Mobility

Ministry proposes temporary cut in import duty on new cars, zero duty on electric cars

Photo: Pixabay

Published

January 18, 2019

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 18, 2019

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) has proposed lowering the import duty on new conventional cars and scrapping the levy entirely on electric cars through to the end of 2019.

The proposed decision to temporarily suspend and lower import duties on new cars through to December 31, 2019 is aimed at lowering taxation and improving the regulatory framework for imports of new cars, especially electric cars, the ministry said, Klix.ba reported.

Minister Mirko Šarović called for a public consultation on the proposed decision so that experts and the broader public can contribute to producing the best possible regulation and so that BiH can respond as efficiently as possible to fast-paced changes on the global market, where the sale of electric cars doubles every year.

“The [proposed] decision on the temporary suspension and temporary reduction of customs duties on imported new cars envisages lowering the customs duty from 15% to 5% on new gasoline- and diesel-engine cars and hybrid vehicles that do not enjoy a preferential status of goods from countries with which Bosnia and Herzegovina has free trade agreements, and from 5% to 0% on electric cars,” the ministry said.

Around 1 million electric cars are sold annually in the world, while the latest data shows that BiH has only 18 registered electric cars.

The more favorable duties will stimulate imports of new cars, which will mean multiple benefits, both in terms of reduced air pollution and environmental protection and in terms of improving traffic safety, the ministry said.

Šarović met with representatives of the Federation of BiH (FBiH) Chamber of Commerce in June 2018 to discuss an initiative to reduce taxation and improve the regulatory framework for imports of new and electric cars.

The ministry said at the time that creating conditions for imports of electric cars is important in order to increase the use of renewable energy sources and fight pollution.

BiH holds the first place in Europe by premature mortality due to air pollution, and it is estimated that 30% of pollution originates from vehicles’ exhaust emissions, the ministry said.

Air quality measurements by the US Embassy in BiH showed Sarajevo to be the world’s most polluted city for a number of days in late 2018, with PM 2.5 levels that are deemed “hazardous.”

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

montenegro france afd loan spajic vukovic

Montenegro signs EUR 50 million loan agreement with France’s AFD

20 November 2024 - AFD will support Montenegro's reforms in waste management, renewable energy, sustainable forestry, and climate action

romania coal mines closure Jiu Valley

Romania gets nod for EUR 790 million in aid for coal mine closure

18 November 2024 - The coal mines are located in the Jiu Valley, Romania’s main coal region and one of the 20 coal regions in the European Union

Vucic Serbia wants Azerbaijan participate major gas power project

Vučić: Serbia wants Azerbaijan to participate in major gas power project

13 November 2024 - Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić said the government is starting talks with Azerbaijan to build a 1 GW gas power plant or two smaller ones

Landmark deal reached at COP29 on global carbon market

Landmark deal reached at COP29 on global carbon market

12 November 2024 - Countries participating in COP29 reached a consensus on standards for the creation of carbon credits in line with the 2015 Paris Agreement