The government’s surprise announcement that solar photovoltaic cells and
modules will attract a levy of 18 per cent under the Goods and Services
Tax (GST)
regime that comes into force on July 1 caught the industry unawares,
but experts said it was unlikely to have any lasting impact on the rapid
growth of India’s solar energy sector.
The
GST regime, which does away with state levies such as excise and
value-added taxes, will unify the entire country into a common market.
The government has proposed four slabs of taxes under the new system.
According to a list of 1,211 items released after the meeting of the GST
Council, which comprises finance ministers of all the states of the
Union, "Photosensitive semiconductor devices; including photovoltaic
cells, whether or not assembled in modules or made up into panels", will
be charged at a rate of 18 Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime. The
effective rate for solar panels and modules currently stands at zero.
However, the council has proposed that renewable energy devices, which includes waste-to-energy and biogas plants, solar water heaters, solar lanterns and lamps, solar power
generating systems and windmills, be charged at the lowest tax slab of
per cent. The low five per cent tax on wind turbines is expected to keep
project costs low for developers such as Inox Wind and Suzlon Energy,
and soothe worries of the wind energy sector. Some battery types and
components may get the highest tax of 28 per cent.
The rates are
not yet final. The proposals are subject to further vetting and the list
may undergo some changes. They will be finalised by the end of June.
The
government has strongly defended the high rate of tax for solar panels
and modules. "Tariffs for solar projects vary from project to project.
The rise (in tax rate) will be compensated by the decline in corruption
and operational difficulties," Energy Minister Piyush Goyal said at a
media briefing after the list was made public. "The prices of solar and
wind energy have hit a record low and the industry is now able to stand
on its own feet."
But the new rates will hit more than 10 GW of
utility scale solar power projects and could pose a threat to their
viability, according to Bridge to India. They will result in an increase
of 18 per cent in the cost of solar modules, about 12 per cent in
inverter cost, and three per cent in all service costs, thus increasing
overall project cost by about 12 per cent, the clean energy consultancy
said.
"There was widespread expectation that solar modules would
be classified under zero or five per cent bracket to continue growth
momentum in the sector," Bridge to India said. "However, sharp reduction
in equipment costs and solar tariffs seems to have convinced the
government that the sector doesn’t need any more financial incentives."
India’s
solar energy sector is in the middle of unprecedented growth, fed by
declining tariffs, improved technology and a global oversupply of
photovoltaic panels and other material, mainly in China.
"India is on track to install more than 10 GW of renewables per year
from 2017 as large-scale renewables, rooftop solar and off-grid sectors
show impressive growth," Bloomberg New Energy Finance said in November.
The
increase in tax rates for solar panels is not wholly unexpected. Solar
power tariffs, which sank to a record low of Rs 2.94 per KWh for a newly
auctioned project in the Thar desert in Rajasthan, could see upward
pressure of as much as 10 per cent if tax incentives are squeezed when
the GST is introduced. This is as per the prediction of the Council on
Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW).
"India’s
solar industry can stand its ground with 18 per cent GST rate," Jasmeet
Khurana, Associate Director at Bridge to India, said in a post on
microblogging site Twitter.
The pace of solar tenders accelerated
sharply after the government announced an ambitious target of adding
100 GW of solar capacity addition by 2022. Currently, the cumulative
installed capacity in India is above 12 GW, and the solar sector is
expected to add around 10-12 GW of new capacity in 2017.
The wind
power sector seems to have shifted into a higher gear as well, aiming
to build wind farms and installations to add at least six GW of capacity
every year for the next five years. The first-ever wind power auction
in February saw a record low tariff of Rs 3.46 per kWh.
"We don’t
need support of lower taxes to encourage renewable energy," Goyal said.
"By itself, it is good for the nation. It reduces pollution. It gives
discoms 25-year-long affordable power at prices which are even below
grid (parity price)."
The cost of grid-connected, coal-fired power plants averages around Rs 2.60 per kWh.
"We
believe that the long-term prospects of the (solar) industry would not
be impacted by the GST move as an increase in tax rates will be quickly
offset by falling costs," Bridge to India said. "A commercially viable,
non-subsidy dependent sector is naturally more sustainable in the long
run."
27 May 2017, 01:20 PM