In a series of recent policy and regulatory interventions, the Government has introduced a set of measures aimed at strengthening export competitiveness, easing compliance, and enhancing domestic manufacturing resilience. Together, these measures spanning customs facilitation, import policy, sustainability regulation, and trade support reflect a calibrated policy response balancing trade facilitation, cost competitiveness, domestic industry protection, and sustainability alignment.
Set out
below is a consolidated snapshot of key developments and their corresponding
impact on industry:
|
Circular / Notification |
Key Change |
Impact on Industry |
|
Circular No. 17/2026-Customs dated
31.03.2026 read with Notification Nos. 33 and 34 / 2026-Customs (N.T.) —
Courier Exports and Imports Reform |
Removal of the existing value cap
of ₹10 lakh per consignment on courier exports, enabling shipment of
high-value goods without diversion to conventional cargo channels. |
Enables high-value e-commerce
exports and removes a longstanding barrier for MSMEs, artisans and start-ups. |
|
Circular No. 18/2026-Customs dated
01.04.2026 read with Notification No. 11/2026-Customs dated 31.12.2026 —
One-Time Relief for SEZ Units: Concessional Duty on DTA Sales |
A special one-time relief measure
allowing eligible manufacturing units in Special Economic Zones to clear
manufactured goods into the Domestic Tariff Area at concessional rates of
customs duty, in response to global trade disruptions. Key eligibility conditions
include: |
Provides temporary relief to SEZ
manufacturers, till 31.03.2027, facing sluggish export demand due to
geopolitical disruptions by enabling access to the domestic market at lower
duty rates. |
|
DGFT Notification No. 65/2025-26
dated 19.03.2026 read with DGFT Public Notice No. 51/2025-26 dated 06.03.2026
— RELIEF Scheme and Export Obligation Extension |
The Government has approved the
Resilience and Logistics Intervention for Export Facilitation (RELIEF) scheme
with an outlay of ₹497 crore under the Export Promotion Mission, implemented
through ECGC. The scheme has three components. |
Provides meaningful working
capital relief to exporters facing extraordinary freight escalation,
heightened insurance premiums and war-risk surcharges. |
|
Notification No. 12/2026-Customs
dated 1st April 2026 — Full Customs Duty Exemption on
Petrochemicals and Polymers |
Full customs duty exemption
granted on 40 critical petrochemical feedstocks, intermediates and polymers
in response to supply chain disruptions arising from the West Asia conflict
and closure of the Strait of Hormuz for the period from 02.04.2026 to 30.06.2026.
|
Reduces landed cost of critical
raw materials for a wide range of downstream sectors including plastics,
packaging, textiles, pharmaceuticals, chemicals and automotive components.
Given the temporary nature of the exemption, businesses should plan procurement
and inventory strategies accordingly. The measure partially offsets the price
escalation driven by global supply disruptions, though it does not address
availability constraints arising from route diversions. |
|
DGFT Notification No. 02/2026-27
dated 01.04.2026 — Restriction on Import of Jewellery under CTH 7113 |
Import policy for all items under
Customs Tariff Heading 7113, covering articles of gold, silver and platinum
jewellery, revised from 'Free' to 'Restricted' with immediate effect. |
Tightens oversight over jewellery
imports and closes the FTA misuse route, particularly for silver and gold
jewellery routed through low-duty FTA partners. |
The above measures collectively reflect a multi-pronged policy approach responding to both immediate geopolitical disruptions and longer-term structural objectives around trade facilitation, domestic manufacturing competitiveness and sustainability. While several of the measures are time-bound and targeted, they carry implications for working capital planning, customs compliance, supply chain strategy and contractual commitments
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