India wants to close tax loopholes on CERs: report Published: 23 Mar
2009 19:12 CET India is planning to make companies pay more in tax from
sales of carbon credits. That's according to a report by the Press
Trust of India, citing an unnamed official with India's finance
ministry.The PTI cited a study commissioned by the government which
found that 98 per cent of companies had not made tax provisions against
the profits out of the sale of carbon credits, and were ploughing the
earnings into other areas of the business."More than 98 per cent of the
companies are not following Section 28 of the Income-Tax Act, which
requires profits and gains of business or profession to be parted as
tax. This will fetch the exchequer around Rs 1,000 crore ($1.94
billion)," the PTI reported the tax official as saying.India is one of
the world's biggest sellers of UN-backed carbon credits known as
cerified emissions reductions (CERs).So far, companies based in India
have been awarded with around 80 million CERs, and over a third have
been issued to just two companies, chemicals producers Gujarat
Fluorochemical and SRF, which own projects that cut HFC-23, a highly
potent greenhouse gas.Deepak Asher, a vice president with Gujarat
Fluorochemical, told Point Carbon: "We include CER income in our normal
business income, and it gets taxed like our other business income."SRF
could not be reached for comment.CriticsSeveral other large Indian
companies have been issued with carbon credits in sectors such as
cement production, metals processing, power generation, paper and pulp
and food production.Green groups have criticised the participation of
some Indian companies in the Kyoto protocol's clean development
mechanism, alleging they have ploughed big profits earned from carbon
trading into production process that harm the environment.India has
repeatedly ruled out the introduction of a specific carbon tax, arguing
that a separate levy on sales of CERs would dissuade the development of
Kyoto projects in the country.So far, only China, Egypt and Vietnam
have imposed stand-alone levies on revenues earned from carbon trading.

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Posted By CA. Vinod Dasani to CA. Vinod Dasani at 3/25/2009 03:22:00 PM
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