The tax dispute between PT GHEI and the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) arose from differing interpretations of the economic substance within a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA). The conflict centered on whether infrastructure components (Component E) could be taxed separately from VAT-exempt electricity delivery.
The Defendant issued a penalty claiming that transmission line construction (Component E) should be subject to VAT, arguing it is an infrastructure investment separate from the electricity output. Conversely, PT GHEI argued that all cost components in the PPA are integral elements forming the Electricity Selling Price. Without the network, delivery is impossible; therefore, the entire billing qualifies for the VAT-exempt facility under PP 81/2015.
The Tax Court Judges supported the Plaintiff, ruling that Selling Price is the total monetary value including all costs requested by the seller. The Judges assessed that Component E serves as compensation for the availability and delivery of electrical power. The Court reaffirmed that the Defendant's attempt to isolate price components lacked a strong legal basis under the VAT Law.
The cancellation of the IDR 1.02 billion penalty serves as an important precedent: tax authorities cannot unilaterally break down price components in a bundled contract to create new taxable objects. This ruling reinforces legal certainty for energy sector players, protecting the integrity of long-term PPA contracts from arbitrary recharacterization.
In conclusion, the Plaintiff's victory highlights that as long as formal requirements are met and the substance is consistent with the contract, administrative sanctions cannot be sustained. Taxpayers are advised to clearly document the nexus between infrastructure costs and primary service delivery to safeguard tax facilities.
A Comprehensive Analysis and the Tax Court Decision on This Dispute Are Available Here