Responding to today's budget,
Greenpeace executive director John
Sauven said:
"Darling's safe pair of hands have
dropped the ball on climate change. Suspending the promised increase in fuel
duty has fatally undermined his boast that this is a green budget, and tinkering
with tax on planes and cars isn't going to reduce emissions when he's also
promising new runways and roads. The Chancellor should have channelled cash into
clean technologies, energy efficiency projects and support for the renewables
industry. On all these counts, his measures have failed to match the scale of
the challenge we face."
The cost
of motoring fell by 10 per cent in real terms (after accounting for growth in household
income) between 1997 and mid-2007. Despite recent fuel price rises, the cost of
motoring is still cheaper in real terms than when Labour came to power in 1997.
Over the same period, rail and bus fares rose in real terms by 6 per cent and 13 per cent
respectively.
Road
transport emissions of carbon dioxide continue to rise and account for nearly
22 per cent of total UK emissions. The government's
Climate Change Programme shows that fuel duty escalator was one of its most
effective measures for reducing carbon dioxide emissions in the late 1990s. The
latest science shows that the UK must cut its emissions by 80 per cent to
play its share in avoiding dangerous climate change. Policies which increase
emissions are incompatible with this goal, and a ½ p rice in 2010 is too little,
too late.
Responding to the Chancellor's
proposals on aviation Greenpeace's senior transport campaigner Anita Goldsmith
said:
"Increasing the revenue from flight
taxes is hypocritical posturing from a Chancellor who wants to see Heathrow and
Stansted almost double in size. The modest carbon savings that might be achieved
by bumping up fares by a few pounds will be wiped out in no time by a third
runway at Heathrow. A truly green Chancellor would have told the aviation
industry their tax subsidies worth billions are being cancelled and the money is
being channelled into the railways. Instead Labour is still committed to more
runways, more emissions and more climate change."
The proposed expansion of Heathrow
would increase flights from 480,000 a year to over 700,000 while plans to expand
Stansted - published yesterday - would see the Essex airport become bigger than Heathrow is now. The
government accepts that aviation currently accounts for 13 per cent of the UK's
climate impact and is rising fast.
Responding to Darling's proposals on
Vehicle Excise Duty Anita Goldsmith:
"This showroom tax is welcome but
the new incentives to drive cleaner cars are too small to spark the kind of
pollution reductions we need to see on our roads. The Chancellor is right to
bash gas guzzlers but it means little while he's also ploughing billions into
motorway widening schemes to make room for more cars."
Responding to the contradiction
between Darling's comments on biofuels and the finding of Julia King's transport
review, published today, Greenpeace Chief Policy Advisor Benet Northcote said:
"At the same time that Alistair
Darling was telling the house he was pressing ahead with the government's
biofuels plans, Julia King's report was published warning ministers that
increasing the efficiency of our cars is a far better way of reducing transport
emissions than encouraging biofuels. Government policy means that in a month's
time motorists will be forced to pump biofuels into their tanks, with no way of
ensuring they're sustainable. This is madness when the science says that most
biofuels are even worse for the environment than fossil
fuels."
Greenpeace press office - 0207 865
8255