Published January 27, 2020, 10:00 PM
By MYRNA M.
VELASCO
The Department of Energy (DOE) is
enforcing strict field monitoring to prospectively apprehend violations of
industry players on the implementation of the last tranche of increased excise
taxes for petroleum products under the Tax Reform for Acceleration and
Inclusion (TRAIN) Act.
The department said it has been
keeping a close watch on the discharge of products from the oil companies’
terminals and depots onward to the gasoline stations where the commodities are
being retailed to the consuming public.
The main variance being tracked by
the DOE is the exact dates when the end-December 2019 inventories of the oil
companies had been fully used up; and when had they started selling the new
products with higher excise taxes.
Over the weekend, the DOE reported
that increased excise taxes for various oil products are already enforced in
more than 900 stations, and that accounts for roughly 10 percent of the total
9,003 retail networks that the Philippine downstream oil industry has.
The oil firms that already implemented
higher excise taxes in a number of their stations had been Pilipinas Shell
Petroleum Corporation, PTT Philippines, Chevron, PetroGazz, Seaoil and Total,
and all of them had informed the DOE of their tax adjustments prior to
enforcement.
With value-added tax, the increased
excise taxes for petroleum products had been set at ₱1.12 per liter for
gasoline; ₱1.12 per kilogram for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) for households;
and ₱1.68 per liter for diesel.
Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi
said the department “has been undertaking all necessary measures to ensure that
all tranches of excise taxes on petroleum products are properly implemented.”
He noted that on top of the regular
monitoring that the department’s Oil Industry Management Bureau (OIMB) has been
exerting, the agency is similarly having “verification inspections to make sure
that the depots and terminals are complying with the provisions of the TRAIN
Law.”
As prescribed, the oil companies
must have display boards at their stations informing the public that their
products already carry higher excise taxes – and it must also be specified on
when the adjustments became effective.
The DOE indicated that as of Friday
(January 24), 48 of the 67 LPG depots; and 40 out of the 116 fuel depots have
already enforced additional taxes, entailing that their stocks as of December
31 had already been exhausted.
At the level of the LPG refilling
facilities, the energy department specified that four out of 297 plants already
applied the higher excise taxes as of January 10.
The department reiterated “it will
continue monitoring retail outlets and their implementation of the taxation
scheme to uphold the best interests of all consumers.”
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