HomeNewsBusinessReliance, Nayara face windfall profit tax on local supplies alongside exports

Reliance, Nayara face windfall profit tax on local supplies alongside exports

The government on July 1 levied Rs 13 per litre additional excise duty on diesel exported out of India.

August 14, 2022 / 11:13 IST
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Representative image (Source: WANA/Reuters)
Representative image (Source: WANA/Reuters)

The just-introduced tax on windfall energy profits of oil refiners like Reliance Industries is not only levied on the diesel they export but also on the supplies they make to fuel retailers within India, sources said.

The government on July 1 levied Rs 13 per litre additional excise duty on diesel exported out of India. A Rs 6 a litre tax was also imposed on petrol and ATF exported out of India. Alongside, it imposed export restrictions, subject to meeting domestic sales of 50 per cent for petrol and 30 per cent for diesel exports.

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In subsequent fortnightly reviews, the government scrapped the export tax on petrol and jet fuel (ATF) and more than halved the export tax on diesel to Rs 5 per litre. The windfall tax was targeted mainly at Reliance Industries Ltd and Russian oil major Rosneft-backed Nayara Energy, who the government believed were making a killing on exporting large volumes of fuel made from discounted Russian oil, at the cost of the domestic market, three sources with knowledge of the matter said.

Post July 1, refiners exporting petrol and diesel would have had lower realisations and for continued exports, they had to shore up domestic supplies either through supplies to state-owned oil marketing companies (OMCs), bulk sales or retail. But the state-owned fuel retailers like Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL) and Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL), who have a sizeable dependence on supplies from standalone refineries to feed their vast retail network, started paying for petrol and diesel bought from Reliance and others after deducting the newly imposed additional excise duty.