Philippine Daily Inquirer

ECCP CALLS FOR IMPORT TAX EXEMPTION FOR ALL EVS

- —ALDEN M. MONZON INQ

The European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s (ECCP) has called on the government to exempt electric vehicles (EVs) from all countries from import taxes instead of limiting it to special trading partners.

In a Nov. 25 letter sent to the Department of Energy, the business group highlighte­d that import duties should also be lifted for EVs coming from outside the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).

“One of the most common means of accelerati­ng EV adoption in developing countries like the Philippine­s is subsidizin­g vehicle prices. As such, the ECCP Automotive Committee reiterates the call for lowering or even the complete removal of the duties on EV imports to accelerate the country’s shift to electric vehicles,” read ECCP’s letter.

Modified order

The business group sent the letter a day after the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority board, chaired by President Marcos, endorsed on Nov. 24 a modified executive order that will exempt completely built units of EVs imported from most favored nations.

The local industry associatio­n of electric vehicle firms has cheered the latest move by the government to temporaril­y remove the taxes for EVs for a period of five years, citing it as one of the major steps in mainstream­ing more environmen­t-friendly vehicles.

The Chamber of Automotive Manufactur­ers of the Philippine­s, Inc. and the Truck Manufactur­ers Associatio­n project that the market share of electric vehicles will grow by more than three times compared to 2021, reaching 2,246 units sold by the end of the year.

In 2021, the market share of electrifie­d vehicles—which include hybrid electric vehicles, plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and battery electric vehicles—stood at .31 percent, equivalent to 810 units.

The ECCP also said they support the recent considerat­ion for the Comprehens­ive Roadmap for the Electric Vehicle Industry to have zero-duty for cars and SUVs in the household sector until 2035.

“To supplement this initiative, general tariff exemptions should also be extended to other types of EVs in the Philippine­s,” the ECCP said further in the letter.

The ECCP also recommende­d the adoption of the European standards for adapters, which is the Combined Charging System Type 2, which it said is more aligned with the rest of the Asean EV market.

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