Zero Duty
Post Export 2013-14 EPCG Duty Credit Scrip Notified
[Customs
Notification No. 23 dated 18th April 2013]
In
exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) of section 25 of the
Customs Act, 1962 (52 of 1962), the Central Government, being satisfied that it
is necessary in the public interest so to do, hereby exempts goods when
imported into India against a Post Export EPCG duty credit scrip issued by the
Regional Authority in accordance with paragraph 5.11 under Chapter 5 {Export
Promotion Capital Goods (EPCG) Scheme} of the Foreign Trade Policy which
provides for duty remission in proportion to export obligation fulfilled
(hereinafter referred to as the said scrip) from,-
(a) the whole of
the duty of customs leviable thereon under the First Schedule to the Customs
Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975); and
(b) the whole of
the additional duty leviable thereon under section 3 of the said Customs Tariff
Act.
2. The
exemption under this notification shall be subject to the following conditions,
namely:-
(1) that the
said scrip is granted against a valid authorisation issued under para 5.22 of
the Handbook of Procedures Volume 1 (hereinafter referred to as the said
authorisation) by the Regional Authority to an applicant (hereinafter referred
as the authorisation holder) who opted for the scheme of Post Export EPCG Duty
Credit Scrip:
Provided that the applicant is not issued, in the year
of issuance of the said authorisation, the duty credit scrips under Status
Holders Incentive Scrip (SHIS) scheme under para 3.16 of the Foreign Trade
Policy. In the case of applicant who is Common Service Provider (herein after
referred as CSP), the CSP or any of its specific users should not be issued, in
the year of issuance of the said authorisation, the duty credit scrips under SHIS.
This condition shall not apply where already availed SHIS benefit that is
unutilised is surrendered or where benefits availed under SHIS that is utilised
is refunded, with applicable interest, before issue of the said authorisation.
SHIS scrips which are surrendered or benefit refunded or not issued in a
particular year for the reason the said authorisation has been issued in that
year shall not be issued in future years also;
(2) that the
said authorisation is not for import under duty exemption but for import of the
goods specified in the Table 1 annexed hereto on full payment of applicable
duties in cash;
(3) that the
said authorisation is registered at the port of import specified in the said
authorisation and the goods, which are specified in the Table 1 annexed hereto,
are imported within eighteen months from the date of issue of the said
authorisation on full payment of applicable duties in cash, and the said
authorisation is produced before the proper officer of customs at the time of
clearance of the goods for endorsement of the import particulars and in cases
where the authorisation holder has opted that the Cenvat Credit under Cenvat
Credit Rules, 2004 in respect of the additional duty under section 3 of the
Customs Tariff Act , 1975 (51 of 1975) paid (hereinafter referred to as
additional duty of customs) shall not be taken, the proper officer endorses
“Not valid for Cenvat Credit” on the bill of entry:
Provided that the benefit of import of capital goods
for creation of modern infrastructure shall be extended only to such retailers
who have a minimum area of 1000 square metres:
Provided further that catalyst for one subsequent
charge shall be allowed, under the authorisation in which plant, machinery or
equipment and catalyst for initial charge have been imported, except in cases
where the Regional Authority issues a separate authorisation for catalyst for
one subsequent charge after the plant, machinery or equipment and catalyst for
initial charge have already been imported;
(4) that the
capital goods imported under the said authorisation are installed and put to
use, after their import, in the authorisation holder’s factory or premises and
at the time of registration of the said scrip a certificate, confirming such
installation and use of the goods, from the jurisdictional Deputy Commissioner
of Central Excise or Assistant Commissioner of Central Excise, as the case may
be, which has been issued prior to the date of the first application filed by
the authorisation holder for issuance of duty credit scrip against the said
authorisation, is produced before the Deputy Commissioner of Customs or the
Assistant Commissioner of Customs, as the case may be:
Provided that if the authorisation holder, including an
authorisation holder who is a CSP, is not registered with the Central Excise or
if the authorisation holder is a service provider (other than a CSP), as the
case may be, he may produce the said certificate of installation and usage
issued by an independent Chartered Engineer:
Provided further that in the case of manufacturer
authorisation holder and merchant authorisation holder having supporting
