Business World

Random fuel mark tests start June

- Melissa L. T. Lopez

THE FIRST ROUND of field tests for marked fuel is scheduled to start in June, with authoritie­s expecting to cover at least 15 billion liters this year and crack down on other smuggled petroleum products.

In a media briefing, officials of the Bureau of Customs (BoC) and the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) said they are on track with rolling out the fuel marking program next month, and initial random testing in oil depots and even retail stations “three months after.”

“We are almost done with the IRR (implementi­ng rules and regulation­s). It’s just that we can’t issue the IRR unless the fuel markers are approved by the BoC and BIR,” Deputy Commission­er for the Customs’ Enforcemen­t Group Teddy Sandy S. Raval told reporters yesterday.

Fuel marking involves use of low concentrat­ions of dyes to be blended with fuel in order to determine whether shipments have gone through legal import channels.

The measure is provided under Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) law, which took effect Jan. 1, 2018.

Marked fuel will show that importers of petroleum paid the required tariffs and went through all necessary steps before selling their products to the market.

The DoF tapped the joint venture of Switzerlan­d-based SICPA SA and SGS Philippine­s in October as service provider for the fuel marking program. They are tasked to provide a unique chemical marker for gasoline, diesel and kerosene and also administer the tests on these products.

Customs expects about 6.8 billion liters of gasoline, diesel and kerosene to be imported this year, while the BIR projects some 8.4 billion liters of these products to be churned out by local refineries.

Mr. Raval said the bureaus are also waiting for approval by the Department of Energy for placing markers on fuel products, citing the need to ensure that these dyes will have no impact on fuel efficiency and emissions.

Citing previous studies, the Department of Finance (DoF) has said it expects to capture at least P20-40 billion worth of foregone import duties from smuggled or misdeclare­d petroleum products each year through the marking scheme.

The government has earmarked P1.96 billion for the program’s first year of implementa­tion. However, the system is expected to be sustained through a Fuel Marking Trust Fund, to be supported by the collection of a fuel marking fee of P0.06884/ liter.

The TRAIN law provides an initial five-year contract for fuel marking.

Emee I. Macabales, director of DoF’s Revenue Operations Group, added that the bureaus plan to deploy 20 mobile analyzers to do the random fuel tests nationwide, which would translate to around three tests per day covering up to 8,000 retail gas stations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines