The Sunday Telegraph

Green levies ‘to force up cost of weekly shop’

- By Edward Malnick

GREEN levies scheduled to be imposed from next year will increase food prices, pushing up shopping bills by up to £4billion a year, retailers warn today, as senior Tories urged Rishi Sunak to drop the “nonsensica­l” plans.

In an open letter to The Sunday Telegraph, the British Retail Consortium suggests a scheme to charge retailers and manufactur­ers for the cost of councils recycling their packaging will increase the cost of household goods when it is introduced from April next year.

The levy was devised by Michael Gove during his time as environmen­t secretary and was billed as helping the UK to reduce waste and meet its net zero target, along with a separate scheme to introduce a returnable deposit system for the purchase of drinks bottles and cans.

Taken together, the schemes could increase shopping bills by up to £140 per year for each household, based on the BRC’s estimate of an overall £4 billion cost. Officials say the funds raised from retailers will go towards the operation and improvemen­t of local council recycling services, with the fees acting as an incentive for firms to use less packaging.

But the Government’s official impact assessment­s of both policies – seen by this newspaper – acknowledg­e that the entire cost due to fall on retailers could simply be passed on to consumers.

The packaging scheme – called extended producer responsibi­lity – would “most likely” increase household bills by £40 a year, possibly rising as high as £48, according to an official assessment produced in February 2022, before soaring inflation that will have increased those figures even further.

The separate “deposit return scheme” for bottles and cans will add up to 4p to the cost of bottled drinks from next year, a separate impact assessment stated. It is intended to incentivis­e consumers to recycle containers.

The disclosure­s come after The Sunday Telegraph revealed that Downing

Street was seeking an agreement with firms to cap the price of basic foods.

Lord Frost, the former minister, said: “It makes no sense at all to try to cap food prices on the one hand and implement a new tax on food on the other. In a cost of living crisis, what people absolutely do not need is for food prices to go up because we are putting more unnecessar­y costs on business with the spurious justificat­ion of Net Zero.”

Craig Mackinlay, who chairs the Net Zero Scrutiny Group of Tory MPs, added: “If we want hard-pressed families to manage the cost of living crisis, this grocery tax needs to be abolished.”

The scheme effectivel­y places a tax on manufactur­ers and supermarke­ts for the full net costs of collecting and disposing of packaging waste – a cost currently borne by local authoritie­s and funded by council tax.

But there is no suggestion that councils will reduce taxes imposed on local residents when they begin benefiting from the funds.

Under the Government’s “central scenario”, 85 per cent of the total cost of the extended producer responsibi­lity scheme will be passed on to shoppers via price increases – increasing to 100 percent in a “high” scenario - according to an official impact assessment, dated January 2021. The document puts the total annual cost at £1.7billion, which retailers say has risen with inflation.

The separate deposit return scheme for plastic bottles would initially add 4p to the price of a drink, before dropping to 3p, “if the full cost were passed on to consumers”, according to the official assessment. These figures are separate from the returnable cash deposit that would be included in the price.

The future of an equivalent scheme in Scotland is in doubt over the Westminste­r government’s refusal to allow Holyrood to include glass bottles.

In the BRC letter Helen Dickinson, the chief executive, writes: “A raft of new regulation­s and taxes will burden retailers – and ultimately consumers – with higher costs. Just as inflation looks to be turning a corner, these new policies put this at peril. The Government needs to look at these in turn, and consider whether to implement, postpone or scrap each one.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, the former business secretary, said: “On the one hand, the Government is trying to cap prices in shops, and on the other it is piling billions on to our food industry when their supply chains are already under strain.

“The British people will pay the price, with empty shelves in supermarke­ts and more expensive food. If this is our approach to Net Zero, our voters will punish us harshly.”

The BRC claims that many councils do not yet have the recycling facilities needed to put the money to its intended use and say it should be ringfenced.

A spokesman for the environmen­t and food department said: “As the Prime Minister has set out, growing the economy is an immediate priority for this Government.

“Supporting businesses to grow is a crucial part of this – which is why we want to ensure a simple and effective system for our extended producer responsibi­lity and deposit return schemes that benefits both businesses and consumers.

“We have been engaging closely with manufactur­ers, retailers, and packaging companies on the design of these schemes and on delivery plans. We will continue to work with these groups as we finalise plans to ensure the schemes will deliver our environmen­tal goals.”

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