SC upholds states’ right to change industrial policy in a 25-year-old dispute

The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the government’s powers to withdraw electricity duty exemptions for captive power plants, ruling in favour of Maharashtra in a 25-year-old dispute with companies such as Reliance Industries Ltd.

A bench of Justices P.S. Narasimha and Alok Aradhe upheld the validity of the state’s notifications of 1 April 2000 and 4 April 2001 to withdraw the exemption and impose electricity duty on power generated and consumed by industries.

However, the court ruled that the withdrawal should not take effect immediately. It directed that the notifications would come into effect only after a one-year period from their respective dates, giving companies time to adjust their finances and operations.

In our view, interest of justice would be adequately served by treating the impugned notifications as taking effect only after the expiry of a reasonable notice period… a period of one year would constitute a reasonable notice,” the court said in its order.

Reliance Industries and Jindal Poly Films Ltd, another company involved in the dispute, have yet to respond to queries emailed on Wednesday.

Legal experts flagged risks around policy certainty.

“From an investment perspective, the concern is not the duty itself but the uncertainty it introduces,” said Keyur D. Gandhi, managing partner at Gandhi Law Associates. “Captive power projects are typically justified on long-term cost stability. If exemptions can be withdrawn later, it weakens predictability.”

The dispute traces back to Maharashtra’s 1993 industrial policy, which promised exemption from electricity duty to encourage industries to set up captive power plants and reduce reliance on the grid. However, in April 2000, the state withdrew the exemption and imposed a duty of 30 paise per unit. This was later reduced to 15 paise per unit through a 2001 notification.

The move triggered litigation, with companies arguing that they had made long-term investments based on the promise of tax exemptions.

In 2009, the Bombay High Court ruled in favour of companies, striking down the state’s decision and granting full exemption for the period between April 2000 and April 2005, according to that order. It had termed the government’s action arbitrary and lacking proper justification.

The Maharashtra government challenged the high court verdict in the top court.

The Supreme Court, however, disagreed with this view. It held that tax exemptions are a policy concession and not a permanent right, and the government retains the authority to modify or withdraw them in public interest.

At the same time, the Supreme Court emphasized that such policy changes must be implemented fairly, without causing sudden hardship to businesses that relied on earlier incentives.

The court noted that electricity duty is a key source of revenue for the state and decisions around exemptions require balancing industrial growth with fiscal stability. “The decision relating to levy or exemption… involves balancing the need to encourage industrial growth against the requirement of maintaining fiscal stability,” the judgment said.

Latest

Workers strike at one of the largest US meatpacking plants will continue for a 3rd week

Workers' strike at one of the largest US meatpacking plants will continue for a 3rd week

Exclusive-US sends subpoenas in Warner-Paramount antitrust review as probe picks up steam

WARNER-BROS-DIS-M-A-PARAMOUNT-SKYDAN-ANTITRUST:Exclusive-US sends subpoenas in Warner-Paramount antitrust review as probe picks up steam

Codelco Expects to Churn Out Slightly More Copper This Year

Codelco expects to produce slightly more copper in 2026 than last year as the Chilean state-owned miner battles to put a string of operational and project setba

‘Sanctions relief on Russian crude not permanent policy’: Rubio amid war-driven market turmoil

International Business News: US secretary of state Marco Rubio has insisted that Washington’s recent easing of sanctions on Russian crude is strictly temporar

Judge wont block meeting that could exempt Gulf drilling from Endangered Species Act

Judge won't block meeting that could exempt Gulf drilling from Endangered Species Act

Topics

Quote of the day by Lady Gaga: ‘I am a feminist, I reject wholeheartedly the way we are taught to perceive women’

Lady Gaga turns 40 – her 2010 views on feminism are still relevant today. On her birthday, here's one of her iconic quotes that's on point.

Singer Jasmine Sandlas reveals this Dhurandhar 2 song was created on the day of the music album launch at 4 am

Singer Jasmine Sandlas said that all the songs were ready but this particular song seemed very apt for the emotional connect in Dhurandhar The Revenge.

Varun Dhawan says he planned a Hollywood debut, wanted Steven Spielberg to launch him: ‘Papa ko jhatka lagta’

Varun Dhawan revealed that he planned to make debut as an actor in Hollywood instead of Bollywood because that would have shocked his father David Dhawan.

‘Part of his brain missing’: Lawyer of Venezuelan migrant held for killing Loyola University student Sheridan Gorman in Chicago

US News: A 25-year-old Venezuelan migrant, Jose Medina, has been ordered to remain in custody for allegedly shooting dead an 18-year-old Loyola University fres.

‘Iran will never go nuclear, India can help end this war,’ says Khamenei’s representative

Middle East News: CHENNAI: There is no space or room for nuclear weapons in Iran’s doctrine, said Abdul Majid Hakeem Ilahi, the representative of Iran’s sup

Weeks, not months: Rubio says Gulf war nearing end, no ground forces

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the Gulf War will end in weeks, not months, as Washington pushes its campaign without ground troops while continuing depl

‘Negligent discharge’: Former first lady Jill Biden’s Secret Service agent accidentally shoots leg while on duty

US News: A US Secret Service agent accidentally shot himself while on duty during an assignment involving former first Lady Jill Biden, officials said.The inci.

Elon Musk joined Trump’s call with PM Modi on Iran war earlier this week

US News: Elon Musk participated in a phone call on Tuesday between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump, an unusual instance of a private.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img