Green tax on motorists rakes in £4bn while reducing vehicle emissions only one percent!
LONDON, England - April 24, 2008 -
The
"green
levy" on motorists announced in Alistair Darling's first Budget will
double car tax revenue to £4 billion but reduce vehicle emissions by less than
one per cent, Treasury figures have showed.
The Chancellor announced a
significant increase in car tax in March.
This will result in the owners of
family cars, estates and people carriers paying hundreds of pounds a year more
to use the roads.
Mr. Darling claimed that the duty
increase was designed to encourage motorists to switch to greener cars and to
reduce the environmental impact of driving.
However, the Telegraph has seen
Treasury projections which disclose that while the amount raised from car tax
will more than double - from £1.9 billion to £4.4 billion by 2010 - carbon
dioxide emissions from motoring are expected to drop by less than one per cent.
Justine Greening, a shadow Treasury minister who
obtained the figures, said last night, "This is a massive tax hike which
will have virtually no impact on the environment. Despite their claims, the Government doesn't expect this move to
change behavior at all - it is just another eco-stealth tax of the worst
kind."