction with cyclic steam and steam drive injection production methods to produce the hydrocarbons at issue, such oil would qualify for the section 29 credit as oil produced from tar sands. This argument is premised on the Third Circuit’s statement in Shell I that “where the definition of an energy source is unclear, Congress’s directive that the eligible energy sources to be subsidized ‘typically involve new technologies’ assists us in interpreting the provision.” Shell I,
The Defendant concedes that a combination of steam drive or cyclic steam injection techniques with another technology which is necessary for prоduction of hydrocarbons from the reservoir and not in use in 1980 would qualify as oil produced from tar sands under § 29. (Def.’s Reply at 15.) However, it distinguishes such combinations from the “new technologies” proffered by the Plaintiffs insofar as none of the technologies offered by the Plaintiffs are technologies used in production. More specifically, the Defendant argues that none of what the Plaintiffs call “enhanced recovery technology” or “new technology” produce hydrocarbons. (Def.’s Reply at 18.) The Defendant argues that a production method is a technology that “move[s] hydrocarbons in a reservoir to a well bore so they can be lifted to the surface.” (Def.’s Reply at 17.) This is in contrast to the Plaintiffs’ proffered definition, based on the declaration of its expert, Dr. Roger Hite, that a production process consists of “all aspects of production from those work processes that begin immediately after a property has been acquired or a reservoir discovered and end when the oil is sold for shipment to a refinery.” (PSGI at 12.)
There are several insurmountable difficulties with the Plaintiffs’ arguments. First, the existenсe of the section 29(b)(5) offset provision does not result in a superfluous interpretation of the section 29 tax credit. As the Defendant points out, the offset provision could come into operation if a taxpayer purchased a cyclic steam or steam drive injection technique in conjunction with a production technique that was new or had not been combined with cyclic steam or steam drive injection before 1980 and used the combination to produce oil from tar sands. Shell Petroleum, Inc.,
The Defendant’s definition of a production method, therefore, is sensible and consonant
A further illustration of the difference between a genuine work process of production and the Plaintiffs’ supposed “enhanced recovery technology” can be found in a private letter ruling of the IRS.
Accordingly, the Plaintiffs have failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact that they used production methods to extract “extremely viscous hydrocarbons” other than by means of cyclic steam or steam drive injections that were in commercial use prior to 1980, which, under Title I of COWPTA, would qualify as crude oil subject to the WPT and would not qualify as oil produced from tar sands under section 29.
V. Conclusion
Because the Plaintiffs cannot show that they are entitled to the section 29 tax credit, the Court GRANTS the Defendant’s motion for summary judgment and DENIES the Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, "section" or "§" refers to a section in the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 or 1986 (26 U.S.C.).
. § 29. Credit for producing fuel from a non-conventional source
(a) Allowance of credit — There shall be allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by this chapter for the taxable year an amount equal to -
(1) $3, multiplied by
(2) the barrel-of-oil equivalent of qualified fuels -
(A) sold by the taxpayer to an unrelated person during the taxable year, and
(B) the production of which is attributable to the taxpayer.
(c) Definition of qualified fuels. — For purposes of this sectiоn -
(1) In General. — The term "qualified fuel” means -
(A) oil produced from shale and tar sands
# Hs H*
(f) Application of Section — This section shall apply with respect to qualified fuels -
(1) which are
(A) produced from a well drilled after December 31, 1979, and before January 1, 1993
26 U.S.C. § 29 (originally designated under § 44D.)
. The Federal Energy Agency was a predecessor to the Department of Energy. Shell Petroleum, Inc.,
. 10 C.F.R. § 212.78 (1979).
. The parties do not dispute that “tertiary recovery methods,” "tertiary enhanced recovery methods,” and "enhanced recovery techniques” are the same. It is the understanding of the Court that "enhanced” or "tertiary” recovery methods are those techniques used to recover heavy crude oil by reducing the viscosity of the oil through raising its temperature by the application of heat, steam or other substances.
. The price controls on crude oil were enacted pursuant to section 4(a) of the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act (EPAA), Pub.L. No. 93-159, 87 Stat. 627(173) (codified as amended at 15 U.S.C. §§ 751-760h) (expired 1981).
. Shell I's analysis of COWPTA described above, for which the Defendant seeks preclusive effect, mirrors the analysis in Texaco, Inc. v. Commissioner,
. The FEA Ruling stated in relevant part:
At the time of the enactment of the EPAA, domestic production of crude oil substitutes derived from oil shale, coal and tar sands was, as it is now, undertaken only for experimental
41 Fed.Reg. at 25886.
. In contrast, the Defendant argues that the words "natural state” in the FEA Ruling means changing the chemical composition of the hydrocarbons extracted, such as cracking a complex hydrocarbon molecule into a simple molecule. The basis for the Defendant’s interpretation of "natural state” is Treas. Reg. § 1.48 — 9(c)(5)(ii) (26 C.F.R.) which defines a "synthetic fuel” as a fuel that "must differ significantly in chemical composition, as opposed to physical composition, from the alternate substance used to produce it.” Accordingly, an IRS General Counsel memorandum and an IRS ruling both held that, in order to become a "qualified fuel” under section 29, the fuel's production process must involve a significant chemical change. See G.C.M. 39548 (I.R.S.) (Nov. 30, 1984); Rev. Rui. 86-100, 1986-
. Finally, the district court said that, if the oil at issue could be both "crude oil” for purposes of Title I and "oil produced from ... tar sands” for purposes of Title II, "the same oil would be subject to both a tax and a credit... .Absent some evidence that Congress intended such an anomalous result ... the Court cannot adopt such a position ...."
