The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
The Times World News

.

The High Court decision on electric vehicles will make charging for road use very difficult

  • Written by Jago Dodson, Professor of Urban Policy and Director, Centre for Urban Research, RMIT University
The High Court decision on electric vehicles will make charging for road use very difficult

The High Court of Australia’s decision[1] to invalidate Victoria’s electric vehicle tax has been widely noted as a major judgement in the history of federal-state taxation powers.

In 2021, Victoria introduced a 2.5 cents per kilometre charge for electric vehicles using public roads. Ostensibly this was to compensate for the likely loss of Commonwealth fuel excise revenue from the shift to electric vehicles.

The court’s decision, released last week, effectively expanded the definition of an excise to include any tax that has “a reasonably anticipated economic effect on the pattern of demand”. By imposing a cost on the use of vehicles, and thereby potentially reducing demand for them, the road user charge is an excise.

At the time of federation in 1901, automobile technology had advanced to the level of a “motorised dog cart powered by kerosene[2]”. There is no constitutional right to operate a motor vehicle on public roads, yet the High Court has given the Commonwealth the right to charge for motor vehicle use on roads.

In making this decision, the court has gravely weakened the capability of the states to set, regulate and fund metropolitan transport planning objectives.

Traffic congestion on the West Gate bridge
The court found only the Commonwealth, not the states could impose an excise. AAP[3]

Australians rely heavily on private vehicles

Between 68 per cent (Sydney[4]) and 75 per cent (Brisbane[5]) of travel in Australia’s major cities is by private motor vehicle, making them the most unsustainable national grouping within a developed country outside the United States. Car dependence causes various problems that are not adequately accounted for in current pricing regimes.

These include carbon emissions, productivity costs of congestion, traffic deaths and injuries to people and animals, respiratory and systemic diseases from exhaust and tyre particles, and cardiovascular disease from sedentary behaviour.

Because they generate many of the negative impacts of conventional vehicles, electric vehicles are not a sustainable mode of urban transport. And there is increasing recognition that moving from internal combustion engine vehicles to electric vehicles won’t reduce the impact of climate change within emergency timeframes.

The best way to reduce damage from car use in cities is to reduce usage overall. Along with regulatory measures that impede, exclude, ban or ration use of cars, taxes, levies, charges and prices are important mechanisms.

Since the 1980s, various agencies have argued the societal costs of motor vehicle use are under-estimated. The Henry Tax Review [6](2010), the last major comprehensive review of national taxation argued a combination of road specific congestion charges, network access charges and a variable charge such as fuel tax, should be applied to vehicle use costs.

This approach has been echoed in further advice from the Productivity Commission, Infrastructure Australia and Infrastructure Victoria, as well as by motorist groups such as the RACV.

Trucks and cars using a Melbourne road. More than 70 per cent of travel in Australia is by private vehicles, one of the highest rates in the developed world. AAP[7]

The states are losing control of managing their roads

The High Court decision to reserve congestion and generalised road use charging to the Commonwealth severely limits states capacity to manage the costs of urban car use by way of taxes, charges, levies or fees, such as under section 1(d) of the Victorian Road Safety Act 1986[8]. The section seeks to ensure “the equitable distribution within the community of the costs of road use”.

But, if Victorians now voted for road user charging to shift the 71% of travel currently undertaken by car[9] in Melbourne to sustainable modes, they would be refused by the Constitution.

Read more: Made in Australia? The electric vehicle revolution gives us a chance to revive an industry[10]

Any future desire to achieve more sustainable levels of car use of 30-40% of travel, as found in cities like Seoul[11], London[12] or Paris[13] - or 12% in Tokyo[14] - would be impossible to achieve using road pricing, without Commonwealth involvement.

Meanwhile, the Commonwealth lacks a mechanism to collect road user charges. It would need to duplicate the states motor vehicle registration systems, roll out an equivalent system via the ATO, or rely on state cooperation.

A new tussle between the Commonwealth and states is foreseeable over the level of charge, the costs of collection and distribution formula, as well as any differential calibrations. It could be the Commonwealth sets a uniform national road users charge but allows states to add their own loadings to meet their transport objectives.

Generic image of a Melbourne freeway
There is set to be disagreement between the states and the Commonwealth over road charges. AAP[15]

There may however be workarounds for states to impose per kilometre road user charges on electric vehicles. Victoria could impose an extra levy per kilowatt hour of electricity charged to an EV, for example, given there the close relationship between distance driven and kilowatt-hours consumed. It would be an adventurous High Court that decided the Commonwealth was responsible for setting electricity tariffs.

