Filed under: articles, daily life, environment, news, politics, products, shopping
From AP:
“Plastic forks, disposable diapers, drafty houses _ if it hurts the environment, make it cost more. That’s the message France’s government wants to send with a raft of proposed new taxes.
France’s ecology minister said Sunday the government is considering a “picnic tax” on disposable dishes to encourage people to use reusable plates and cups instead.
Speaking on Europe-1 radio, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet said the plan wouldn’t stop at picnicware. For example, she said, “We could make it so that in all public maternity wards, you would be taught to use washable diapers.”
She said a new carrot-and-stick plan already applied to cars is being spread to other environmentally damaging products such as paints and detergents.
The plan offers a bonus of up to $7,000 to buyers of fuel-efficient cars, but as of next year it will slap extra fees of up to a few thousand euros (dollars) on the cost of heavy polluters like SUVs.
The idea is meant to change the habits of both consumers and manufacturers by getting people to calculate the environmental cost of their waste, though some critics _ even within the Finance Ministry _ fear it could crimp growth.
Kosciusko-Morizet said the plan could be spread to some 20 other types of products, from paints to household appliances and detergents. She said the tax would be determined based on the “recyclability” of the product, among other things.
And she said it could even be extended to homes, based on how energy-efficient they are.
The financial details of the taxes have yet to be worked out. Some will be introduced in the 2009 budget, which the government will present at the end of the month.”
tags: france, environment tax, picnic tax
4 Comments so far
Leave a comment
That will possibly help paying for the bad computations they did with the green bonuses and maluses on cars which costed so far 200 millions euros.
Comment by Pascal Tempier 09.16.08 @ 5:52 amThey’re probably rescuing the banks… Even with the huge fees that they take from their customers, they manage to lose money…
Comment by Calimero 09.16.08 @ 6:53 amLeave a comment
E-mail addresses are never displayed - If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting. HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

























Ok great but just adding a few cents on those products will not stop people from buying them.
Comment by milto 09.15.08 @ 12:22 pmThen, the question is, what does the government do with the money collected? I am a bit worried that it is not used to protect the environment in any way but for other purposes.
I could be wrong but…