VAT should be cut for green purchases such as bicycles, energy efficient light bulbs and wind turbines as part of efforts to encourage people to cut their environmental impact David Cameron has suggested.
According to Telegraph reports, the Conservative leader told business leaders that he yesterday was keen to reward environmentally conscious consumers through a green tax incentives system.
"We need to make the environment something where people want to – and are encouraged to – lead greener lives and differential tax rates are a good example of that," he said.
Cameron's comments echo Gordon Brown's proposals to the EU summit last month that VAT on more energy efficiency electrical appliances and white goods should be cut to five per cent.
VAT negotiations are notoriously difficult as they require unanimous agreement of all member states, but the European Commission has agreed to investigate Brown's idea.
Cameron also called for a VAT loophole to be closed that currently means it can be more cost effective to build a new home than renovate an existing one to improve its energy efficiency. If you renovate your house and make green changes you are currently hit with 17.5 per cent tax, whereas building a house on a green field site incurs no VAT charges, he explained.
His comments follow calls earlier this week from the Communities and Local Government Select Committee for the loophole to be closed and step up efforts to curb emissions from existing housing.
Plans to make energy efficient products cheaper to be aired at EU summit, as Commission President rattles sabre at US and China over post Kyoto deal 13 Mar 2008
US cap-and-trade scheme all but inevitable as all three runners in presidential race endorse trading mechanism 13 May 2008
Leaders agree to a timeline that will see 2020 target to cut emissions by 20 per cent formally adopted next March, and threaten protectionist measures if post-Kyoto negotiations fail 14 Mar 2008
Wind, biomass and microgeneration to be big winners as government details wide-ranging investment and incentive package designed to meet EU renewables targets 23 Jun 2008
Report claiming solar panels take over 100 years to recoup their value is just plain wrong, say manufacturers 05 Sep 2008
Republican attempts to highlight differences over energy policy as both candidates pledge to deliver US energy independence 05 Sep 2008
Once your company has gathered up all the low-hanging fruit, what comes next? Sarah Fister Gale finds that the answer lies in everything from multi-million dollar energy efficiency programmes to printers powered by exercise bikes 03 Sep 2008
Slow journey times mean airships are highly unlikely to replace passenger jets, but, as Danny Bradbury discovers, a flotilla of new companies are convinced that low-fuel costs mean the old-fashioned aircraft could have huge appeal to freight operators 02 Sep 2008
Recent claims from the oil giant's chief executive suggesting tar sand extraction is required to slow the shift to coal may have caught the eye, but as BusinessGreen.com discovers they do not make much sense 28 Aug 2008




