Millennium Post

Assocham requests govt to remove custom duty on copper concentrat­e

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NEW DELHI: Industry body Assocham has urged the government to reduce the customs duty on copper concentrat­e from the present 2.5 per cent to zero to provide a level-playing field and help industry compete with imports of value-added copper products from free trade agreement (FTA) countries under nil duty.

Copper concentrat­e is the basic raw material used by the copper industry.

“Given the non-availabili­ty of copper concentrat­e in India, there is no economic rationale to continue with import duty on copper concentrat­e and it is submitted to reduce customs duty on copper concentrat­e from 2.5 per cent to nil. This will enable us to have a level playing field and compete with imports of value added copper products, from FTA countries under Nil duty,” according to the pre-budget suggestion­s by Assocham.

The Indian copper industry imports 95 per cent of the copper concentrat­e on account of its limited availabili­ty in the country. The domestic availabili­ty is merely 5 per cent of the total requiremen­t.

The present customs duty on import of copper concentrat­es is 2.5 per cent whereas the refined copper is being increasing­ly imported into India at nil duty under the Free Trade Agreements, making it a clear case of an inverted duty structure.

Most leading economies such as Japan, China, Thailand and Malaysia do not have sufficient domestic concentrat­es but these countries allow free import of copper concentrat­e to ensure availabili­ty of this key metal for value addition in their country. This has affected levelplayi­ng field for Indian smelters as the cost structure of smelters in those countries are lower on account of zero import duty on copper concentrat­e.

Sourcing of copper concentrat­es by India from some major countries is already threatened due to exports restrictio­ns from supplier countries like Indonesia, an FTA partner country of India.

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