A significant legal debate has resurfaced under the erstwhile Cenvat Credit regime after two recent rulings of the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal (CESTAT) — one from Hyderabad and another from Chandigarh — examined whether electricity can be treated as “goods”, “exempted goods”, or even “non-excisable goods” for the purpose of Rule 6 of the Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004.
Interestingly, while both Benches ultimately ruled in favour of the assessee, the reasoning adopted exposes a deeper contradiction in indirect tax jurisprudence relating to the legal character of electricity.
The controversy essentially revolves around a fundamental question: if electricity is not “goods” or not “excisable goods”, then what exactly is the legal nature of electricity under Central Excise law?
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Hyderabad CESTAT: Electricity Is Not “Exempted Goods”
In M/s Madhucon Sugar & Power Industries Ltd. v. Pr. Commissioner of Central Tax [JURISHOUR-1210-CES-2026(HYD)], the Hyderabad Bench dealt with a demand exceeding ₹1.17 crore raised under Rule 6(3) of the Cenvat Credit Rules.
The Department alleged that since the assessee generated electricity in its captive co-generation plant and sold a portion of the surplus electricity outside, the assessee was required to reverse proportionate input service credit. According to the Department, electricity falls under Tariff Heading 2716 0000 and since no duty was payable on electricity, it constituted “exempted goods”.
The Hyderabad Bench rejected this entire foundation.
Relying heavily upon the Allahabad High Court judgment in Gularia Chini Mills v. Union of India, later affirmed by the Supreme Court, the Tribunal held that electricity cannot be treated as “exempted goods” because Rule 6 applies only to “excisable goods”.
The Bench noted that although electricity may appear in the tariff schedule, no rate of duty is actually prescribed against it. Consequently, electricity does not qualify as “excisable goods” under Section 2(d) of the Central Excise Act.
Once electricity itself ceased to qualify as excisable goods, Rule 6 became inapplicable altogether.
The Hyderabad Bench therefore concluded that reversal of Cenvat credit merely because surplus electricity was sold outside the factory was legally unsustainable.
Chandigarh CESTAT: Electricity May Be Non-Excisable, But Credit Still Allowed
In M/s Shahabad Co-Op Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of CE & ST, Panchkula [JURISHOUR-1209-CES-2026(CHAN)], the Chandigarh Bench examined a different but closely connected issue.
Here, the Department denied Cenvat credit of nearly ₹4.97 crore on capital goods and inputs used for erection of a captive power plant. The Department argued that the power plant constituted a non-excisable structure and that electricity generated therefrom was exempted/non-excisable, thereby attracting Rule 6(1) and Rule 6(4) of the Cenvat Credit Rules.
Unlike the Hyderabad ruling, the Chandigarh Bench did not directly enter into the larger debate on whether electricity is “goods” or “not goods”.
Instead, it proceeded on a narrower legal basis.
The Tribunal held that the capital goods were used within the factory and that part of the electricity generated was captively consumed in manufacture of dutiable products like sugar and molasses. Therefore, the machinery could not be regarded as being used exclusively for exempted goods.
Thus, even assuming electricity was exempted or non-excisable, Rule 6(4) itself would not bar credit because captive consumption existed.
The Bench therefore allowed the credit and quashed the demand, interest, and penalty.
The Real Contradiction: What Exactly Is Electricity?
The apparent contradiction between the two rulings lies not in the final outcome — both favour the assessee — but in the legal treatment of electricity itself.
The Hyderabad Bench effectively held:
- Electricity is not “exempted goods”
- Rule 6 cannot apply at all
- Electricity is not “excisable goods” because no duty rate exists
The Chandigarh Bench, however, proceeded as though:
- Electricity may still fall within the framework of exempted/non-excisable output
- Rule 6 can potentially apply
- But credit survives because electricity was partly captively consumed
This creates an important jurisprudential tension.
If electricity is not “excisable goods” at all, as held in Gularia Chini Mills, then the entire Rule 6 machinery should collapse at the threshold. There would be no need to examine captive consumption, exclusive use, or proportionate reversal.
However, if Rule 6 continues to apply to electricity generation cases, then electricity is indirectly being treated as a form of exempted output for Cenvat purposes.
Is Electricity “Goods” Under Law?
The answer depends upon the statute being examined.
Under constitutional law and sales tax/VAT jurisprudence, the Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized electricity as “goods” because it is capable of transmission, transfer, delivery, storage, and consumption.
However, Central Excise law operates differently.
Under Section 2(d) of the Central Excise Act, goods become “excisable goods” only when:
- They are specified in the tariff, and
- A duty of excise is leviable upon them.
The Hyderabad Bench emphasized the second condition.
Since no effective rate of duty exists on electricity, it ceases to qualify as “excisable goods” for Rule 6 purposes.
