Australia to ditch pollution levy by 2014

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AFP Sydney
Last Updated : Jul 16 2013 | 12:45 PM IST
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd today announced the country's divisive fixed-price carbon tax will be scrapped a year ahead of schedule in favour of a market-driven emissions trading scheme.
As he seeks to build support for his centre-left Labor Party ahead of elections due this year, the newly-reappointed Rudd declared that the unpopular tax, which charges the country's biggest polluters for their carbon emissions, will move to a floating price from July 1, 2014.
"The government has decided to terminate the carbon tax, to help cost-of-living pressures for families and to reduce costs for small business," Rudd told reporters in Townsville.
"From July next year, Australia will move to an emissions trading scheme (ETS), one that is used around the world including in countries like Britain, like Germany and soon in China."
Rudd said the result would be that the carbon price, which was to be fixed at Aus USD 25.40 per tonne for 2014-15, would drop to about Aus USD 6 a tonne, translating into savings of about Aus USD 380 for an average household, mainly due to lower gas and electricity bills, in the first year.
But opposition leader Tony Abbott, who earlier this week described an emissions trading scheme as "a so-called market in the non-delivery of an invisible substance to no one", rejected Rudd's claim that he was "terminating" the tax.
"He's not the terminator, he's the exaggerator," said Abbott, who has vowed to dismantle the carbon pricing scheme if elected prime minister. "He's changed its name, but he hasn't abolished the tax."
Rudd was reinstalled by the Labor Party last month, three years after his own dumping in favour of Julia Gillard over issues including his inability to pass a much-vaunted emissions trading scheme.
Gillard's popularity dived after she vowed not to introduce a pollution tax ahead of the 2010 election and then changed her position, bringing in a deeply divisive levy at the end of 2011 designed to move to an emissions trading scheme within three years.
Bringing forward the start date of emissions trading from July 2015 will cost the budget about USD 3.8 billion over the next four years in lost revenues, which Rudd said would be offset by cuts and a tightening of taxes in some areas.
The prime minister said the changes announced today would still mean that Australia would play its part in reducing carbon pollution to combat climate change.
"I am certain that we are taking the correct action," said Rudd from Townsville, a city on the doorstop of Queensland's Great Barrier Reef, a natural icon which it is feared will be impacted by global warming.
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First Published: Jul 16 2013 | 12:45 PM IST

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