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Edited version of private advice

Authorisation Number: 1012680177022

Ruling

Subject: GST and Partial Exemption Certificates

Question 1

Do you receive any non-monetary consideration for your supply of electricity to the customer?

Answer

Yes

Question 2

If so, are you the recipient of a taxable supply made by a customer when a Partial Exemption certificate (PEC) is issued in relation to you by the Clean Energy Regulator in accordance with the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 (RE(E) Act)?

Answer

You are the recipient of a taxable supply made by a customer when the customer provides a PEC to you.

Relevant facts and circumstances

• You are registered for goods and services tax (GST).

• You are an electricity retailer. A retailer buys electricity from the wholesale market and on-sell the electricity directly to individual customer.

• You sell electricity to customers, who are registered for GST, under a Retail Electricity Agreement.

• Your activities are governed by the RE(E) Act.

• Electricity generators are able to create renewable energy certificates (RECs) either Large-Scale Generation Certificates (LGC) or Small-scale Technology Certificates (STC) for electricity produced using eligible energy sources. Once registered, RECs are traded and sold.

The operation of the partial exemption

The purpose of this form

Relevant legislative provisions

A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999

Section 9-5

Section 9-75

Section 9-15

Section 9-10

Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment Regulations 2010 (No 1).

Reasons for decision

It is not disputed that you make a taxable supply of electricity to your customers (including EITE customers) and receive consideration in return for the taxable supply.

The consideration is the price that you receive in return for the electricity supplied to your customers.

The amount of GST on a taxable supply is 10% of the value of the taxable supply. Under subsection 9-75(1), the value of a taxable supply is the price x 10/11, where the price is the sum of:

Under section 195-1 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 (GST Act) 'consideration, for a supply or acquisition, means any consideration, within the meaning given by sections 9-15 and 9-17 of the GST Act, in connection with the supply or acquisition.' Subsection

9-15(1) provides that consideration includes:

A 'payment' is not limited to a payment of money. It includes a payment in a non-monetary or in an 'in kind' form.

Goods and Services Tax Ruling GSTR 2001/6 explains how the GST Act applies if part or all of the consideration for a supply is not expressed as an amount of money (that is, if it is non-monetary consideration). The Ruling explains the meaning of monetary consideration for the purposes of subsection 9-75(1) and provides principles for identifying non-monetary consideration for a supply.

In identifying a non-monetary consideration, paragraphs 47 and 48 of GSTR 2001/6 provide that:

Paragraphs 81 and 82 of GSTR 2001/6 add further:

Therefore, there are two elements to the definition of consideration:

For a non-EITE customer, you only receive monetary consideration to settle the account. The price is the amount of money paid to you for the supply.

For EITE customers, what is the consideration you have received from the supply?

The following are a brief description of the operation of the Partial Exemption Scheme as envisaged in the Explanatory Statement Select Legislative Instrument 2010 No 46 Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment Regulations 2010 (No 1). The Regulations amend the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Regulations 2001 to support the provisions of the Act that deal with the provision of partial exemptions from liability in respect of the electricity acquired for use in carrying on activities that are defined as emissions-intensive trade-exposed (EITE) for the purposes of the Act.

The RET places a legal requirement on liable entities (typically electricity retailer) to purchase RECs (LGCs and STCs) equivalent to a prescribed proportion of liable wholesale electricity acquisitions set annually by the Regulator. It should be noted that the RET liability to the Regulator by you do not change regardless of whether the customer is EITE or non-EITE. The liability is calculated by reference to the wholesale electricity acquisitions. The liability must be met either:

Under the current arrangement, the exemption can only be claimed by the liable entity that supplies electricity to EITE customer, although being issued to the EITE customer. Theoretically, the PEC reduces the amount of electricity subject to a RET liability and therefore reduces the number of certificates the liable entity must purchase during the year to surrender to the Regulator. In return for the PEC, the retailer offers a reduction in the price of electricity to the EITE customer as agreed in the retail contract.

EITE customer that receives a PEC can only negotiate its value with the retailer that supplies their electricity. The value of the PEC is negotiated as a part of the electricity contract, in your circumstances. The negotiation on the reduction in price of electricity is included in a Schedule of the Electric Retail Agreement.

This indicates that the PEC has an economic value and is accepted by the retailer as a payment in addition to the monetary payment for the supply of electricity by the retailer. As the PEC is not considered money, the PEC in the circumstances is a non-monetary consideration for the supply by the retailer.

The value of the taxable supply of electricity is provided by you to EITE customers consists of two components:

The EITE customer pays a combination of monetary and non-monetary consideration. The two components adds up to the price of the supply which is the same for both EITE and non-EITE customers.

The GST payable on the supply of electricity is 1/11 of the price of the supply.

Question 2

Summary

You receive a taxable supply from an EITE customer in relation to the PEC. Your GST liability and input tax credit entitlement are subject to the normal rules in section 9-75 and Division 29 of the GST Act.

Detailed reasoning

Paragraph 16 of GSTR 2001/6 provides that:

Paragraph 3 of GSTR 2001/6 provides that:

Is the supply made by the EITE customer a taxable supply?

A supply is a taxable supply where all of the requirements under section 9-5 of the GST Act are met.

Therefore, the supply of the PEC to you is a taxable supply made by the EITE customer.

Under the arrangement above:

The value of the PEC as non-monetary consideration

Paragraph 138 of GSTR 2001/6 provides that:

It is considered that the non-monetary consideration (PEC) received by you from the customer for the supply of electricity is of equal GST -inclusive market value to the taxable supply made by the customer to you, which is equal to the reduction in the price for the electricity.

Your GST liability

Your input tax credit (ITC) entitlement in relation to the PEC


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