Selective Tax Applied on Over 1,600 Items in UAE

Khaled Al Bustani., director-general of the Federal Tax Authority. WAM
Khaled Al Bustani., director-general of the Federal Tax Authority. WAM
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Selective Tax Applied on Over 1,600 Items in UAE

Khaled Al Bustani., director-general of the Federal Tax Authority. WAM
Khaled Al Bustani., director-general of the Federal Tax Authority. WAM

The number of commodities covered by the UAE's selective taxation has been announced as 1,610 items, 60 percent of which are classified as soft drink products, 26 percent as tobacco and its derivatives, and some 14 percent as energy drinks, all deemed as the most damaging to the public's health, the UAE announced Sunday.

The Federal Tax Authority has prepared a list of taxable commodities to assist in the collection process by the authorized parties, the manufacturing companies or importing companies.

The number of items on the list is subject to increase in the future if new brands of tobacco products, soft drinks or energy drinks are introduced to the market, and the selective tax rate varies between 50 and 100 percent.

The number of commodities classified as soft drinks, according to the list prepared by the Federal Tax Authority, is 974 while those classified as tobacco products and its derivatives reached 417, and the number of energy drinks was set at 219 items.

The Federal Tax Authority announced earlier this week that selective tax collections will only be accepted in e-Dirhams, a decision that will boost the government's efforts to adopt an electronic system, keeping the UAE up to date with the latest technologies and providing a high-level of security and efficiency in electronic payments.

The UAE is the second Gulf country after Saudi Arabia to apply selective taxes, which is an indirect tax imposed on commodities that are harmful to public health or the environment.

The purpose of the tax is to limit the consumption of those commodities while contributing to an increase in government revenues.

According to preliminary estimates, the authority expects government revenues to increase to seven billion dirhams annually after the collection of the selective tax.



Saudi Energy Minister Emphasizes Importance of Balancing Growth, Energy Security

Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin Abdulaziz. Photo: Energy Ministry account on X
Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin Abdulaziz. Photo: Energy Ministry account on X
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Saudi Energy Minister Emphasizes Importance of Balancing Growth, Energy Security

Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin Abdulaziz. Photo: Energy Ministry account on X
Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin Abdulaziz. Photo: Energy Ministry account on X

Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman bin Abdulaziz participated in the Energy Transitions Working Group meetings, the 15th Clean Energy Ministerial and the 9th Mission Innovation Ministerial, held this week in Foz do Iguacu, Brazil, where he emphasized the importance of balancing economic growth and energy security.
The meetings focused on sustainable energy policies and equitable energy transitions within G20 efforts to enhance international cooperation aimed at achieving environmental sustainability and supporting innovations in clean energy technologies.
Prince Abdulaziz emphasized the importance of balancing economic growth, energy security, and climate change mitigation. He highlighted the Kingdom's leadership in Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) technologies, as well as its commitment to leading by example in leveraging circular carbon economy technologies, and affirmed the Kingdom's ambition to become a global leader in the production and export of clean energy.
Prince Abdulaziz also outlined Saudi Arabia's efforts to increase its renewable energy capacity, which is expected to reach approximately 44 gigawatts by the end of 2024, and touched upon the establishment of a hydrogen production hub in Ras Al Khair Industrial City, along with a major carbon capture and storage project, which will have a capacity of 9 million tons annually by 2027.