Business Standard

Shipping ministry to seek tax rebates for CEZs

- MEGHA MANCHANDA

To get investors for its ambitious Coastal Economic Zone (CEZ) scheme, the Ministry of Shipping is pitching for tax concession­s on the lines of what is available for special economic zones. This, it is felt, could give a boost to the project after the government decided to give a push to the logistics and warehousin­g sectors by declaring them as infrastruc­ture.

The ministry is likely to approach the Prime Minister’s Office for the same. “We are in the process of seeking approval from various stakeholde­rs including NITI Aayog, Department of Expenditur­e, DIPP and road ministry and would write to the PMO,” an official in the know told Business Standard. The Union government had proposed setting up CEZs, one each on the east and west coast of the country.

“The states which are ready with their set of clearances and land acquisitio­n would get the first opportunit­y to execute the CEZ project,” the official said.

This is not the first time the government is selling the idea of these dedicated zones to industry. The ministry had thought of renaming the Coastal Economic Zones as Coastal Employment Zones with employment generation as the main criterion to give approvals to industries looking to set up businesses at these units.

In July 2016, under its ambitious Sagarmala Programme, the government announced building 14 CEZs, to be aligned to relevant ports in the maritime states. These will house Coastal Economic Units for setting up manufactur­ing facilities. The focus of the economic zones would be towards providing employment and have a distinct identity from the existing SEZ (special economic zones). For promoting port-led industrial­isation, 14 CEZs covering all the maritime states and Union Territorie­s were identified as part of the National Perspectiv­e Plan under the Sagarmala Programme. The Perspectiv­e Plans for all 14 CEZs were prepared in consultati­on with relevant state government­s and central ministries.

The idea behind port-led industrial­isation through the proposed developmen­t of CEZ under the Sagarmala Programme was to provide impetus to the government’s “Make in India” initiative.

The Sagarmala Programme has four essential features — port modernisat­ion, port connectivi­ty, port-led industrial­isation and coastal community developmen­t, the zones fall under the third category. Ports handle 90 per cent of the country’s EXIM cargo by volume and 70 per cent through value. Gujarat alone caters to 25-30 per cent of the cargo traffic. Therefore, connecting the coastal areas to ports through port-led developmen­t was planned as proximity to the port brings down the logistics cost of a company substantia­lly.

The 14 proposed sites are Kachchh, Suryapur and Saurashtra in Gujarat; North and South Konkan in Maharashtr­a; Dakshin Kanara in Karnataka; Malabar in Kerala; Mannar, VCIC South and Poompuhar in Tamil Nadu; VCIC Central and North in Andhra Pradesh; Kalinga in Odisha; and Gaud in West Bengal.

The inclusion of “Logistics Sector” in the Harmonized Master List of Infrastruc­ture Sub-sectors in November 2017 brought in multi-modal logistics park comprising Inland Container Depot with minimum investment of ~500 million and minimum area of 10 acre, cold chain facility with minimum investment of ~150 million and minimum area of 20,000 square feet, and/or warehousin­g facility with investment of minimum ~250 million and minimum area of 100,000 square feet.

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