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Archived press release

 


Budget must help tackle climate change

20 March 2006

Friends of the Earth is calling on the Chancellor to make action on climate change a central part of next week's Budget. Despite promising to put the environment at the heart of Government, green taxation has fallen under Gordon Brown, while levels of carbon dioxide have risen.

The Chancellor has failed to adequately address climate change in his previous Budgets:

Friends of the Earth director, Tony Juniper said:

"Green taxes have fallen under Labour, despite promises to increase them when they came to power. At the same time UK carbon dioxide emissions have risen. The Chancellor must seize the green initiative by putting measures to combat climate change at the heart of his Budget. By encouraging people to save energy he will help tackle climate change and cut fuel bills.

"The Government is failing to reduce UK carbon dioxide emissions. A new law is desperately needed to make the Government legally responsible for cutting emissions by three per cent each year, with an annual climate budget to ensure that we are kept on track. The Government must stop dithering and take urgent action now."

Traffic levels have risen under Labour, despite a promise by Deputy Prime Minister, John Prescott, to reduce them. Traffic levels are now about 11 per cent higher than 1997. Last year Government figures revealed that motoring costs fell by seven per cent in real terms between 1997 and the end of 2004. Over the same period the cost of travelling by bus (11%) and train (4 %) rose [6]. According to DfT 'Transport Trends' emissions by source from road transport rose from 32.1 MtC in 1997 to 32.6 MtC in 2003 [7].

The environmental campaign group said that Gordon Brown must put the fight against climate change at the centre of his Budget and has outlined a number of measures he should take to make it cheaper and easier for people to save energy [8].

Friends of the Earth is also calling on the Government to:

Notes

1. HM Treasury - Statement of Intent on environmental taxation

2. National Statistics, Environmental Accounts Autumn 05, table 3.1 (PDF)

3. www.ifs.org.uk/bns/bn55.pdf (PDF)

4. based on www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/ea1105.pdf (PDF), table 3.1

5. If the Chancellor had even kept fuel duty at the same proportion of total taxes, rather than letting them fall, then over 2000-2004 this would have raised £9 billion. The shortfall in 2004 was £3.5 billion, equivalent to:

6. Hansard: 11 Oct 2005

Transport Costs

7. Department for Transport - Section 8: Health and the environment

8. Friends of the Earth's Budget briefing (PDF)

9. "The Department for Transport has published research showing that this would work - wider VED differentials would persuade people to buy a greener car. They say that: "the current graduated scheme does not offer a large enough incentive to encourage behavioural change", and state that wider bands would have an effect: "A differential between bands of £50, would be enough for 33% [of people about to buy a car] to choose a different car". At a differential of £150, 55% of people would choose a greener car."

10. Braintree District Council in Essex offers council tax rebates for home energy efficiency measures.


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For further information please contact the Friends of the Earth media team on 020 7566 1649.

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