GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
(DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE)
Notification No.100 /2009-CUSTOMS
New Delhi, the 11 September, 2009
G.S.R. 666 (E) - 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 specified in the Table annexed hereto, from,-
(i) so much of the duty of customs leviable thereon which is specified in the
First Schedule to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 (51 of 1975) as is in excess of
the amount calculated at the rate of three percent ad-valorem, and
(ii) the whole of the additional duty leviable thereon under section 3 of the
said Customs Tariff Act, when specifically claimed by the importer.
2. The exemption under this notification shall be subject to the following
conditions, namely :-
(1) that the goods imported are covered by a valid authorization issued under
the Export Promotion Capital Goods (EPCG) Scheme to Common Service
Providers(hereinafter referred to as CSP) designated by the Director General Of
Foreign Trade (hereinafter referred to as DGFT), Department of
Commerce(hereinafter referred to as DOC) or State Industrial Infrastructural
Corporation in Towns Of Export Excellence (hereinafter referred to as TEE) in
terms of Chapter 5 of the Foreign Trade Policy permitting import of goods at the
rate of three percent duty and the said authorization is produced for debit by
the proper officer of customs at the time of clearance :
Provided that for import of spare parts specified at Sr.No.4 of the said Table,
the validity period of the authorization shall be deemed to be the period
permitted for fulfillment of the export obligation in full ;
(2) that the authorization issued under the scheme shall have the details of the
users of the said capital goods and the quantum of the Export
Obligation(hereinafter referred to as EO) which each user would fulfil.
(3) that the goods imported shall not be disposed of or transferred by sale or
lease or any other manner till export obligation is completed.
(4) that the Common Service provider and each of the specific users shall
execute a bond in such form and for such sum as may be specified by the Deputy
Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of Customs and a bank
guarantee equivalent to their portion of duty foregone in terms of export
obligation apportioned in the authorization binding themselves to fulfil export
obligation on Free On Board (FOB) basis equivalent to eight times the duty saved
on the goods imported as may be specified on the licence or authorization, or
for such higher sum as may be fixed or endorsed by the Licensing Authority or
Regional Authority in terms of Para 5.10 of the Handbook of Procedures Vol I,
issued under para 2.4 of the Foreign Trade Policy, within a period of eight
years from the date of issue of licence or authorization, in the following
proportions, namely :-
S.No. |
Period from the date of issue of Authorization
|
Proportion of total export obligation |
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
1. |
Block of 1st to 6th year |
50% |
2. |
Block of 7th to 8th year |
50% |
Provided that where the duty saved is not less than Rupees one hundred crores,
or where the authorization is issued to units in the agri export zone as may be
notified by the licensing authority or Regional Authority, the export obligation
shall be fulfilled within a period of twelve years from the date of issue of
authorization in the following proportions, namely :-
S.No. |
Period from the date of issue of Authorization
|
Proportion of total export obligation |
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
1. |
Block of 1st to 10th year |
50% |
2. |
Block of 11th to 12th year |
50% |
Provided further 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 time period allowed by the Licensing
Authority or 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 Licensing Authority or Regional Authority which shall not
exceed twelve years.
Provided also that where the capital goods are imported by agro units and units
in tiny and cottage sector, the export obligation shall be fixed equivalent to
six times the duty saved on the goods imported as may be specified on the
authrization, or for such higher sum as may be fixed by the licensing authority,
within a period of twelve years from the date of issue of the authorization :
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
or by small scale industry units as defined in paragraph 5.2 of the Foreign
Trade Policy, as the case may be, the export obligation shall be fixed
equivalent to six times the duty saved on the goods imported as may be specified
on the authorization, or for such higher sum as may be fixed by the Licensing
Authority or Regional Authority, within a period of eight years from the date of
issue of authorization subject to the further condition that in the case of
Small Scale Industry (SSI) units the landed Cost Insurance Freight (CIF) value
of such imported capital goods under the scheme shall not exceed Rupees fifty
lakhs and total investment in plant and machinery after such imports shall not
exceed the SSI limit :
Provided also that spares (including refurbished or reconditioned spares),
moulds, dies, jigs, fixtures, tools, refractory for initial lining and catalyst
for initial charge, for the existing plant and machinery (imported earlier,
under EPCG or otherwise), shall be allowed to be imported under the EPCG scheme
subject to an export obligation equivalent to 50% of the normal export
obligation prescribed above, to be fulfilled in 8 years reckoned from the date
of issue of the Authorization, subject to the condition that the CIF value of
import of the said spares etc. will be limited to 10% of the CIF value of the
plant and machinery imported under the EPCG authorization or 10% of the book
value of the plant and machinery imported earlier otherwise than under EPCG
Scheme, as the case may be.
