Summary of Statement No. 143
Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations (Issued 6/01)
Summary
This Statement addresses financial accounting and
reporting for obligations associated with the retirement of
tangible long-lived assets and the associated asset retirement
costs. This Statement applies to all entities. It applies to legal
obligations associated with the retirement of long-lived assets
that result from the acquisition, construction, development and
(or) the normal operation of a long-lived asset, except for certain
obligations of lessees. As used in this Statement, a legal
obligation is an obligation that a party is required to settle as a
result of an existing or enacted law, statute, ordinance, or
written or oral contract or by legal construction of a contract
under the doctrine of promissory estoppel. This Statement amends
FASB Statement No. 19, Financial Accounting and Reporting by Oil
and Gas Producing Companies.
Reasons for Issuing This Statement
The Board decided to address the accounting and
reporting for asset retirement obligations because:
- Users of financial statements indicated that
the diverse accounting practices that have developed for
obligations associated with the retirement of tangible long-lived
assets make it difficult to compare the financial position and
results of operations of companies that have similar obligations
but account for them differently.
- Obligations that meet the definition of a liability were not
being recognized when those liabilities were incurred or the
recognized liability was not consistently measured or
presented.
Differences between This Statement, Statement 19, and
Existing Practice
This Statement requires that the fair value of a
liability for an asset retirement obligation be recognized in the
period in which it is incurred if a reasonable estimate of fair
value can be made. The associated asset retirement costs are
capitalized as part of the carrying amount of the long-lived asset.
This Statement differs from Statement 19 and current practice in
several significant respects.
- Under Statement 19 and most current practice,
an amount for an asset retirement obligation was recognized using a
cost-accumulation measurement approach. Under this Statement, the
amount initially recognized is measured at fair value.
- Under Statement 19 and most current practice,
amounts for retirement obligations were not discounted and
therefore no accretion expense was recorded in subsequent periods.
Under this Statement, the liability is discounted and accretion
expense is recognized using the credit-adjusted risk-free interest
rate in effect when the liability was initially recognized.
- Under Statement 19, dismantlement and restoration costs were
taken into account in determining amortization and depreciation
rates. Consequently, many entities recognized asset retirement
obligations as a contra-asset. Under this Statement, those
obligations are recognized as a liability. Also, under Statement 19
the obligation was recognized over the useful life of the related
asset. Under this Statement, the obligation is recognized when the
liability is incurred.
Some current practice views a retirement obligation
as a contingent liability and applies FASB Statement No. 5,
Accounting for Contingencies, in determining when to
recognize a liability. The measurement objective in this Statement
is fair value, which is not compatible with a Statement 5 approach.
A fair value measurement accommodates uncertainty in the amount and
timing of settlement of the liability, whereas under Statement 5
the recognition decision is based on the level of uncertainty.
This Statement contains disclosure requirements that
provide descriptions of asset retirement obligations and
reconciliations of changes in the components of those
obligations.
How the Changes in This Statement Improve Financial
Reporting
Because all asset retirement obligations that fall
within the scope of this Statement and their related asset
retirement cost will be accounted for consistently, financial
statements of different entities will be more comparable. Also,
- Retirement obligations will be recognized when
they are incurred and displayed as liabilities. Thus, more
information about future cash outflows, leverage, and liquidity
will be provided. Also, an initial measurement at fair value will
provide relevant information about the liability.
- Because the asset retirement cost is
capitalized as part of the asset's carrying amount and subsequently
allocated to expense over the asset's useful life, information
about the gross investment in long-lived assets will be
provided.
- Disclosure requirements contained in this Statement will
provide more information about asset retirement obligations.
How the Statement Generally Changes Financial
Statements
Because of diverse practice in current accounting for
asset retirement obligations, various industries and entities will
be affected differently. This Statement will likely have the
following effects on current accounting practice:
- Total liabilities generally will increase
because more retirement obligations will be recognized. For some
entities, obligations will be recognized earlier, and they will be
displayed as liabilities rather than as contra-assets. In certain
cases, the amount of a recognized liability may be lower than that
recognized in current practice because a fair value measurement
entails discounting.
- The recognized cost of assets will increase
because asset retirement costs will be added to the carrying amount
of the long-lived asset. Assets also will increase because assets
acquired with an existing retirement obligation will be displayed
on a gross rather than on a net basis.
- The amount of expense (accretion expense plus depreciation
expense) will be higher in the later years of an asset's life than
in earlier years.
How the Conclusions in the Statement Relate to the
Conceptual Framework
The Board concluded that all retirement obligations
within the scope of this Statement that meet the definition of a
liability in FASB Concepts Statement No. 6, Elements of
Financial Statements, should be recognized as a liability when
the recognition criteria in FASB Concepts Statement No. 5,
Recognition and Measurement in Financial Statements of Business
Enterprises, are met.
The Board also decided that the liability for an
asset retirement obligation should be initially recognized at its
estimated fair value as discussed in FASB Concepts Statement No. 7,
Using Cash Flow Information and Present Value in Accounting
Measurements.
Effective Date
This Statement is effective for financial statements
issued for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2002. Earlier
application is encouraged.
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