Denial of RoDTEP Creates a Stir in Chemical Industry, Indian Chemical Council Appeals Reconsideration from the Government of India
India’s chemical industry representative body, the Indian Chemical Council (ICC), which focusses on the industry’s growth, promotion and policymaking, has ushered in filing an appeal to the Government of India (GoI) to consider the inclusion of chemical products under the Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (RoDTEP) scheme while highlighting the adversities being borne by the chemical industry on RoDTEP denial.
The appeal by ICC has
been submitted to the Department of Chemicals & Petrochemicals, Ministry of
Chemicals & Fertilizers, GoI, following the release of a product-wise rate
list by GoI via notification number 19/2015-2020 dated August 17, 2021, which
reveals government’s refrain from the allocation of RoDTEP rates to chemicals
and allied products.
RoDTEP reform, which has
been introduced in lieu of the Merchandise Exports from India Scheme (MEIS), is
a WTO compliant scheme devised to promote India’s exports and market
competitiveness by benefitting exporters with refunds on previously
non-recoverable embedded taxes (like fuel tax, electricity duty, Mandi tax etc.)
at the local, state and central levels. The scheme was brought into effect on
January 1, 2021.
The non-availability of
RoDTES rates for Indian Chemical exporters for over 7 months is tarnishing
their global competitiveness and has led to degrowth in exports amounting to a
value of 49,327 crores that compounds to 17% of the total chemical exports. With
its written appeal that now contains the HS Code wise list of affected chemical
products, ICC seeks a resolve in the form of release of RoDTES rates for chemicals
and its allied products that fall under Chapters 27, 28 – Inorganic Chemicals
(like carbon black, hydrogen, phosphoric acid etc.), Chapter 29 – Organic
Chemicals (like ethylene, benzene, vitamin B12 etc.), Chapter 30 –
Pharmaceuticals (liquid extracts of liver, vaccines for hepatitis etc.), and
Chapter 31 – Fertilizers (like ammonium nitrate, potassium sulphate etc.).
As per ChemAnalyst, the Indian chemical industry is already
witnessing back-to-back hindrances in its export since last year, initially due
to severe disruption in supply chain networks and loss of workforce during the
COVID19 spread, followed by shortage of intermediates predominantly imported
from China due to escalating freight charges with heavy port congestions this
year. The RoDTES scheme represents a hope to save the chemical exporters from
paying more under the cascading effect and reducing the gross production cost,
thus giving the manufacturers more room to sell their products across the
world. The reform, in these testing times, could give the required impetus to
the industry in rebounding the export rates and strengthening their position in
the international markets, consequently fortifying the Indian economy. The
improvement in the exports would also cater to the rising demand for
ammonium nitrate and other chemical products across the globe.
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