The Guardian Australia

Drivers in Australia’s outer suburbs should receive electric vehicle tax breaks, report finds

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Australian workers with long commutes should receive tax breaks for buying electric vehicles, according to a new report into the technology.

The recommenda­tion was one of three policies proposed in a study from KPMG Australia that investigat­ed the uptake of electric vehicles in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.

It found a disparity between the size and age of vehicles used in urban and outer suburban areas and recommende­d government­s introduce “purchase incentives” to boost adoption of electric vehicles in more areas, and accelerate carbon emission reductions.

The study followed targets set by New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland for 50% of new car sales to be electric vehicles by 2030.

KPMG planning and infrastruc­ture economics leader, Ben Ellis, said the study investigat­ed EV uptake suburb by suburb and identified ways to speed up Australia’s transition to electric vehicles.

“Understand­ing EV uptake at a local level provides an opportunit­y for Australia to develop uptake policies and pathways that will help us go from EV laggard to EV leader,” Ellis said.

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“We find that emissions reductions are a local matter and that replacing a convention­al vehicle with an EV in one area will not result in the same benefit as one in another.”

The report, launched at the Infrastruc­ture Sustainabi­lity Council Connect Conference Queensland, identified significan­t difference­s in car-buying behaviour by location.

Australian­s in outer suburbs bought bigger cars and used vehicles for longer, the study found, while Australian­s in inner suburbs used newer and smaller cars.

In Brisbane, for example, inner-city residents used vehicles less than eight years old, while residents on the city’s fringe used vehicles older than 12 years.

Residents in outer suburbs tended to have longer commutes, the study found, and replacing their petrol vehicles with electric models would have a greater environmen­tal benefit.

“If the current trends persist, emissions will be highest in areas with the slowest EV uptake,” Ellis said.

“Replacing one convention­al vehicle in an outer suburb could lead to much higher emissions reductions than replacing one in an inner city.”

The study recommende­d government­s introduce electric vehicle tax breaks for drivers with long commutes to boost their uptake in a policy similar to one introduced in Austria.

Under that policy, workers are given tax exemptions based on the length of their commute if public transport is not available.

Other recommenda­tions included “purchase incentives” for low-cost electric vehicles and lower-income households, an EV import campaign and the introducti­on of petrol emission standards.

Infrastruc­ture Sustainabi­lity Council chief executive, Ainsley Simpson, said the study showed Australia needed a targeted approach to transition­ing from petrol to electric cars.

“Zero emission vehicles have a key role to play in accelerati­ng net zero for the transport sector and for our nations, cities and regions,” she said.

“The KPMG analysis identifies that emissions reductions are a local matter, making it clear at the level of postcodes where the greatest economic, social and environmen­tal benefits can be gained.”

The study comes as the federal government accepts submission­s to its National Electric Vehicle Strategy that asks questions about EV infrastruc­ture, local manufactur­ing and petrol emission standards.

Submission­s on the consultati­on paper close on 31 October.

 ?? Photograph: Mark Baker/AP ?? A KPMG study has found providing drivers in Australia’s outer suburbs with tax incentives to driver EVs would provide greater emissions cuts than those in the inner cities.
Photograph: Mark Baker/AP A KPMG study has found providing drivers in Australia’s outer suburbs with tax incentives to driver EVs would provide greater emissions cuts than those in the inner cities.

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