as long as engine size isn't the determining factor, emissions based vrt is the way to go, most diesel cars have larger engines but are much more fuel efficient and subsequently have hugely lower carbon emission.Just to start a good ould debate on budget morning, how would folk respond to VRT on engines greater than 2 liters being substantially increased for people living in Urban areas but no increase on VRT for the same car in Rural Areas….. the rational being to target carbon emissions released when cars are sitting in traffic…
From hearing Morning Ireland this morning it seems that moves are under foot to tax cars according to carbon emissions
home in the sticks my wifes car is an evil eco-destroying range rover which does about 20-25 mpg . it does howerver travel less miles per annum, does not sit in jams and usually has 4-5 occupants. i look forward to the day that some tree hugger attempts to criticise my gas-guzzling suv (both stupid trendy terms that have been stolen from america)
As the poster said, his wifes' RR (stolen from the UK) is not poluting as much as a much smaller car in traffic with one single occupantI dont hug trees (stupid trendy terms that have been stolen from america) but your wifes car making an excessive contribution to the decline of the environment.
If this is meant to be an 'environment' or green tax, then cars should be taxed on how old they are. The older the car, the less the tax.
This is because a car does most damage to the environment at the time of manufacture. A car that lasts 15 years is more friendly than a car that lasts two years.
This scale could be based on engine size etc, factors.
It would encourage people to hang onto cars longer, and repair rather than scrap.
snap !"the environment is not on my list of priorities"
that's astonishing.
the environment is not on my list of priorities. my families comfort and safety are much more important to me. having said that, ill bet it outputs far less pollution per passenger mile travelled than your average corolla/astra etc crawling around dublin.
Just to start a good ould debate on budget morning, how would folk respond to VRT on engines greater than 2 liters being substantially increased for people living in Urban areas but no increase on VRT for the same car in Rural Areas….. the rational being to target carbon emissions released when cars are sitting in traffic…
From hearing Morning Ireland this morning it seems that moves are under foot to tax cars according to carbon emissions
The rural driver could easily be clocking up 20-25k a year in mileage
The urban driver 5 to 6k a year yet have to pay a higher vrt charge whilst producung less pollution
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