ian38_39
Well-Known Member
To my mind it's not really a concession; somebody in the HMRC read the EU rules and seeing the word "propulsion", for once decided to apply that to the letter. Hence the split - propulsion = pay full rate, anything else = reduced rate. on the other side of La Manche I think they treat Red Diesel differently in its other uses.
The quantum (60:40) of the acceptable split was negotiated in the good old British tradition of consensus.
However, I do feel that the numbers made the final price slightly cheaper that supermarket road fuel, which would tend to discourage folks by filling up jerry cans.
So if the "concession" were to be removed that potential problem of pollution would raise its head again.
At the time of the change I saw estimates of £5M being quoted as the extra revenue raised by the additional duty.
But is the £5 million after cost of collection and does it take into account the 60/40 split ie. They are now looking to collect only 40% of that 5 million assuming the buyer has declared at the esstablished norm.
Don't think 2 million before cost of collection is going to make much of a dent and they would be better off putting resources into something more lucrative.