Motorists could be charged for every mile they drive on Britain’s roads under plans reportedly being considered by Rishi Sunak.
The Chancellor is mulling over the move to fill a £40 billion tax shortfall caused by the rise in popularity of electric cars, The Times reports.
Road charges are currently limited to schemes such as the London Congestion Zone, the M6 Toll in the West Midlands, the Dartford Crossing, and levies on certain tunnels and bridges.
Under Tony Blair, Labour abandoned the unpopular idea of a national road pricing scheme amid fury at drivers potentially being charged up to £1.50 a mile. A petition against the plans reached 1.8 million signatures.
But Mr Sunak is reportedly ‘very interested’ in the concept of a national road pricing scheme, but it’s unclear how the charges would be calculated.
Currently motorists pay 57.95p in fuel duty for each litre of petrol and diesel they buy – a figure which has been frozen since March 2011.
This brings in £28 billion a year, or 1.3% of national income, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, while VAT on fuel and vehicle excise duty also raises money for the Treasury.
It has recently been reported a proposed ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars will be accelerated to 2030 as part of efforts to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
Edmund King, president of the AA, said that while electric vehicles were good for the environment, they are less so for the Treasury.
He said: ‘The Government can’t afford to lose £40bn from fuel duty and car tax when the electric revolution arrives.
‘It is always assumed that Road Pricing would be the solution but that has been raised every five years since 1964 and is still perceived by most as a “poll tax on wheels”.’
He said the country needed an ‘imaginative solution’, highlighting a proposal he made in 2017 where drivers would be given an allowance of 3,000 miles per year – or more in rural areas – free of charge, and any mile over that would be subject to a fee.
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