But this result is not at all anomalous.
Def.’s Reply to Pis.' Resp. and Obj. to Def.'s Mot. to Strike Portions of Two Affs. (hereinafter "Def.’s Reply Mot. to Strike”) at App. 68.
. In its appellant brief before the Third Circuit, the Plaintiffs made the following argument:
First, the court relied ... on the Senate Report's statement that the term "crude oil” in Title I should apply "only to natural crude petroleum and does not include synthetic petroleum, such as oil from shale or tar sands....” Consequently, according to the district court, when Congress used the words "oil produced from ... tar sands” in Title II, it must have had in mind only synthetic petroleum. .. .Any other reading, the court believed, "would result in two different definitions of tar sands under Title I and Title II.”
But Title I nowhere mentions, let alone defines, the words "tar sands.” Nor does the Senate Report contain anything resembling a definition. One cannot fairly read the words "synthetic petroleum, such as oil from shale or tar sands” to indicate that only synthetic petroleum could qualify as oil from tar sands. An equally plausible understanding is that "oil from shale or tar sands” was merely an example of oil that could be processed into "synthetic petroleum.”
Def.'s Reply Mot. to Strike at App. 66.
. The Plaintiffs also cite Bilzerian v. United States,
. A change in controlling legal principles that renders the application of issue preclusion inappropriate would be when "there has been some marked advance or alteration in relevant orientation, approach, reasoning, or principles.” CBN Corp. v. United States,
. Although Shell I did not explicitly interpret the words "natural state” in the definition of a tar sand in the FEA Ruling, if steam drive and cyclic steam are "currently used enhanced recovery techniques” as held by Shell I, then by necessary implication "natural state" cannot mean a change in the physical property of the hydrocarbons, as the Plaintiffs maintain, because these enhanced recovery techniques recover oil by changing the physical property of the hydrocarbon, i.e., raising the temperature and pressure of the rocks from which the oil is extracted. Concurrently, the Defendant’s proffered definition of "natural state” as a change in chemical composition is consistent with Shell I's holding that oil produced from a tar sand was contemplated by Congress, both in COWPTA and the EPAA, to be a "crude oil substitute.”
. The 8 reservoirs at issue are: (1) Coalinga Etchegoin; (2) Kern River Series; (3) North Midway Sunset — Potter Sands; (4) Yorba Linda Upper Conglomerate; (5) McKittrick Tulare; (6) Cat Canyon Basal — Sisquoc; (7) East Cat Canyon — Brooks; and (8) Casmalia — Monterrey. The Plaintiffs allege that during 1988 and 1989, Shell Western E & P (“SWEPT'), a Shell Petroleum affiliate, produced oil from tar sands by means of wells drilled after December 31, 1979, and before January 1, 1993, from the 8 reservoirs at issue.
. The Plaintiffs have not revealed the production process at the Casmalia reservoir. Because the Plaintiffs have not made any attempt to show that they are entitled to the section 29 credit with respect to this reservoir, summary judgment is granted in favor of the Defendant with respect to the Casmalia reservoir.
. These technologies are briefly described in § 11(b), supra.
. The Court rejects the Plaintiffs' argument that the Government is not entitled to summary judgment without establishing that the Plaintiffs did not use new technology. Under Celotex, it is enough for the Defеndant to "point out” to the Court that there is an absence of evidence that it used "new technology” to produce the oil at issue. See Celotex,
. Likewise, in Shell I, the Third Circuit held that "[o]il capable of extraction through any of the enhanced production methods set forth in 10 C.F.R. § 212,78(c) is not tar sand oil.” (Shell I,
. Written determinations by the IRS, unless otherwise established by regulations, cannot be used or cited as precedent. 26 U.S.C. § 6110(k)(3). The Court, therefore, expresses no opinion as to whether this process in itself would in fact qualify for the section 29 tax credit.
. There is a seeming inconsistency between the Defendant's insistence that the term "not recoverable in its natural state” in the FEA Ruling refers to a change in the chemical composition of the highly viscous hydrocarbon and the IRS's determination in P.L.R. 9113019 that an enhanced recovery technique that changes the physical state of the hydrocarbon, not available in 1980, would qualify as an "oil produced from tar sands." The Court cannot determine whether the combination of steam, natural gas, and diluent would chаnge the chemical composition of the extracted hydrocarbons in some way. Any inconsistency, however, is immaterial to the outcome of this decision because the Court has already held that, for purposes of issue preclusion, "natural state” refers to a change in the chemical composition of the highly viscous hydrocarbon, and also that the "enhanced recovery technologies” proffered by the Plaintiffs in this case would not, in and of themselves, change the physical state of the highly viscous hydrocarbon. In any event, private letter rulings are not normally binding precedent.
. The Plaintiffs argue that somehow they are being required to satisfy a definition of a tar sand
. The Defendant also argues that there is an absence of evidence that the Plaintiffs could not have produced hydrocarbons from any of the reservoirs at issue by means of enhanced recovery methods not in commercial use in 1980, which it claims to be an essential element to the Plaintiffs’ claim. However, the Court need not resolve this issue because the Plaintiffs’ claims fail on other grounds.
. The Court grants summary judgment in favor of the Defendant with respect to the Casmalia reservoir because they have not revealed the production process for that reservoir.
