Electric Vehicles

Victoria’s EV hit means a sub $20,000 Nissan Leaf pays more tax than a Lexus

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The Driven

The lobbyists behind the bizarre new electric vehicle taxes in South Australia and Victoria claim that new road user charges are a “tax on millionaires” who drive Tesla’s and the like. But they’ve forgotten about all the rich people driving expensive new hybrid cars that are dodging road user chargers.

The new 2.5c a kilometre road user charge to be implemented by the Victoria Labor government means that this second hand  Nissan Leaf – now selling well below $20,000 in the growing used car import market – will attract a charge of around $2.50 for every 100 kilometres travelled.

2012 Nissan Leaf AZE0. Source: Nissan

That’s more than what the owner of this $80,000 Lexus hybrid will pay in levies – it will attract a fee of just $2.15 for every 100 kilometres travelled (five litres per 100kms fuel economy, at 42.3 cents a litre of fuel excise).

Lexus ES Hybrid. Source: Lexus

That’s not a tax on millionaires. That’s a tax on average folk just trying to do the right thing.

And what will the impact on the market be? The federal government’s own modellers make it clear – a 5% increase in the overall costs of an EV, which this new Victoria tax represents, will result in a 2.5 per cent reduction in sales, in a market that is already struggling with high prices and the lowest sales in the developed world.

Why do governments in Australia bow so cravenly to the bullying of powerful lobby groups trying to protect the status quo? This issue could have been so easy to resolve.

It’s outrageous. And you can tell them so here in this stop the clean air tax campaign.

To read the original version of this story, please go to our EV-focussed sister site, The Driven and click here…

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

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