Thus, electricity may be “goods” in a constitutional or commercial sense, but not necessarily “excisable goods” under Central Excise law.
That distinction is precisely where the legal confusion emerges.
Why These Rulings Matter
These rulings are extremely important for industries operating captive power plants, especially sugar mills, steel plants, cement manufacturers, and heavy industrial units generating surplus electricity.
The Hyderabad ruling gives taxpayers a far stronger defence because it attacks the very applicability of Rule 6 itself.
The Chandigarh ruling, though favourable, still leaves room for departmental arguments on proportionate reversal wherever electricity is sold outside.
If future Benches follow Hyderabad’s reasoning strictly, many pending Rule 6 disputes involving electricity reversal may fail entirely.
However, if courts continue adopting the Chandigarh approach, litigation may persist over the extent of captive consumption and exclusive usage.
The Bigger Legal Question Remains Unsettled
The deeper unresolved issue is this:
Can something simultaneously be:
- “goods” for constitutional law,
- “non-excisable” for excise law,
- and yet “exempted” for Rule 6 purposes?
The Hyderabad ruling suggests the answer is “No”.
The Chandigarh ruling implicitly suggests the answer may still be “Yes” in certain contexts.
| Particulars | Hyderabad CESTAT Ruling | Chandigarh CESTAT Ruling |
| Case Title | M/s Madhucon Sugar & Power Industries Ltd. v. Pr. Commissioner of Central Tax | M/s Shahabad Co-Op Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of CE & ST, Panchkula |
| Citation | JURISHOUR-1210-CES-2026(HYD) | JURISHOUR-1209-CES-2026(CHAN) |
| Bench | Angad Prasad (Judicial Member) and A.K. Jyotishi (Technical Member) | Justice S.S. Garg (Judicial Member) and P. Anjani Kumar (Technical Member) |
| Nature of Dispute | Reversal of input service credit on electricity sold outside | Denial of Cenvat credit on capital goods and inputs used in captive power plant |
| Amount Involved | ₹1.17 Crore | ₹4.97 Crore |
| Department’s Main Argument | Electricity is “exempted goods” under Rule 6 because no excise duty payable | Power plant/electricity generation relates to exempted/non-excisable output |
| Rule Invoked | Rule 6(3) of Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 | Rule 6(1) and Rule 6(4) of Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 |
| Type of Credit Involved | Input service credit | Capital goods and input credit |
| Department’s Stand on Electricity | Electricity falls under Tariff Heading 2716 0000 and should be treated as exempted goods | Electricity generation treated as exempted/non-excisable activity |
| Core Legal Issue | Whether electricity is “exempted goods” at all | Whether credit is barred when electricity partly supplied outside |
| Assessee’s Defence | Electricity is not excisable goods; Rule 6 itself inapplicable | Capital goods used in factory for dutiable products; not exclusively for exempted goods |
| Key Judicial Reliance | Gularia Chini Mills v. Union of India affirmed by Supreme Court | Indian Oil Corporation Ltd., HEG Ltd., Nizam Deccan Sugars Ltd. |
| View on Electricity | Electricity is not “excisable goods” because no duty rate specified | Tribunal did not conclusively decide whether electricity is goods/exempted goods |
| Whether Electricity Treated as Exempted Goods? | No | Indirectly assumed possible for Rule 6 analysis |
| Applicability of Rule 6 | Rule 6 completely inapplicable | Rule 6 may apply, but conditions for denial not satisfied |
| Tribunal’s Core Reasoning | Once electricity is not excisable goods, Rule 6 collapses entirely | Credit allowed because electricity partly captively consumed in dutiable manufacture |
| Captive Consumption Relevance | Secondary issue; not necessary after Rule 6 held inapplicable | Central factor for allowing credit |
| View on Sale of Surplus Electricity | Sale outside factory does not trigger reversal | Supply to State electricity utility does not defeat credit eligibility |
| Treatment of Power Plant | Integral part of manufacturing unit | Capital goods validly used within factory |
| Final Outcome | Demand, interest and penalty set aside | Demand, interest and penalty quashed |
| Broader Legal Impact | Stronger precedent against Rule 6 reversal on electricity | Limited protection based on partial captive consumption |
| Jurisprudential Effect | Electricity cannot be treated as exempted goods under Rule 6 | Electricity may still remain within Rule 6 framework in certain cases |
| Bigger Legal Message | “No excisable goods = No Rule 6” | “Even if Rule 6 applies, credit may survive” |
| Nature of Relief | Foundational attack on Rule 6 applicability | Factual/usage-based relief |
| Impact on Future Litigation | Could defeat entire category of electricity reversal demands | May continue litigation on proportionate captive use and reversals |

