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Accelerating the transformation to a low carbon passenger transport system: The role of car purchase taxes,feebates, road taxes and scrappage incentives in the UK
Institution:1. Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK;2. The Centre for Transport Research, University of Aberdeen, St. Mary’s, Elphinstone Road, Aberdeen AB24 3UF, UK;3. Oxford Martin School and Transport Studies Unit, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK;1. IUBH International University, Department of Aviation Management, Germany;2. Technische Universität Dresden, Faculty of Traffic Sciences “Friedrich List”, Institute of Transport & Economics, Germany;3. Molde University College, Department of Logistics, Norway;4. Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Department of Political Science, Italy;1. AREC, University of Maryland, United States;2. CEPE, ETH-Zurich, Switzerland;3. University of Lugano, Switzerland;4. CIDE, Circuito Tecnopolo Norte 117, Aguascalientes, 20313, Mexico
Abstract:The transition to a low carbon transport world requires a host of demand and supply policies to be developed and deployed. Pricing and taxation of vehicle ownership plays a major role, as it affects purchasing behavior, overall ownership and use of vehicles. There is a lack in robust assessments of the life cycle energy and environmental effects of a number of key car pricing and taxation instruments, including graded purchase taxes, vehicle excise duties and vehicle scrappage incentives. This paper aims to fill this gap by exploring which type of vehicle taxation accelerates fuel, technology and purchasing behavioral transitions the fastest with (i) most tailpipe and life cycle greenhouse gas emissions savings, (ii) potential revenue neutrality for the Treasury and (iii) no adverse effects on car ownership and use.The UK Transport Carbon Model was developed further and used to assess long term scenarios of low carbon fiscal policies and their effects on transport demand, vehicle stock evolution, life cycle greenhouse gas emissions in the UK. The modeling results suggest that policy choice, design and timing can play crucial roles in meeting multiple policy goals. Both CO2 grading and tightening of CO2 limits over time are crucial in achieving the transition to low carbon mobility. Of the policy scenarios investigated here the more ambitious and complex car purchase tax and feebate policies are most effective in accelerating low carbon technology uptake, reducing life cycle greenhouse gas emissions and, if designed carefully, can avoid overburdening consumers with ever more taxation whilst ensuring revenue neutrality. Highly graduated road taxes (or VED) can also be successful in reducing emissions; but while they can provide handy revenue streams to governments that could be recycled in accompanying low carbon measures they are likely to face opposition by the driving population and car lobby groups. Scrappage schemes are found to save little carbon and may even increase emissions on a life cycle basis.The main policy implication of this work is that in order to reduce both direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions from transport governments should focus on designing incentive schemes with strong up-front price signals that reward ‘low carbon’ and penalize ‘high carbon’. Policy instruments should also be subject to early scrutiny of the longer term impacts on government revenue and pay attention to the need for flanking policies to boost these revenues and maintain the marginal cost of driving.
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