The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Treasury faces loss of £5bn as drivers go green

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Chancellor Rishi Sunak could lose almost a third of the revenue raised by car-related fuel duty within eight years because of the shift to green motoring, according to a new report.

The collapse in the sale of new diesel cars in favour of electric models could cause the Treasury’s annual fuel duty income from cars to drop from £16.4 billion in 2019 to £11.4bn in 2028, analysis by the RAC Foundation found.

This £5bn decline is roughly equivalent to what is spent operating, maintainin­g and enhancing motorways and major A-roads in England each year.

Figures from the Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders show battery electric vehicles made up 11.6% of the UK’S new car market last year, up from 6.6% in 2020.

Diesel-powered new cars accounted for 14.2% of all registrati­ons in 2021, down from 19.7% during the previous year.

RAC Foundation director Steve Gooding said Mr Sunak faces a “dilemma” as the growth in electric cars is causing him to lose out on fuel duty, which is nearly 58p per litre for petrol and diesel.

Ministers must soon decide “how and from where they are going to plug the fiscal hole electrific­ation will inevitably cause” as carrelated fuel duty is “heading for terminal decline”, according to Mr Gooding.

The report stated that one possible option would be to raise fuel duty and other motoring taxes such as vehicle excise duty, but that would “hit poorest motorists hardest”.

Another possibilit­y is road pricing, which would involve people paying based on the distance, time and location they drive.

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