manufacturer(s) or vendor(s) or in the case of import of irrigation equipment
for use in contract farming for export of agricultural products or in the case
of authorisation holder rendering services, the capital goods may be
installed at the factory or premises of such other person whose name and
address is endorsed on the said authorisation and also on the shipping bills
for fulfillment of the export obligation and the authorisation holder and such
other person jointly and severally fulfill the export obligation and all other
conditions. This shall not apply to a CSP:
Provided also that agro units located in Agri Export
Zones or service providers in Agri Export Zones may move the capital goods
within the Agri Export Zones under intimation to the jurisdictional Deputy
Commissioner of Central Excise or Assistant Commissioner of Central Excise, as
the case may be, subject to the condition that the authorisation holder shall
maintain accurate record of such movement;
(5) that where
the goods imported under the said authorisation are found defective or unfit
for use, they may be re-exported back to the foreign supplier within three
years from the date of payment of duty on the importation thereof subject to
the condition that, –
(a) at the time
of re-export the goods are identified to the satisfaction of the Deputy
Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of Customs, as the case may
be, to be the same goods which were imported;
(b) when the
re-export of the goods has been made under claim of duty drawback, no duty
remission in the form of duty credit scrip for the duty paid at the time of
import on the re-exported goods shall be allowed;
(c) after any
duty remission in the form of duty credit scrip has been claimed in respect of
the duty paid on the goods imported under the said authorisation, no duty
drawback shall be allowed when the goods are re-exported and the export
obligation shall also not be re-fixed;
(6) that goods
imported under the said authorisation are not disposed of or transferred by
sale or lease or any other manner by the authorisation holder till the date of
last export against which the said scrip is issued;
(7) that the
total export obligation to be fulfilled is equivalent to eighty five percent.
(85%) of six times the amount which is the sum of applicable duty of customs
under the First Schedule to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975) paid
(hereinafter referred to as basic customs duty), additional duty of customs,
Education Cess under section 94 of the Finance (No.2) Act, 2004 (23 of 2004)
paid and Secondary and Higher Education Cess under section 136 of the Finance
Act, 2007 (22 of 2007) paid on goods imported under the said authorisation, on
Free On Board basis, which is to be fulfilled within an export obligation
period of six years from the date of issue of the said authorisation:
Provided that additional duty of customs shall not be
taken for computation for the purpose of fixation of export obligation when the
Cenvat Credit in respect of additional duty of customs has not been taken:
Provided further that the export obligation shall be
75% of the export obligation specified above when fulfilled by export of
following green technology products, namely, equipment for solar energy
decentralised and grid connected products, bio-mass gassifier, bio-mass or
waste boiler, vapour absorption chillers, waste heat boiler, waste heat
recovery units, unfired heat recovery steam generators, wind turbine, solar
collector and parts thereof, water treatment plants, wind mill and wind mill
turbine or engine, other generating sets - wind powered, electrically operated
vehicles – motor cars, electrically operated vehicles – lorries and trucks,
electrically operated vehicles – motor cycle and mopeds, and solar cells:
Provided also that for units located in Arunachal
Pradesh, Assam, Jammu and Kashmir, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland,
Sikkim and Tripura, the export obligation shall be 25% of the export obligation
specified above:
Provided also that where a sick unit is notified by the
Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) or where a
rehabilitation scheme is announced by the concerned State Government in respect
of sick unit for its revival, the export obligation may be fulfilled within the
time period allowed by the Regional Authority as per the rehabilitation package
prepared by the operating agency and approved by BIFR or rehabilitation
department of State Government. In cases where the time period is not specified
in the rehabilitation package, the export obligation may be fulfilled within
the time period allowed by the Regional Authority which shall not exceed nine
years:
Provided also that where the capital goods are imported
for technological upgradation as per conditions specified in Para 5.8 of the
Foreign Trade Policy, the export obligation shall be fulfilled within a period
