GST has led to 10-12 per cent rise in overall cost of solar projects,
the All India Solar Industries Association has said, while petitioning
the government against the rise in tax incidence on solar power
equipment under the new regime.
This will, in turn, result in
increase in the cost of power, AISIA general secretary Gyanesh Chaudhary
said in letters to Revenue Secretary and other senior government
officials.
While solar power generating systems are charged 5 per
cent tax, procurement and supply of equipment like module mounting
structures, trackers, inverters, transformers and cables are being
charged the GST at varying rates.
The equipments are charged GST
as applicable on individual items rather than treating them as a part of
solar power generating system, Chaudhary wrote.
The
association said solar module were exempt from all duties in the
pre-GST regime but since July 1 they are being charged 5 per cent Goods
and Services Tax (GST).
Inverters, cables and transformers were
levied by 2 per cent central sales tax and excise was exempt but post
GST they are charged 5-8 per cent tax. Similarly, the tax incidence on
services and civil work has risen to 18 per cent from 15 per cent and 6
per cent respectively previously.
"Currently, the power developers
cannot avail the benefit of GST for the electricity produced leading to
a detrimental effect towards achieving the 100 GW target of National
Solar Mission," he wrote.
Under the current GST regime, "solar
power cost will see upward escalation", the association said, while
urging the government to remove the ambiguity.
It suggested
re-introduction of MNRE-certification or self-certification supported by
an undertaking that such equipment is required for the setting up of a
solar power generating system.
Since solar power generating
systems are already charged to 5 per cent GST, there should be no GST on
such equipments which are part and parcel of the generating system, it
said.
"We strongly feel that an urgent intervention is required in
order to keep the cost of solar power low and incentivise renewable
energy deployment," Chaudhary said.
15 Dec 2017, 07:28 AM