Provided also that export obligation of a particular block may be set off
against the excess exports made in the said preceding block(s);
(5) that if the authorisation holder does not claim exemption from the
additional duty leviable under section 3 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975, the
additional duty so paid by him shall not be taken for computation of the net
duty saved for the purpose of fixation of export obligation provided the Cenvat
credit of additional duty paid has not been taken;
(6) that the Authorization Holder and the other specific users produce within 30
days from the expiry of each block from the date of issue of authorization or
within such extended period as the Deputy Commissioner of Customs or Assistant
Commissioner of Customs may allow, evidence to the satisfaction of the Deputy
Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of Customs showing the extent
of export obligation fulfilled, and where the export obligation of any
particular block is not fulfilled in terms of the preceding condition, the
importer shall within three months from the expiry of the said block pay duties
of customs equal to an amount which bears the same proportion to the duties
leviable on the goods, but for the exemption contained herein, which the
unfulfilled portion of the export obligation bears to the total export
obligation, together with interest at the rate of 15% per annum from the date of
clearance of the goods;
(7) where the Authorization Holder fulfills 75% or more of the export obligation
as specified in condition (4) (over and above 100% of the average export
obligation) within half of the period specified for export obligation as
mentioned in condition (4), his balance export obligation shall be condoned and
he shall be treated to have fulfilled the entire export obligation;
(8) that the capital goods imported, assembled or manufactured are installed in
the Common Service Provider’s factory or premises and a certificate from the
jurisdictional Deputy Commissioner of Central Excise or Assistant Commissioner
of Central Excise, as the case may be, is produced confirming installation and
use of capital goods in the Common Service Provider’s factory or premises,
within six months from the date of completion of imports or within such extended
period as the Deputy Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of
Customs, as the case may be, may allow :
Provided that in case of import of spares, the installation certificate shall be
produced within three years from the date of import :
Provided further that if the Authorization Holder is not registered with central
excise or if he is a service provider, as the case may be, he may produce the
said certificate of installation and usage issued by an independent Chartered
Engineer :
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 importer shall maintain accurate record of such movement;
(9) that the imports and exports are undertaken through sea ports at Bedi
(including Rozi-Jamnagar), Chennai, Cochin, Dahej, Dharamtar,Haldia (Haldia Dock
complex of Kolkata port) Kakinada, Kandla, Kolkata, Krishnapatnam, Magdalla,
Mangalore, Marmagoa, Muldwarka, Mumbai, Mundhra,Nagapattinam, Nhava Sheva, Okha,
Paradeep, Pipavav, Porbander, Sikka, Tuticorin, Visakhapatnam and Vadinar or
through any of the airports at Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Bhubaneswar, Chennai,
Cochin, Coimbatore, Dabolim (Goa), Delhi, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kolkata,
Lucknow (Amausi), Mumbai, Nagpur, Rajasansi (Amritsar), Srinagar, Trivandrum and
Varanasi or through any of the Inland Container Depots at Agra, Ahmedabad,
Anaparthy (Andhra Pradesh), Babarpur, Bangalore, Bhadohi, Bhatinda, Bhilwara,
Bhiwadi, Bhusawal, Chheharata (Amritsar), Coimbatore, Dadri, Dappar (Dera Bassi),
Daulatabad (Wanjarwadi and Maliwada), Delhi, Dighi (Pune), Durgapur (Export
Promotion Industrial Park), Faridabad, Garhi Harsaru, Gauhati, Guntur,
Hyderabad, Jaipur, Jallandhar, Jamshedpur, Jodhpur, Kanpur, Karur, Kota, Kundli,
Loni (District Ghaziabad), Ludhiana, Madurai, Malanpur, Mandideep (District
Raisen), Miraj, Moradabad, Nagpur, Nasik, Pimpri (Pune), Pitampur (Indore),
Pondicherry, Raipur, Rewari, Rudrapur(Nainital), Salem, Singanalur, Surat,
Surajpur, Tirupur, Tuticorin, Udaipur, Vadodara, Varanasi, , Waluj (Aurangabad)
or through the Land Customs Station at Agartala, Amritsar Rail Cargo, Attari
Road, Changrabandha, Dawki, Ghojadanga, Hilli, Jogbani, Mahadipur, Nepalganj
Road, Nautanva (Sonauli), Petrapole, Ranaghat, Raxaul, Singhabad and Sutarkhandi
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 sea-port, airport, inland container depot or
through a land customs station within his jurisdiction.
(10) notwithstanding anything contained in condition (6) above, where the
Licensing Authority or Regional Authority grants extension of block-wise period
for any block(s) or overall period of fulfilment of export obligation upto a
period of two years or regularization of shortfall in export obligation, not
exceeding five percent of such export obligation, the said block-wise period or
overall period of export obligation shall be extended or condoned by the Deputy
Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of Customs, as the case may be
:
Provided that in respect of sick units referred to in the second proviso to
condition (4) extension of overall period of export obligation shall not be
allowed :
Provided further that the Regional Authority may grant further extension in the
overall period of export obligation upto a period of further two years if the
authorization holder pays fifty percent of duty payable in proportion to the
unfulfilled portion of export obligation and agrees to fulfill other conditions
as may be specified by the Regional Authority for this purpose;
Provided further that the Export Obligation period shall not be extended beyond
12 years including the original Export Obligation period of 8 years or 12 years
as the case may be.
