awol
Well-Known Member
The handy jetty - where!
Don't you have jetties down south? Where do the fishing boats unload?
The handy jetty - where!
Don't you have jetties down south? Where do the fishing boats unload?
Don't you have jetties down south? Where do the fishing boats unload?
Not many fishing boats in the Solent. There's a few tiny one-man day boats up the river from me which could probably unload into an estate car; there isn't a fish quay as far as I know. There is a pontoon intended for fishing boats at Warsash I believe. Don't know of any anywhere else.
All jetties, pontoons, piers, quays, etc etc etc are owned by someone whose aim is to extract money from anyone who goes near it.
I wouldn't choose to sail in the Solent, I just happen to live here
Pete
perhaps im being a touch naive but isnt there a much simpler solution?
the problem is simply one of duty is it not?
so,dont put dye in the fuel. initiate a leisure boat owners register for the purchase of reduced duty fuel which is linked to the owners debit/credit card and linked to the owners boat.
Besides, we are not allowed to charge more than one rate of duty for the same fuel
But we do - hence the 60/40 fudge.
"Guess" being the operative ... Altogether too many postings on the red diesel topics that bandy unresearched figures around.I guess that over the entire UK, which includes inland waterways, less than 1 out of every 1000 boats ever goes foreign. For areas such as the Solent, where marinas are ten a penny and more than average boats go abroad, surely at least one could stock white?
I guess that over the entire UK, which includes inland waterways, less than 1 out of every 1000 boats ever goes foreign.
That's not correct. The problem is the use of marked fuel. If marinas sold unmarked gas oil at a lower rate of duty, how much do you think would end up in cars ? Besides, we are not allowed to charge more than one rate of duty for the same fuel, unmarked gas oil would be the same as tractor diesel so both would have to have the same level of duty.
yes, the marking of the fuel has become a problem in belgium but the issue the eu commission has is with duty.
i do, however, have an alternator which charges my batteries. if i get an electric blowy heater will that count?
No need to get a blowy heater. If you feel that you are using 40% of your fuel to run the engine for battery charging, claim the split. It isn't a heating allowance, it's for non-propulsion purposes.
This is something I don't get.
If it's not to go somewhere, why would you even get a boat?
Surely, you can't keep going round the cans for ever and a day?
Probably just me.
So, realistically, this is a problem that affects south and east coast sailors. I am, of course, sympathetic and understand the problem - but why should many sailors who have no intention or capability of going to the EU pay higher duty? If I were thinking of going overseas, I'd be looking at the Faeroes, Iceland and Norway (none of which are EU countries), and I guess the same is true of many others who sail. The only other foreign destination of interest is Eire, and people seem to be saying that red diesel is not likely to be a problem there!
Who said anything about higher duty. HMG can allow marinas to sell the white diesel with a 60/40 split. It's about supply of the white diesel.
Who said anything about higher duty. HMG can allow marinas to sell the white diesel with a 60/40 split. It's about supply of the white diesel.
As I understand it, no they can't because EU regulations require reduced duty fuel to be marked in a very specific way.
As I understand it, no they can't because EU regulations require reduced duty fuel to be marked in a very specific way.
As someone who is 'intelligent...competent,...real...sensible...and capable of problerm solving at a high level' what would you do - given that you have to start from a point where red diesel exists and the Europeans won't accept it?
As someone who is 'intelligent...competent,...real...sensible...and capable of problerm solving at a high level' what would you do - given that you have to start from a point where red diesel exists and the Europeans won't accept it?