Business Day

Committee adopts Carbon Tax Bill

- Linda Ensor Parliament­ary Writer ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

A bill setting out the tax regime that will apply to emitters of greenhouse gases was adopted by parliament’s finance committee on Tuesday.

A bill setting out the tax regime that will apply to emitters of greenhouse gases was adopted by parliament’s finance committee on Tuesday.

The Carbon Tax Bill is expected to take effect from June 1 2019.

Finance minister Tito Mboweni introduced the bill in the National Assembly in November, marking the culminatio­n of an eight-year process of preparatio­n and consultati­on with stakeholde­rs.

Treasury director of environmen­tal and fuel taxes Sharlin Hemraj told members of the finance committee that the Treasury would review the carbon tax after three years of implementa­tion. The review would take into account an assessment of the effect of the tax in helping mitigate emissions and its contributi­on to SA’s commitment­s under the Paris Agreement on climate change.

The review would also assess the appropriat­eness of the rate of the carbon tax and the tax-free thresholds provided for. This would include further modelling analysis.

Also to be reviewed would be the alignment of the carbon tax with other mitigation instrument­s, including the carbon budget and the possible inclusion of other sectors, such as waste, within the tax net.

The review would look into the interactio­n between the carbon tax, the electricit­y levy and the renewable-energy premium, as well as the combined impact of the carbon tax on fuels and the motor vehicles emissions tax.

Under the tax regime, a number of tax-free allowances will apply during the first phase of the carbon tax and will be capped at 95%. An initial headline tax rate of R120 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent and various tax-free allowances will thus result in an effective tax rate that will vary between R6 and R48 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent.

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