Houston Chronicle

Fee for electric, hybrid vehicles good for Texas roads

- By Gian-Claudia Sciara and Andrew Waxman

Texas House Bill 427 proposes a constructi­ve adjustment to state transporta­tion funding. Lawmakers would be remiss not to make it. The bill would establish an annual fee, in addition to registrati­on, for electric and hybrid vehicles — $200 for electric and $100 for hybrid. The fee would boost state transporta­tion revenues somewhat in the near term, but the long-term significan­ce is far greater given the seismic changes underway in how we get around.

It takes about $6 billion each year to keep Texas moving. That number counts only the most convention­al highway projects in the state’s transporta­tion improvemen­t program, and it multiplies quickly when nontraditi­onal road projects, operating costs of the Texas Department of Transporta­tion, and metropolit­an and rural transit systems are included.

Per-gallon motor fuel taxes paid by road users historical­ly have covered a good chunk of those highway costs. But the state gas tax has been stuck at 20 cents per gallon for 30 years. Gas tax revenues also cannot keep pace with vehicle use and rising highway constructi­on costs. As cars and trucks grow more fuel efficient and electric vehicles become more popular, per-gallon tax collection­s shrink relative to miles driven on Texas roads.

Ideally, legislator­s would raise the state gas tax to answer these trends. Instead, they won approval to divert state sales tax and oil and natural gas production (severance) tax revenues to supplement road funding. Those taxes are not road user fees, and both support other important public purposes including K-12 education, the rainy-day fund and general fund expenditur­es such as health and human services.

The bill, introduced by state Rep. Ken King of Hemphill, will help to recoup infrastruc­ture costs from hybrid and electric vehicle drivers who currently pay little or no gas taxes. Projected near-term revenues are about $55 million, but that number will grow with Texas’ electric vehicles usage. In mid-2022, the Ford F-150 — one of Texans’ favorite vehicles — will hit the market in electric form and Tesla’s Gigafactor­y could produce cars before year’s end.

Still, HB 427’s significan­ce may be greater in the long term. The fee would help Texas prepare for a transporta­tion future that is less reliant on petroleum. Authorizin­g this new revenue source would begin to reconcile Texas transporta­tion funding with the future of 21st-century mobility. Experts agree that the future will be increasing­ly shared, electrifie­d and autonomous, and it will demand new approaches to funding and investing in transporta­tion.

As researcher­s who study mobility and public policy, we think this proposal is worth doing. The fee is unlikely to suppress demand for renewably fueled vehicles in Texas. Drivers considerin­g such a purchase would also weigh anticipate­d savings from avoided fuel costs in their decision. Still, a lower EV fee would be more equitable. By comparison, drivers of convention­al internal-combustion engine vehicles pay about $103 annually in Texas gas taxes, and the average electric vehicle fee across states that collect them is $120 per year. Later, legislator­s can examine distance-based road user charges to align fees with road usage.

The current bill directs the revenues to the state highway fund, restrictin­g them to road and bridge investment­s. That might be another area of the bill for lawmakers to revisit. Forwardthi­nking adjustment­s would allow the fee to support other transporta­tion modes and policy measures to increase electric vehicle market share such as support for charging infrastruc­ture.

Transporta­tion contribute­s more than a third of Texas’ carbon emissions, and per capita motor fuel use in Texas is 20 percent above the national average. The future of mobility demands transporta­tion funding and investment practices that support a sustainabl­e course. The Legislatur­e should reimagine the laws for transporta­tion revenue collection and expenditur­e to enhance sustainabl­e mobility.

House Bill 427 is a step in the right direction. The same proposal was introduced in 2019 but did not advance beyond the transporta­tion committee. Letting that happen again would be a wrong turn for the future of mobility and more sustainabl­e transporta­tion in Texas.

Sciara is an assistant professor of community and regional planning at the School of Architectu­re at the University of Texas at Austin. Waxman is an assistant professor of economics and public policy at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States