The Supreme Court today issued a show-cause order against the government decision to raise the taxes on electric vehicles (EVs).
The government – through the budget for the current fiscal year 2020-21 – has increased the customs duty from 10 per cent to 80 per cent and excise duty from five per cent to 80 per cent despite its tall claims of promoting the clean energy and substitute the import of petroleum products that is the largest import of the country.
Due to the hike in the customs and excise duty, traders have stopped import of electric vehicles lately. A single bench of the Supreme Court Justice Ananda Mohan Bhattarai has issued a show-cause order showing concern on the tax hike in electric vehicles as a serious matter. Claiming that the rise in tax has made electric vehicles unaffordable to the general people, Jury Nepal – a non-government organisation – has filed a writ petition against the government move.
The provision – to raise tax on electric vehicles by discouraging the use of environment-friendly automobiles – has been not only against the government’s own policy to substitute the fossil-fuel vehicle by 2030, and also Prime Minister’s pledge to promote the clean energy through the use of electric vehicles.
The government move has also been criticised on the ground that it will hit the aspiration of making the country self-reliant in energy supply and reduce the ballooning trade deficit by substituting the import of fossil fuel.
However, finance minister Dr Yuba Raj Khatiwada has been defending his move – to increase taxes on electric vehicle against the government policy – claiming that the government is compelled to revoke the scheme to check misuse of the government package due to surge in imports of luxury electric cars.
The government – through the budget for the current fiscal year 2020-21 – has increased the customs duty from 10 per cent to 80 per cent and excise duty from five per cent to 80 per cent despite its tall claims of promoting the clean energy and substitute the import of petroleum products that is the largest import of the country.
Due to the hike in the customs and excise duty, traders have stopped import of electric vehicles lately. A single bench of the Supreme Court Justice Ananda Mohan Bhattarai has issued a show-cause order showing concern on the tax hike in electric vehicles as a serious matter. Claiming that the rise in tax has made electric vehicles unaffordable to the general people, Jury Nepal – a non-government organisation – has filed a writ petition against the government move.
The provision – to raise tax on electric vehicles by discouraging the use of environment-friendly automobiles – has been not only against the government’s own policy to substitute the fossil-fuel vehicle by 2030, and also Prime Minister’s pledge to promote the clean energy through the use of electric vehicles.
The government move has also been criticised on the ground that it will hit the aspiration of making the country self-reliant in energy supply and reduce the ballooning trade deficit by substituting the import of fossil fuel.
However, finance minister Dr Yuba Raj Khatiwada has been defending his move – to increase taxes on electric vehicle against the government policy – claiming that the government is compelled to revoke the scheme to check misuse of the government package due to surge in imports of luxury electric cars.
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