| Britain Urged To Replace VAT With Environment Taxes 
    
 UK: February 29, 2008
 
 
 LONDON - The British government should replace VAT, a European 
    Union-regulated tax on goods and services, with environmental taxes to 
    encourage green products, an environmental lobby group said on Thursday.
 
 
 The Green Alliance, an independent think-tank, said such a move to favour 
    environmentally friendly products with differentiated taxes would encourage 
    producers to make them and buyers to chose them.
 
 "We are aiming high in order to get this on the political map. We feel we 
    have got a political hook for it. If you are going to use taxation then 
    probably the more productive way is to exempt the good and tax the bad," 
    Julie Hill, Green Alliance policy expert, said.
 
 The "political hook" she referred to was a rumour that British Prime 
    Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy had been planning 
    to lobby the European Commission to reduce VAT rates on green goods.
 
 Hill said the aim of the report was to provoke discussion inside and outside 
    government on the merits of product levies designed to promote 
    environmentally-friendly behaviour.
 
 "The market still brings forward products that conflict with the 
    government's own environmental goals. Without the right price signals this 
    pattern is set to continue," she said. (Reporting by Jeremy Lovell; editing 
    by Robert Woodward)
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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