3. Where the goods specified in the said Table are found defective or unfit for
use, the said goods may be re-exported back to the foreign supplier within three
years from the date of payment of duty on the importation thereof:
Provided that 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 as the goods which were imported.
Explanation – For the purpose of this notification,-
1. “Capital goods” has the same meaning as assigned to it in Paragraph 9.12 of
the Foreign Trade Policy;
2. “Common Service Provider (CSP)” means a service provider who is designated or
certified as a Common Service Provider by the DGFT, Department of Commerce or
State Industrial Infrastructural Corporation in a Town of Export Excellence.
3. “Export obligation”, -
(1) means obligation on the Common Service provider and each of the specific
users to export to a place outside India, goods manufactured or capable of being
manufactured or services rendered by the use of capital goods imported in terms
of this notification. The export obligation shall be over and above the average
level of exports achieved by the Common Service provider or the specific user in
the preceding three licensing years for the same and similar products within the
overall export obligation period including the extended period, if any. Such
average shall be the arithmetic mean of export performance in the last 3 years
for the same and similar products.
Provided that upto 50% of the export obligation may also be fulfilled by export
of other good(s) manufactured or service(s) provided by the Common Service
provider / the specific user or his group company or managed hotel, which has
the EPCG authorization subject to the condition that in such cases, additional
export obligation imposed shall be over and above the average exports achieved
by the Common Service provider / the specific user or his group company or
managed hotel in preceding three years for both the original and the substitute
product(s) or service(s) :
Provided further that in case of export of goods relating to handicraft,
handlooms, cottage, tiny sector, agriculture, animal husbandry, floriculture,
horticulture, pisciculture, viticulture, poultry and sericulture, the Common
Service provider or the specific user shall not be required to maintain the
average level of exports :
Provided further that in case of export of goods relating to
aquaculture(including fisheries), the Common Service provider or the specific
user shall not be required to maintain the average level of exports subject to
the condition that EPCG authorization has been obtained for goods other than
fishing trawlers, boats, ships and other similar items.
Provided also that the goods, excepting tools, imported under this notification
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 former USSR, or to such countries as notified
by Director General of Foreign Trade as on 31.3.08, shall not be counted for
fixing the average level of exports :
Provided also that exports against only such shipping bills which mention the
EPCG authorization No. and date shall be counted for the discharge of the export
obligation;
Provided also that exports counted against the authorization issued under this
notification shall not be counted towards fulfilment of other specific Export
Obligations against other EPCG authorizations;
(2) shall be fulfilled through physical exports and the export proceeds shall be
realized 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 Authorization/Advance Authorization for
Annual Requirement/ Duty Free Import Authorization (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 Department of Economic Affairs (DEA), 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 power projects and refineries not covered in (iv) above
under ICB procedure;
(vi) Supply of goods to nuclear power projects through competitive bidding as
opposed to ICB;
(b) Supply of ITA-1 items to Domestic Tariff Area, provided realization is in
free foreign exchange;
(c) Royalty payments received in freely convertible currency and foreign
exchange received for Research and Development (R and D) services; and
(d) Payments received in rupee terms for port handling services in terms of
chapter 9 of the Foreign Trade Policy.
4. “Foreign Trade Policy” means the Foreign Trade Policy 2009-2014 published in
the gazette of India, Part II, Section 3, Sub-section (ii) vide notification of
the Government of India in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, No.1/2009-2014
dated the 27th August, 2009 as amended from time to time;
5. “Licensing Authority or 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 authorized by him to grant an
authorization under the said Act;
6. “Manufacture” has the same meaning as defined in clause (f) of section 2 of
the Central Excise Act, 1944 (1 of 1944).
7. “Towns of Export Excellence(TEE)” means a selected town producing goods of
Rs.750 Crores or more based on potential for growth in exports. However for TEE
in Handloom, Handicraft, Agriculture and fisheries sector the threshold limit
would be Rs.150 Crores.
Table
S.No. |
Description of goods |
(1) |
(2) |
1. |
Capital goods for pre-production, production and post production including
second hand capital goods. |
2. |
Capital goods in Semi Knocked Down (SKD) / Completely Knocked Down (CKD)
conditions to be assembled into capital goods by the importer. |
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 authorization holder. |
[F. No.605/58/2009-DBK ]
Rajesh Kumar Agarwal,
Under Secretary to the Government of India.