British government seeks permission to cut 5p off fuel prices
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-12648814
UK seeks permission to cut 5p off islanders' petrol
Quote:
The government is pushing ahead with plans to cut the cost of fuel for drivers on a number of Scottish islands and the Isles of Scilly. It has asked the European Commission if it can reduce fuel duty by 5p a litre, the BBC understands. Ministers are not allowed to cut fuel duty without getting permission from Brussels first. Labour said prices should be cut for all UK motorists in this month's budget - not just those in remote areas.
Ministers have hinted they could introduce a fuel duty stabiliser - which would see duty fall when the oil price goes up. Duty is due to rise again in April. The plan to ease the fuel price burden on remote rural areas was included in the coalition agreement between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives, but there has been much speculation about whether it would be approved by the European Commission.
The planned pilot would provide a discount of up to 5p per litre of petrol and diesel on the Northern and Western isles, Argyll and Clyde islands and the Isles of Scilly. But it could be autumn before the bid is processed and voted on by finance ministers, European Commission sources have said. Western Isles councillor Donald Manford said high costs threatened businesses and was a cause of depopulation. Under the Energy Tax Directive of the European Union - which the UK is signed up to - minimum rates for fuel duty are set down and each country must have a standardised rate within their borders. UK ministers require permission to lower costs.
No, not for all of us as was hoped when you first read this (and apologies for using the BBC as a news source). But doesn't this just show yet again the amount of power that has seeped away from the elected British government into the hands of unelected politicians in Brussels of which we cannot remove from their positions. When your own government requires permission from an unelected foreign body else to lower such a simple thing as fuel prices for the electorate which voted the government in in the first place, there's something deeply deeply wrong.
I follow the subject closely and even I wasn't aware it also had powers over fuel duty prices.
Thoughts on fuel duty/requiring EU permission to lower our own fuel prices?