Govt Finally Eyes Tax Exemptions to Revive $6 Billion Refinery Investments

Govt Finally Eyes Tax Exemptions to Revive  Billion Refinery Investments

The government has moved to revive nearly $6 billion in planned refinery investments by addressing tax and policy hurdles that have delayed major upgrade projects across Pakistan’s oil refining sector.

A high-level meeting chaired by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb on Thursday signaled renewed momentum for the long-delayed Brownfield Refinery Policy. Officials discussed proposals to exempt machinery imports from sales tax and introduce policy protections aimed at restoring investor confidence in refinery modernization projects.

The meeting was attended by Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik, senior officials from the Finance Division, Petroleum Division, Federal Board of Revenue, Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (Ogra), and representatives of oil refineries. Participants reviewed challenges that emerged after changes introduced through the Finance Act 2024, particularly the shift of petroleum products from zero-rated to sales tax-exempt status.

Industry representatives told the government that the revised tax structure had disrupted the financial viability of refinery projects because input sales tax could no longer be fully adjusted against output liabilities. Refineries warned that the additional tax burden was increasing operational and project costs, creating uncertainty for lenders and investors financing multibillion-dollar upgrades.

Officials said the government is now considering incorporating a stability clause into agreements between Ogra and refineries to ensure that no major policy changes occur during project execution. Another meeting, scheduled for Monday under the chairmanship of the petroleum minister, is expected to finalize proposals before sending recommendations to the Economic Coordination Committee for approval.

According to officials familiar with the discussions, the prime minister has already directed relevant ministries to remove implementation bottlenecks and accelerate refinery upgrade projects.

The government views refinery modernization as critical for long-term energy security, cleaner Euro V-compliant fuel production, lower furnace oil output, and reduced dependence on imported petroleum products.

Industry stakeholders welcomed the government’s renewed engagement and said stable fiscal and regulatory policies were essential for attracting financing and maintaining investor trust in long-term projects. Officials added that several proposals were being reviewed to strengthen cash flow stability, preserve project viability, and protect approved investments from abrupt policy changes.

If implemented successfully, the Brownfield Refinery Policy is expected to modernize Pakistan’s downstream petroleum sector, improve refining margins, enhance environmental compliance, and attract fresh investment into energy infrastructure.

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