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Texas Continues Its Attack On Electric Cars & Trucks — To Implement $200 Annual Fee On EVs

543 Views 12 Replies 7 Participants Last post by  SeaPhil4
Oy, Texas. … First, Texas decided to not allow people to buy Teslas in the state. It’s a long and complicated story, but the funny thing is that you still can’t go into a Tesla store and buy a Tesla in Texas, yet Tesla’s global headquarters is now located there and “Giga Texas” is set to become one of the largest EV factories in the world. Now, apparently to pay Tesla back a bit, Texas is going to slap a $200 annual fee on EV owners. There’s humor in there somewhere.

I guess this is what you do to show your appreciation for a huge new economic development project, cleaner air, and a livable climate?

The Texas legislation isn’t fully in force yet, so there’s still time for a miracle — but let’s not count on one. The Texas state legislature passed the bill this week and it’s now on Governor Greg Abbott’s desk. Governor Abbott hasn’t exactly been a champion of progressive causes, or anything good ever. He’s been one of the most anti-democratic and anti-progress governors in recent memory. More likely than not, he signs the bill into law and any Texan with an EV gets a new $200 tax/bill to add to their “fun things to do next year” list. There is, of course, a slim chance Elon Musk gives Abbott a call and convinces him to veto the bill while laughing about Republican attacks on human rights, US democracy, and a stable climate.

Overall, while other places are encouraging electric vehicle sales with financial subsidies and stronger fuel economy regulations, Texas is going backwards by disincentivizing electric vehicle purchases.

The argument is that EVs don’t pay to build and repair roads since they don’t pay gas taxes. First of all, gas taxes don’t really cover most road construction and repair these days anyway. States and other levels of government have to tap into other budgets for that since they haven’t been willing to raise gas taxes on the public in decades. I don’t know the exact case in Texas, but I did find the state bragging about the fact that “Texas’ taxes on gasoline and diesel are the lowest among the 10 largest states.” They’re seventh lowest overall in the whole country. So, more likely than not, those frail gas and diesel taxes aren’t covering too much. Secondly, as implied above, we’re at a phase when EV adoption should be incentivized with everything we’ve got, not the opposite, deterred. Sure, go ahead and tax EVs in the future when they make up a big portion of the market and this is truly needed. This is not that time.

Also, as Consumer Reports notes, the $200 annual fee is arbitrary and is possibly just an attack on EVs and EV adoption on behalf of the fossil fuel industry. (Unheard of, I know.) Consumer Reports estimates that, under the logic of the bill, the annual tax should be just $71, not $200. “As EVs continue to grow in popularity and consumers gain interest in accessing cost-effective technology, states need to consider alternative strategies to address the issue of decreasing gas-tax revenues to fund roads and highways,” said Dylan Jaff, policy analyst at CR. “Consumers should not be punished for choosing a cleaner, greener car that saves them money on fuel and maintenance. The fees proposed in this bill will establish an inequitable fee scale for EV owners, and will not provide a viable solution to the long-standing issue of road funding revenue.” So, even if you agreed with the arguments Texas Republicans have put forward, you should conclude $71 is a fair fee, not $200.

All in all, this is a stain on both Texas and the United States as a whole. It’s a policy that clearly and boisterously goes backward. It’s so counterproductive that, even though it’s happening in Texas, it’s hard to believe.
Source: https://cleantechnica.com/2023/04/2...rs-trucks-to-implement-200-annual-fee-on-evs/
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Texas refuses to let floriduh take the “most asinine state” crown without a fight.
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Got my model 3 inspected today. As always, the technician entered the vin, the mileage, checked the lights and wipers and whatnot, charged me $7, and sent me on my way. I was then able to log in and pay my ($75) tax and registration fee online (not allowed until inspection is complete). The entire infrastructure is in place for a 1 cent per mile tax system that would make this much fairer.
i'm in Texas with a Tesla. $200 seems a little high, but i don't have a big problem with it. Would prefer it be per mile or something similar.
I pay $63 in annual gas tax and commute 30 miles a day. When I get an EV the gas equivalent MPG will much than gas engines. So $200 would be an unfair penalty for driving EV.

This essay has some good ideas on how to address any revenue loss. Some are common sense, like raising the gas tax with inflation and indexing it to reduced sales.

BayouCity offered another example. Vehicle miles driven.

These politicians have the easiest jobs. They can't even be bothered to put any real thought into these laws they pass. They're as thick-headed as the OEM auto companies.

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These politicians have the easiest jobs. They can't even be bothered to put any real thought into these laws they pass. They're as thick-headed as the OEM auto companies.
It only looks like that because you are starting with a faulty premise. You assume the politicians are trying to actually do what they say they are trying to do: in this case, replace the lost road tax revenue from EVs in a fair and efficiency manner. What they are really trying to do - always in every circumstance - is get more votes and donations. The rest is ancillary.

So the Texas "Get More Votes and Donations Under the Guise of an EV Tax" bill math looks like this:
Texas Auto Dealers love it so more donations ++
Oil companies love it more donations +++
Tesla does not like it but does not hate it so neutral =
Anti-EV crowd loves it so more votes ++
EV neutral / curious crowd won't notice and won't care for neutral =
EV owners / advocates don't like it, but are a smaller group and they do not hate it they just wish it was implemented better so small negative -

As you can see, this really s just a "Get More Votes and Donations Under the Guise of an EV Tax" bill and it is very well thought-out for that purpose. I mean a Texas Republican is proudly advocating for a long-term, structural tax increase and getting kudos from conservatives for doing it!
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You assume the politicians are trying to actually do what they say they are trying to do: in this case, replace the lost road tax revenue from EVs in a fair and efficiency manner.
I make that mistake a lot.

I think your "politician math" checks out. Using the follow-the-money formula rarely fails with today's elected officials. Nicely done.
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World Green Cartoon Urban design Fictional character
Oil companies love it more donations +++
Its a world-wide serious problem....
At least in North American the people get to voice their concern at the ballot box!
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Very important miss for me:
TOYOTA LOVES IT - taxes EVs and subsidizes hybrids, slows EV adoption. And Toyota matters since its Tundra factory is in San Antonio...
You can definitely feel Toyota's slimy lobbying hand behind this.
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Now signed into law. Goes into effect on September 1. So Fisker can do it's ONE customers in Texas a solid and make sure to get them delivered and registered by August 31 so we can avoid a $400 charge!

Now signed into law. Goes into effect on September 1. So Fisker can do it's ONE customers in Texas a solid and make sure to get them delivered and registered by August 31 so we can avoid a $400 charge!

sept 1 delivery would really suck😂
This shit is so annoying.
I understand there's a difference due to no gasoline taxes, but the math doesn't add up for the average miles driven.
This shit is so annoying.
I understand there's a difference due to no gasoline taxes, but the math doesn't add up for the average miles driven.
The more miles you drive, the cheaper it gets. 20k is $.01 /mile.
For someone who drives 10k the price/mile doubles.
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