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Comment Re: I thought we were saving the planet? (Score 1) 79

Exempt for the time being. So they’ve got some leeway to try to think of a system that doesn’t penalise UK hauliers while boosting overseas hauliers. Good luck to them with that! I don’t think ti’s going to be straightforward. Maybe they will need to start checking truck mileage at ports, including for foreign vehicles.

Comment Re:according to google.... (Score 1) 79

The UK does not have a hypothecated road tax, no matter how much people think it does or think it ought to. And the costs to the public purse of vehicles are much more extensive than just roads maintenance. There’s NHS costs (respiratory damage, cardiovascular damage, accidents, etc etc), policing, productivity hits from congestion, etc.

Comment Re:Annoying but actually reasonable (Score 1) 79

What they’re proposing is fairly straightforward for the UK, where cars have to pay an annual tax to be on the road and have an annual test (“MOT”) to ensure roadworthiness annually. The plan is that drivers estimate the mileage for the year ahead and pay that as part of their annual tax, and then there’s a reconciliation when the car goes for its MOT.

There’s a few complications to work through, but it’s relatively easy to implement.

Comment Re:Annoying but actually reasonable (Score 1) 79

1. Taxes on ICE vehicles don’t begin to capture the cost externalities associated with their use. Health costs from tailpipe pollutants alone are really significant. It was never a hypothecated tax because (a) the UK doesn’t really do any hypothecated taxes, and (b) the costs aren’t just roads

2. The weight difference between an EV and an ICE vehicle is completely irrelevant for the purpose of road wear. Road wear is essentially entirely caused by large vehicles — buses, lorries, etc — because as you yourself pointed out, it grows as the fourth power. So a 1.5 ton EV supermini causes about 1.8x the damage of the ICE vehicle. But a bus weighing 12 tons causes something like 1,500 times the damage, and a 40 ton artic (= semi) causes something like 30,000x the damage. Even the difference between a heavy UK SUV at 2.5 tons and the 1.3 ton ICE supermini is just unimportant by comparison.

Comment Re:I thought we were saving the planet? (Score 1) 79

I think you’re dancing on the head of a pin, here. All taxes have some edge cases where they create some unfairness, whether income or consumption or property or anything else. The fact that a small number of drivers will have to pay for some miles driven outside the UK is really not that big a deal. It’s a tiny percentage of the total number of vehicles on the road in any one year.

The bigger distortion compared to fuel tax is that the most efficient EV pays at the same rate as the least efficient. Fuel duty was much better in that respect. But a tax per kWh would have been too on-the-nose, I guess, given how people are grumpy about the costs of charging already. Plus, submitting estimates of annual mileage and reconciling each year is a lot easier.

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