| on May 2, 2008, 11:38 AM E.S.T.
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More than seven in 10 voters insist that they would not be willing to pay
higher taxes in order to fund projects to combat climate change, according
to a new poll.
The survey also reveals that most Britons believe "green" taxes on
4x4s, plastic bags and other consumer goods have been imposed to raise
cash rather than change our behaviour, while two-thirds of Britons
think the entire green agenda has been hijacked as a ploy to increase
taxes.
The findings make depressing reading for green
campaigners, who have spent recent months urging the Government to take
far more radical action to reduce Britain's carbon footprint. The UK is
committed to reducing carbon emissions by 60 per cent by 2050, a target
that most experts believe will be difficult to reach. The results of
the poll by Opinium, a leading research company, indicate that
maintaining popular support for green policies may be a difficult act
to pull off, and attempts in the future to curb car use and publicly
fund investment in renewable resources will prove deeply unpopular.
The
implications of the poll could also blow a hole in the calculations of
the Chancellor, Alistair Darling, who was forced to delay a scheduled
2p-a-litre rise in fuel duty until the autumn in his spring Budget,
while his plans to impose a showroom tax and higher vehicle excise duty
on gas-guzzling cars will not take effect for a year. He is now under
pressure to shelve the increase in fuel duty because of the steep rise
in the price of oil.
The public's climate-change scepticism
extends to the recent floods which inundated much of the West Country,
and reported signs of changes in the cycle of the seasons. Just over a
third of respondents (34 per cent) believe that extreme weather is
becoming more common but has nothing to do with global warming. One in
10 said that they believed that climate change is totally natural.
The
over-55s are most cynical about the effects of global warming with 43
per cent believing that extreme weather and global warming are
unconnected.
Three in 10 (29 per cent) of all respondents would
oppose any more legislation in support of green policies, while close
to a third of citizens (31 per cent) believe that green taxes will have
no discernible effect on the environment since people will still take
long-haul flights regularly and drive carbon-heavy vehicles.
Mike
Childs, the head of campaigns for Friends of the Earth, blamed the
Government for generating a cynical response to "green taxes". "People
do get cynical unless they see benefits," he said. "The Government is
playing a dangerous game. They are using climate change to identify
potential new taxes and revenues but the public aren't seeing anything
in return. The public aren't being helped to go green. The Government
could put a windfall tax on the big oil companies and use that money to
insulate homes or introduce a feed-in tariff to pay people to produce
renewable energy."
Mark Hodson, of Opinium Research, said:
"Britain appears to be feeling increasingly negative about being more
carbon neutral. We are questioning the truth behind being greener and
many feel that Government is creating a green fear for monetary gain."
The
findings were released as the Prince of Wales yesterday called on
Britain's business leaders to take "essential action" to make their
firms more sustainable. Speaking in central London to some of the
country's leading chief executives, Prince Charles said: "What more can
I do but urge you, this country's business leaders, to take the
essential action now to make your businesses more sustainable. I'm
exhausted with repeating that there really is no time to lose."
Also
attending the May Day Business Summit, the Prime Minister promised the
Government will set out a "credible" long-term policy framework to help
industry develop innovative low-carbon, resource-efficient products and
services.
He outlined the recommendations of a report, Building
a Low Carbon Economy, for creating a "green" economy, including
"seeking to encourage changes in consumer behaviour".
Gordon
Brown said: "We know that we will only succeed if individuals and
communities, as well as Government and business, are part of the
solution."
Hilary Benn, the Environment Secretary, said: "The
Government is committed to building a low-carbon economy, here and
around the world. That means a complete change in the way we live and
an economic transformation that will put Britain at the forefront of a
technological revolution in the way we use and source our energy." Source
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