The French environment minister has this week unveiled plans for a tax on
non-recyclable throwaway plates and cutlery that looks likely to form part of a
wider package of new green taxes.
The so-called "picnic tax" would see a levy of 0.9 Euros raised on throwaway
plates and cutlery made from non-recyclable cardboard, but would not apply to
plastic tableware.
Newspaper Le Figaro reported that the plans were a forerunner for a wider
range of measures that could see new green taxes levied on 19 product
categories, including fridges, washing machines, televisions, batteries and
wooden furniture.
The changes would be made revenue neutral through the instigation of tax
breaks on a range of environmentally friendly products.
According to Reuters reports, Environment Minister Jean-Louis Borloo told RTL
radio that the proposals were at the planning stage and that no final decision
had been reached.
"We are not completely ready," he said. "It has not been decided on
definitively."
The proposals are the latest in a series of green tax measures proposed by
the French government, which has already seen a so-called "bonus-malus" system
introduced that imposes a higher rate of tax on the most polluting cars and
offers tax breaks to low emission vehicles.
Earlier this year, French president Nicolas Sarkozy joined with UK prime
minister Gordon Brown to propose a reduction in VAT across Europe on
environmentally-friendly products such as energy efficient light bulbs.
The latest news comes in the same week as new figures from the French
Environment and Energy Management Agency,
ADEME, showed that the
country is the second largest generator of renewable energy in Europe.
The new figures showed that the French renewable sector generated revenues of
€33bn in 2007, creating 220,000 jobs in the process and providing 12 per cent of
the country's energy mix.
Hydroelectric power was the leading form of renewable energy, providing 91
per cent of total green energy production. However, the proportion of renewable
energy provided by wind power doubled in 2007 to 3.5 per cent of the total,
while significant gains were also reported in the fields of solar thermal and
photovoltaic power and biomass.
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