Read more: The human factor: why Australia's net zero transition risks failing unless it is fair[16]

Another workaround could be to vest Victoria’s roads within a commercially mandated state-owned corporation responsible for full cost recovery for road use. Road user charges would not comprise excise but rather a commercial transaction between the corporation providing the road service and the motorist paying to use the service.

Australian cities need to move quickly and decisively away from the car as a means of urban transport. Given its opposition to the Victorian road user charge and its newly confirmed powers over urban transport pricing, it is incumbent on the Commonwealth to present a coherent plan to reduce car use in cities.

Although the Commonwealth is currently developing a net zero transport and infrastructure roadmap[17], this needs to be urgently broadened to a national strategy for sustainable urban transport, coordinated with the states, and including clear, effective and accelerated ways of reducing car use in cities.

References

  1. ^ decision (www.lawyersweekly.com.au)
  2. ^ motorised dog cart powered by kerosene (researchrepository.rmit.edu.au)
  3. ^ AAP (photos.aap.com.au)
  4. ^ Sydney (www.transport.nsw.gov.au)
  5. ^ Brisbane (public.tableau.com)
  6. ^ Review (treasury.gov.au)
  7. ^ AAP (photos.aap.com.au)
  8. ^ Victorian Road Safety Act 1986 (classic.austlii.edu.au)
  9. ^ 71% of travel currently undertaken by car (public.tableau.com)
  10. ^ Made in Australia? The electric vehicle revolution gives us a chance to revive an industry (theconversation.com)
  11. ^ Seoul (www2.deloitte.com)
  12. ^ London (www2.deloitte.com)
  13. ^ Paris (www2.deloitte.com)
  14. ^ 12% in Tokyo (www2.deloitte.com)
  15. ^ AAP (photos.aap.com.au)
  16. ^ The human factor: why Australia's net zero transition risks failing unless it is fair (theconversation.com)
  17. ^ roadmap (www.infrastructure.gov.au)

Read more https://theconversation.com/the-high-court-decision-on-electric-vehicles-will-make-charging-for-road-use-very-difficult-216107

Active Wear

Times Magazine

Kindness Tops the List: New Survey Reveals Australia’s Defining Value

Commentary from Kath Koschel, founder of Kindness Factory.  In a time where headlines are dominat...

In 2024, the climate crisis worsened in all ways. But we can still limit warming with bold action

Climate change has been on the world’s radar for decades[1]. Predictions made by scientists at...

End-of-Life Planning: Why Talking About Death With Family Makes Funeral Planning Easier

I spend a lot of time talking about death. Not in a morbid, gloomy way—but in the same way we d...

YepAI Joins Victoria's AI Trade Mission to Singapore for Big Data & AI World Asia 2025

YepAI, a Melbourne-based leader in enterprise artificial intelligence solutions, announced today...

Building a Strong Online Presence with Katoomba Web Design

Katoomba web design is more than just creating a website that looks good—it’s about building an onli...

September Sunset Polo

International Polo Tour To Bridge Historic Sport, Life-Changing Philanthropy, and Breath-Taking Beau...

The Times Features

NRMA Partnership Unlocks Cinema and Hotel Discounts

My NRMA Rewards, one of Australia’s largest membership and benefits programs, has announced a ne...

Restaurants to visit in St Kilda and South Yarra

Here are six highly-recommended restaurants split between the seaside suburb of St Kilda and the...

The Year of Actually Doing It

There’s something about the week between Christmas and New Year’s that makes us all pause and re...

Jetstar to start flying Sunshine Coast to Singapore Via Bali With Prices Starting At $199

The Sunshine Coast is set to make history, with Jetstar today announcing the launch of direct fl...

Why Melbourne Families Are Choosing Custom Home Builders Over Volume Builders

Across Melbourne’s growing suburbs, families are re-evaluating how they build their dream homes...

Australian Startup Business Operators Should Make Connections with Asian Enterprises — That Is Where Their Future Lies

In the rapidly shifting global economy, Australian startups are increasingly finding that their ...

How early is too early’ for Hot Cross Buns to hit supermarket and bakery shelves

Every year, Australians find themselves in the middle of the nation’s most delicious dilemmas - ...

Ovarian cancer community rallied Parliament

The fight against ovarian cancer took centre stage at Parliament House in Canberra last week as th...

After 2 years of devastating war, will Arab countries now turn their backs on Israel?

The Middle East has long been riddled by instability. This makes getting a sense of the broader...