- Joined
- 3 July 2009
- Posts
- 27,819
- Reactions
- 24,825
Taxing fuel as a means of forcing change will also tend to hurt the poorer half of society who are least able to afford an EV or even a more efficient ICE car.Then the change over has to be forced by increasing tax on fossil fuels, registrations etc, which in the end just costs the taxpayer twice as much.
At this point I think there's enough on the EV bandwagon to declare the outcome and that is batteries, not hydrogen or synthetic fuels, seem the likely winner at least in the medium term.Ford Europe, to join the list of manufacturers changing to BEV's by 2030.
Lol champagne socialists don't give a f**k about poor peopleTaxing fuel as a means of forcing change will also tend to hurt the poorer half of society who are least able to afford an EV or even a more efficient ICE car.
It may well be environmentally progressive but socially it's a very regressive approach.
Certainly would be if such a tax raised billions of dollars for a government.Taxing fuel as a means of forcing change will also tend to hurt the poorer half of society who are least able to afford an EV or even a more efficient ICE car.
It may well be environmentally progressive but socially it's a very regressive approach.
and this includes ICENo matter how good any other approach might be technically
That's exactly what it does, fuel excise goes straight into consolidated revenue.Certainly would be if such a tax raised billions of dollars for a government.
That's exactly what it does, fuel excise goes straight into consolidated revenue.
It's not a road user charge, it goes to the federal government not local councils who maintain most roads or states who do most of the rest, and it's at a rate too high, $184 per tonne of CO2 in the case of petrol and with GST on top, to be reasonably be considered as a sensible carbon tax especially given the lack of any comparable tax on other fossil fuels.
It's an issue that a future government will be forced to face. Excise revenue will diminish over time as EV's become more common and to the extent excise tax is still collected, it will in practice be mostly from the poorer half of society who tend to have older vehicles. A tax on those who don't have enough money to afford a modern car, which by then will by definition mean an EV. Politically, that's playing with fire no matter which side is in power at the time.
I intend that comment as a taxation one in regard to EV's not a political one since it applies equally regardless of which party's in government in the 2030's. At some point government's going to find itself forced to apply a user tax to EV's or drop the idea of taxing road travel altogether.
I'm tipping it to be like when the power company comes & inspects your meter, just the odometer of your car instead.That's exactly what it does, fuel excise goes straight into consolidated revenue.
It's not a road user charge, it goes to the federal government not local councils who maintain most roads or states who do most of the rest, and it's at a rate too high, $184 per tonne of CO2 in the case of petrol and with GST on top, to be reasonably be considered as a sensible carbon tax especially given the lack of any comparable tax on other fossil fuels.
It's an issue that a future government will be forced to face. Excise revenue will diminish over time as EV's become more common and to the extent excise tax is still collected, it will in practice be mostly from the poorer half of society who tend to have older vehicles. A tax on those who don't have enough money to afford a modern car, which by then will by definition mean an EV. Politically, that's playing with fire no matter which side is in power at the time.
I intend that comment as a taxation one in regard to EV's not a political one since it applies equally regardless of which party's in government in the 2030's. At some point government's going to find itself forced to apply a user tax to EV's or drop the idea of taxing road travel altogether.
As I see it, the concept of taxing emissions is a very different one from the concept of taxing petrol specifically.However It would be interesting to hear some comment on the net neutral carbon tax and dividend proposal as fair way to redirect resources to low carbon alternatives.
As smurf and I have said the transition to renewables should be technically driven, not politically driven, that way the best outcome is achieved.
It’s a situation where detail is crucial but, due to technical complexity, easily lost.As smurf and I have said the transition to renewables should be technically driven, not politically driven, that way the best outcome is achieved.
That depends on which news you read....I wonder if that will get splashed all over the news.
Hopefully that's only relevant to LG batteries installed in EV's and doesn't apply to other LG batteries.Bit of a problem for Hyundai . Seems they will need to recall and replace batteries in about 100,000 electric vehicles. Cars, Buses.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?