of six years from the date of issue of authorization under the said para:
Provided also that the export obligation shall be 50%
of the export obligation specified above in the case of separate authorisation
for spares (including refurbished/ reconditioned spares), moulds, dies, jigs,
fixtures, tools and refractory for initial lining, for the existing plant and
machinery (imported earlier, under para 5.22 of Handbook of Procedures Volume 1
or otherwise), in which the CIF value of import of the above spares, etc is
limited to 10% of the CIF value of the plant and machinery imported under the
authorisation (para 5.22 of Handbook of Procedures Volume 1) or 10% of the book
value of the plant and machinery imported earlier otherwise than under para
5.22 of Handbook of Procedures Volume 1, as the case may be;
(8) that the
duty remission granted as duty credit in the said scrip bears the same
proportion to the amount which is the basic customs duty on the goods imported
under the said authorisation which were considered for fixation of export
obligation, as the extent of export obligation fulfilled (over and above the
average export obligation) bears to the total export obligation:
Explanation 1. –
For the purpose of condition (8),-
(a) the amount
of duty remission shall not include the duty paid, any portion of which has
been rebated, including by way of duty drawback;
(b) the amount
of duty remission shall not include the duty paid which are not assessed
finally;
(c) extent of
export obligation fulfilled shall be the export obligation fulfilled till the last
export included in the said scrip less the export obligations fulfilled that
have been counted towards the previously issued duty credit scrips against the
said authorisation;
(d) in condition
(c) above, the export obligation fulfilled till the last export included in the
said scrip shall be taken as the total export obligation fulfilled in the
following cases–
(i) where the
authorisation holder fulfills seventy five percent. (75%) or more of the export
obligation as specified in condition (7) [over and above hundred percent.
(100%) of the average export obligation], within half of the period specified
for export obligation as mentioned in said condition (7), in which case the
balance export obligation shall stand condoned;
(ii) where the
Regional Authority regularises shortfall, in the export obligation as specified
in condition (7), not exceeding five per cent. (5%) of such export obligation,
in which case the said shortfall shall be condoned;
(e) the Explanation
2 to this notification relating to ‘Export obligation’ shall apply
severally to each duty credit scrip, including the said scrip, issued against
the said authorisation;
(f) the exports
and supplies made within the export obligation period specified in condition
(7) shall count towards fulfillment of export obligation;
(g) for
fulfillment of export obligation, the payments against exports/supplies should
have been realised.
(9) that where
the first proviso to condition (7) is applied, the Cenvat Credit in respect of
additional duty of customs shall not been taken and at the time of registration
of the said scrip a certificate, from the jurisdictional Deputy Commissioner of
Central Excise or Assistant Commissioner of Central Excise, as the case may be,
to the effect that Cenvat Credit in respect of additional duty of customs on
goods imported under the said authorisation has not been taken, is produced by
the authorisation holder before the Deputy Commissioner of Customs or the
Assistant Commissioner of Customs, as the case may be:
Provided that when the authorisation holder is not
registered with Central Excise, he may produce the said certificate on
self-certification basis;
(10) that the
duty remission in the said scrip does not relate to duties paid on the imports
made under the said authorisation which have not been installed and put to use;
(11) that the
duty remission in the said scrip has not been obtained as a consequence of
indigenous sourcing of capital goods;
(12) that the
said scrip is issued, on request of the authorisation holder in form ANF5B for
duty remission, by the Regional Authority specifying the same port of
registration as mentioned in the said authorisation and it indicates details of
the said authorisation, total export obligation fixed and its calculation,
details of previous duty credit scrips issued against the said authorisation
and the calculation of duty credit;
(13) that the
imports under the said authorisation, the exports for fulfilling the export
obligations and import of goods against the said scrip are undertaken through
the seaports, airports or through the Inland Container Depots or through the
Land Customs Stations as mentioned in the Table 2 annexed hereto or a Special
Economic Zone notified under section 4 of the Special Economic Zones Act, 2005
(28 of 2005):
Provided that the Commissioner of Customs may, by
special order or a public notice and subject to such conditions as may be
