Millennium Post

Oil India to move TDSAT against DOT seeking `48,489 cr in past dues

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NEW DELHI: State-owned Oil India is likely to move the TDSAT this week against the telecom department seeking about Rs 48,500 crore in past dues on the surplus bandwidth capacity it had leased to third parties, its Chairman and Managing Director Sushil Chandra Mishra has said.

Other non-telecom firms, which have also been slapped with similar demands, too are

likely to move the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT).

Those likely to go to the TDSAT include gas utility GAIL India Ltd, from whom Rs 1.83 lakh crore has been sought, Power Grid Corp that has been slapped with Rs 21,953.65 crore

liability and Gujarat Narmada Valley Fertilizer­s & Chemicals Ltd which faces a payout of Rs 15,019.97 crore.

Following the Supreme Court ruling of October 24, 2019 that non-telecom revenues should be included for considerin­g payments of the government dues by firms holding any sort of telecom

license, the Department of Telecommun­ications (DOT) slapped Rs 1.47 lakh crore demand on mobile phone operators such as Bharti Airtel Ltd and Vodafone Idea Ltd and another Rs 2.7 lakh crore from non-telecom firms.

Non-telecom firms such as OIL, GAIL and Powergrid filed clarificat­ory petition on applicabil­ity of the October 24 order on them, but the apex court on February 14 asked them to approach the appropriat­e authority.

"As per our licence condition, any dispute has to be referred to TDSAT and so we will be approachin­g TDSAT within a weeks time," Mishra told PTI here.

On February 14, the Supreme Court had pulled up the DOT for not enforcing its October 24 order that gave telcos three months time to pay dues. Hours later, the DOT sent notices to Airtel and Vodafone Idea asking them to clear dues immediatel­y but hadn't so far raised such demand with nontelecom companies, industry sources said.

OIL, the nation's second biggest state-owned oil producer, holds a National Long Distance Service Licence (NLD) with primary objective of monitoring and operation of its pipeline network.

The surplus bandwidth capacity available with the

Other non-telecom firms, which have also been slapped with similar demands, too are likely to move the Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal

company was leased out to the telecom operators/other users, on which the company regu

larly paid the applicable license fee to the telecom department (DOT).

But after the October 24 Supreme Court ruling for including non-telecom revenues for calculatin­g dues, the DOT included all revenues from oil and gas to seek Rs 48,489 crore from the company for the period from 2007-08 to 2018-19.

OIL believes that the October 24 judgement was not applicable to the company and had represente­d to the DOT stating that the demand raised is not sustainabl­e either in law or on facts as the nature of

licence in case of telecom service providers is different and distinct from the licences given to the company, Mishra said.

In case of GAIL, which held a IP-II licence, the DOT assessed Rs 1,83,076 crore as outstandin­g after including interest and penalty computed on the entire revenue of the company.

Powergrid, which holds NLD and Internet Service Provider (ISP) licences, was asked to pay Rs 21,953.65 crore (including interest and penalty) for FY 2012-13 to FY 2017-18 by adding revenue related to power transmissi­on and consultanc­y as 'miscellane­ous income' in adjusted gross revenue, company sources said, adding the firm will approach the TDSAT in next few days.

Gujarat Narmada Valley Fertilizer­s & Chemicals Ltd, which had a Very Small Aperture Terminal (VSAT) and a Category 'A' ISP, was asked to pay Rs 15,019.97 crores for financial year 2005-06 to 201819.

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