Undoubtedly eager to improve the take rate of electric vehicles, automakers have a myriad of solutions at their disposal. But the majority have something to do with getting the government involved to futz around with taxes.
Normally, this has to do with making special exceptions for EVs or subsidizing them via rebate programs. But governments seem happy to do this, as increasingly more legislation is advanced that would place restrictions on when and where people will be able to drive internal combustion vehicles, and automakers appear to be getting with the program. We’ve already seen manufacturers choosing sides in America’s gas war and now the Europeans are getting in on the action by demanding higher taxes be imposed on vehicles reliant on gasoline or diesel.
We’ve long been skeptical that a portion of green initiatives are actually self-serving scams, existing primarily to suit the ambitions of various businesses — plenty of which have direct ties to the automotive industry. Nobody wants the environment to be further tainted, so environmentalism becomes a convenient excuse for enacting whatever policies one desires without receiving much scrutiny from the press. But that’s beginning to change as we inch closer to the utopia (a term coined by Sir Thomas More for his 1516 to satirize the concept of a perfect planned society) that’s being envisioned by government regulators and one of the most powerful industry groups in human history.
It has not appeared to slow its advance, however.
In a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal, Audi CEO Markus Duesmann said he would like to see internal combustion vehicles subjected to new fees. But he’s just one of several top executives from various automotive manufacturers that are asking the EU to impose more fuel taxes on vehicles that burn them — that way EVs can become more competitive without the industry needing to make them better in any technical sense.
“We need to tax carbon at the pump,” Duesmann stated.
From WSJ:
Traditional auto makers face a dilemma. The bulk of their business is still building and selling cars with internal-combustion engines—including family cars, big sport-utility vehicles and sports cars. Raising fuel taxes could hurt sales of those vehicles. But unless EVs can compete on price with conventional cars, it will be hard for auto makers to lure customers to them and recoup the vast investments manufacturers have made in the technology.
One avenue for the tax hikes is through carbon pricing — a dollar price on carbon emissions that sets a base for levies and taxes on emissions — which is one of the tools governments have deployed to fight greenhouse-gas emissions. Higher carbon pricing ultimately leads to higher prices for fossil fuels.
Herbert Diess, chief executive of Volkswagen AG, which owns Audi, has been calling for higher carbon-dioxide emissions for some time. He says the €25 price (about $29) Germany sets per ton of carbon emissions is too low and suggests Germany should price carbon more in line with Sweden, which sets the price at €100.
Truck manufacturers are also interested, with the CEOs of DAF, Daimler Truck, MAN, Scania, Volvo, and Ford’s European truck division jointly called for the EU to end support of diesel fuels late in 2020. While it sounds kind of insane, the industry has dumped billions into developing battery or hydrogen driven delivery trucks (something engineers from several of the world’s largest vehicle manufacturers have told me was both brilliant and totally insane/impossible) and envision a future where most cargo haulers are powered by electricity. But it’s not so cut and dried as just building new vehicles, European truck companies also wanted the government to base all future road tolls and fuel taxes on CO2 emissions and to tax energy based on its carbon content at the tailpipe — which would be great news for any fleets burning all of their measurable pollutants as the plant that’s providing the electricity.
“We need cost parity between hydrogen and diesel trucks,” Daimler Truck head Martin Daum was quoted as saying. “You have to switch to [charging for] CO2 and then you can play around with the rate.”
Germany’s biggest auto lobbying group, the VDA, has similarly suggested that the European Union make additional tax exemptions for vehicles that run on electricity or biofuels as a way to discourage customers from buying gasoline/diesel reliant cars. While it seems like a big ask, the government has actually been pretty receptive. The EU already has a plan to introduce new environmental rules over the summer and the presumed scenario involves a strong, organized push for tightening emissions regulations even further.
While we understand that it’s an effective strategy, it doesn’t seem to be one that’s actually catering to customers anymore. Regulations are definitely encouraging more people to buy electric but it’s coming from this twisted marriage between the state and industry that has increasingly less to do with saving the environment. Consumers are not blind to this and there may soon come a day where the backlash is far worse for the industry than any advantages provided by regulation. EVs do indeed seem to be the future. But they need to be gradually improved until they become the kind of vehicles that work for the customer, not treated as square pegs the industry has to hammer into a round hole by some arbitrary deadline determined by government officials and auto executives.
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