specified by him, permit import and export through any other seaport, airport,
inland container depot or through a land customs station within his
jurisdiction;
(14) that for the
purposes of registration, the said scrip is produced by the authorisation
holder at the specified port of registration before the Deputy Commissioner of
Customs or the Assistant Commissioner of Customs, as the case may be, along
with –
(a) the said
authorisation and the bill(s) of entry under which the imports under the said
authorisation were made on payment of applicable duties in cash;
(b) evidence
showing the extent of export obligation fulfilled within the export obligation
period;
(c) certificate
confirming installation and use as prescribed in condition (4) above;
(d) certificate
that Cenvat Credit has not been taken as prescribed in condition (9) above,
where applicable;
(e) undertaking
from the authorisation holder to the effect that,-
(i) the goods
imported under the said authorisation have not been disposed of or transferred
by sale or lease or any other manner till the date of last export against which
the said scrip is issued;
(ii) the duty
remission in the said scrip does not include the duty paid, any portion of
which has been rebated, including by way of duty drawback; and
(iii) all the
conditions have been complied with respect to the duty credit in the said
scrip,
and the said Deputy Commissioner or Assistant
Commissioner, as the case may be, upon being satisfied, allows the said scrip
to be registered and the Customs authority endorses details of the said scrip
and the remark “Drawback not available on re-export” on the bill(s) of entry,
and registers the said scrip;
(15) that the
said scrip and goods imported against it shall be freely transferable;
(16) that the
said scrip is produced before the proper officer of customs at the time of
clearance for debit of the duties leviable on the goods and the proper officer
taking into account the debits already made under this exemption debits the
duties leviable on the goods, but for this exemption;
(17) that the
validity of the said scrip shall be eighteen months from the date of issue and
the said scrip shall be valid on the date on which actual debit of duty is
made;
(18) that where
the importer, under this notification, does not claim exemption from the
additional duty of customs leviable under section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act,
1975 (51 of 1975) he shall be deemed not to have availed the benefit under this
notification for the purpose of calculation of the said additional duty of
customs;
(19) that the
benefit under this notification shall not be available to the items listed in
Appendix 37B of the Handbook of Procedures Volume 1;
(20) that the
importer shall be entitled to avail of the drawback or Cenvat credit of
additional duty leviable under section 3 of the said Customs Tariff Act against
the amount debited in the said scrip.
Explanation 2. –
For the purpose of this notification, -
(A) “Capital
goods”‖
has the same meaning as assigned to it in Paragraph of 9.12 of the Foreign
Trade Policy;
(B) “Common
Service Provider” (CSP) means a service provider who is designated or certified
as a Common Service Provider by the Director General of Foreign Trade (DGFT),
Department of Commerce or State Industrial Infrastructural Corporation in a
Town of Export Excellence;
(C) “Export
obligation”,-
(I) means
obligation on the authorisation holder to export to a place outside India,
goods manufactured or capable of being manufactured or services rendered by the
use of capital goods imported under the said authorisation and the export
obligation shall be over and above the average level of exports achieved by the
authorisation holder in the preceding three licensing years for the same and
similar products within the export obligation period and such average shall be
the arithmetic mean of export performance in the last three years for the same
and similar products:
Provided that in case of export of goods relating to
handicraft, handlooms, cottage, tiny sector, agriculture, animal husbandry,
floriculture, horticulture, pisciculture, viticulture, poultry, sericulture,
carpet, coir and jute, the authorisation holder shall not be required to
maintain the average level of exports:
Provided also that in case of export of goods relating
to aquaculture (including fisheries), the authorisation holder shall not be
required to maintain the average level of exports subject to the condition that
said authorisation has been obtained for goods other than fishing trawlers,
boats, ships and other similar items:
Provided also that the goods, excepting tools, imported
under said authorisation by the aforesaid sectors, shall not be allowed to be
transferred for a period of five years from the date of imports even in cases
where export obligation has been fulfilled. Transfer of capital goods would,
however, be permitted within the group companies, after fulfillment of export
obligation but before five years from the date of imports, under intimation to
Regional Authority and jurisdictional Central Excise Authority:
Provided also that exports made to such countries as
notified by Director General of Foreign Trade, shall not be counted for fixing
the average level of exports:
Provided also that exports against only such shipping
bills which mention the authorisation number and date of the said authorisation
shall be counted for the fulfillment of the export obligation;
Provided also that in the case of authorisation issued
to a CSP, -
(i) the
reference to ‘authorisation holder’ in this Explanation shall be taken to mean
a reference to ‘CSP and specific users whose details are informed prior to
export by CSP to the Regional Authority’;
(ii) for the
exports by users of the common service to be counted towards fulfilment of
export obligation of CSP, the respective shipping bills of the users of common
service shall contain the authorisation details of the CSP and the concerned
Regional Authority shall be informed about the details of the users prior to
such export; and
(iii) the
exports counted against the authorisation shall not be counted towards
fulfillment of other specific export obligations against all other
authorisations issued under Chapter 5 of the Foreign Trade Policy, including
para 5.22 of Handbook of Procedures Volume 1;
(II) shall be
fulfilled through physical exports and the export proceeds realised in freely
convertible currency. However the following categories of supplies, shall also
be counted towards fulfillment of export obligation:
(a) deemed
exports, namely:
(i) supply of
goods against Advance Authorisation/Advance Authorisation for Annual Requirement/
Duty Free Import Authorisation (DFIA);
(ii) supply of
goods to Export Oriented Units (EOUs) or Software Technology Parks (STPs) or
Electronics Hardware Technology Parks (EHTPs) or Bio-Technology Parks (BTPs);
(iii) supply of
goods to projects financed by multilateral or bilateral agencies or Funds as
notified by the Department of Economic Affairs (DEA), the Ministry of Finance
(MOF) under International Competitive Bidding (ICB) in accordance with
procedures of those agencies or Funds, where legal agreements provide for
tender evaluation without including customs duty; supply and installation of
goods and equipments (single responsibility of turnkey contracts) to projects
financed by multilateral or bilateral agencies or Funds as notified by DEA, MOF
under ICB, in accordance with procedures of those agencies/Funds, where bids
may have been invited and evaluated on the basis of Delivery Duty Paid (DDP)
prices for goods manufactured abroad;
(iv) supply of
goods to any project or purpose in respect of which the Ministry of Finance, by
a notification, permits import of such goods at zero customs duty and the
supply is made under ICB procedure;
(v) supply of
goods to mega power projects as provided in sub-clause (ii) of clause (f) of
para 8.2 of Foreign Trade Policy;
(vi) supply of
goods to nuclear power projects through competitive bidding as provided in
clause (j) of para 8.2 of Foreign Trade Policy;
(b) supply of
ITA-1 items to Domestic Tariff Area, provided realisation is in free foreign
exchange;
(c) royalty
payments received in freely convertible currency and foreign exchange received
for Research and Development (R&D) services; and
(b) payments
received in rupee terms for port handling services in terms of chapter 9 of the
Foreign Trade Policy.
(D) “Foreign
Trade Policy” means the Foreign Trade Policy, 2009-2014, published in the
Gazette of India, Extraordinary, Part II, Section 3, Sub-section (ii) vide notification
number G.S.R. 1293 (E) of the Government of India, Ministry of Commerce and
Industry, Department of Commerce No.1 (RE – 2012) /2009-2014 dated the 5th
June, 2012, as amended from time to time;
(E) “Handbook of
Procedures, Volume 1” means the Handbook of Procedures Volume 1, 2009-14,
published in the Gazette of India, Extraordinary, Part I, Section 1 vide public
notice of the Government of India in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry,
Department of Commerce, No.1 (RE – 2012) /2009-2014 dated the 5th June, 2012,
as amended from time to time;
(F) “Manufacture”
has the same meaning as defined in clause (f) of section 2 of the Central
Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944);
(G) “Regional
Authority”‖ means the Director General of Foreign
Trade appointed under section 6 of the Foreign Trade (Development and
Regulation) Act, 1992 (22 of 1992) or an officer authorised by him to grant an
authorisation including a duty credit scrip under the said Act;
(H) “Town of
Export Excellence” (TEE) means a selected town producing goods of Rs. 750 Crore
or more based on potential of growth in exports. However, for TEE in handloom,
handicraft, agriculture and fisheries sector the threshold limit would be
Rs.150 Crore.
|
Table 1 |
|
|
SNo.
|
Description
of goods |
|
1.
|
Capital
goods for pre-production, production and post-production. |
|
2.
|
Capital
goods in Semi Knocked Down (SKD)/Completely Knocked Down (CKD) conditions to
be assembled into capital goods by the authorisation holder. |
|
3.
|
Spare
parts of CIF value upto 10% of the CIF value of goods specified at Serial Nos.1
and 2 as actually imported and required for maintenance of capital goods so
imported, assembled, or manufactured. |
|
4.
|
Spare
parts of CIF value upto 10% of the book value of the existing plant and
machinery of the authorisation holder. |
|
Table 2 |
||
|
S.No.
|
Port,
ICD, LCS |
Located
at |
|
1.
|
Seaports
|
Bedi
(including Rozi-Jamnagar), Chennai, Cochin, Dahej, Dharamtar, Haldia (Haldia
Dock complex of Kolkata port) Kakinada, Kandla, Kattupalli (Tamilnadu), Kolkata,
Krishnapatnam, Ennore (Tamilnadu) and Karaikal (Union territory of
Puducherry), Magdalla, Mangalore, Marmagoa, Muldwarka, Mumbai, Mundhra,
Nagapattinam, Nhava Sheva, Okha, Paradeep, Pipavav, Porbander, Sikka,
Tuticorin, Visakhapatnam and Vadinar. |
|
2.
|
Airports
|
Ahmedabad,
Bangalore, Bhubaneswar, Chennai, Cochin, Coimbatore, Dabolim (Goa), Delhi,
Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kolkata, Lucknow (Amausi), Mumbai, Nagpur,
Rajasansi (Amritsar), Srinagar, Trivandrum, Varanasi and Visakhapatnam. |
|
3.
|
Inland
Container Depots |
Agra,
Ahmedabad, Anaparthy (Andhra Pradesh), Babarpur, Bangalore, Bhadohi,
Bhatinda, Bhilwara, Bhiwadi, Bhusawal, Chettipalayam (Tamilnadu), Chheharata (Amritsar),
Coimbatore, Dadri, Dappar (Dera Bassi), Daulatabad (Wanjarwadi and Maliwada),
Delhi, Dhannad Rau (District Indore), Dighi (Pune), Durgapur (Export
Promotion Industrial Park), Faridabad, Garhi Harsaru, Gauhati, Guntur,
Hyderabad, Irugur Village (Tamilnadu), Irungattukottai (SIPCOT Industrial
Park, Kattrambakkam Village, Sriperumbudur Taluk, Kanchipuram District,
Tamilnadu), Jaipur, Jallandhar, Jamshedpur, Jodhpur, Kanpur, Karur, Kheda
(Pithampur, District Dhar), Kota, Kundli, Loni (District Ghaziabad),
Ludhiana, Madurai, Malanpur, Mandideep (District Raisen), Marripalem Village
(in Edlapadu Taluk of District Guntur), Miraj, Moradabad, Nagpur, Nasik,
Patli (Gurgaon), Pimpri (Pune), Pitampur (Indore), Pondicherry, Raipur,
Rewari, Rudrapur (Nainital), Salem, Singanalur, Surat, Surajpur, Talegaon
(District Pune), Thudiyalur (Tamilnadu), Tirupur, Tondiarpet (TNPM) in
Chennai, Tuticorin, Udaipur, Vadodara, Varanasi, Veerapandi (Tamilnadu) and
Waluj (Aurangabad). |
|
4.
|
Land
Customs Stations |
Agartala,
Amritsar Rail Cargo, Attari Road, Changrabandha, Dawki, Ghojadanga, Hilli,
Jogbani, Mahadipur, Nepalganj Road, Nautanva (Sonauli), Petrapole, Ranaghat,
Raxaul, Singhabad and Sutarkhandi. |
[F.No.605/10/2013-DBK]