What's the Govt stance on LPG?
What's the Govt stance on LPG?
Author
Discussion

Uncle John

Original Poster:

5,094 posts

213 months

Sunday 22nd June 2008
quotequote all
Will the price per litre stay roughly the same or will the robbing barstewards increase the duty?

If anyone has any news on which way it may go please tell.

Cheers.

Apache

39,731 posts

306 months

Sunday 22nd June 2008
quotequote all
it's in stasis at the moment, not enough people will buy it because they fear it'll get taxed as soon as they convert their car and the govt aren't taxing it yet because not enough people are using it

HowMuchLonger

3,026 posts

215 months

Sunday 22nd June 2008
quotequote all
3yr EU price limit. i.e. there needs to be 3years notice before the taxation levels can rise.

Mods, a sticky would be helpfull on LPG facts and fiction.

WOO5IE

953 posts

219 months

Monday 23rd June 2008
quotequote all
If they do develope the water powered car as previously reported they will tax H2O until they reach the same level as petrol. They just cant help themselves

So which way do you think LPG will go

When Electric cars take off it will be the same only they will have too use a different excuse other than Green!!

Thats why they want to use a pay as you go tax so it wont matter what fuel you use

just tax,tax,tax the miles

Gonewest

138 posts

212 months

Monday 23rd June 2008
quotequote all
[quote=HowMuchLonger]3yr EU price limit. i.e. there needs to be 3years notice before the taxation levels can rise./quote]

I thought that this time limit was already up ?

Plotloss

67,280 posts

292 months

Monday 23rd June 2008
quotequote all
Price will stay roughly the same until 2011 at least.

thunderbelmont

2,982 posts

246 months

Tuesday 24th June 2008
quotequote all
It's the duty that's supposed to remain constant.
In fact, the percentage "discount" that the EU recommends is more than the UK government gives it, which is why people haven't embraced LPG that much as a road fuel.

Look at it this way, if they encourage more people to use it, they will lose duty, which means that they will have to tax something else to pay for more support groups for some fringe minority freak organisation.
Or more jollys around the world for Golden Brown so he can tell these Johnny Foreigners to pump more oil so he can save his own worthless skin.


herewego

8,814 posts

235 months

Wednesday 25th June 2008
quotequote all
This government have encouraged people to use LPG with grants for conversion as well as reduced duty. Unfortunately the people who went for the conversion were those with the most to gain, i.e. the gas guzzlers which meant that the government were actually inadvertently encouraging people to buy the most fuel consumptive cars. I assume this is why the government is no longer so keen. In my opinion they should have said at the outset that only lower band cars were eligible.

roosevelt

396 posts

283 months

Wednesday 25th June 2008
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Are Gov. grants still available for conversion??

adeelster

90 posts

212 months

Friday 27th June 2008
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I really hope that LPG prices remain the same relative to petrol i.e. half the price. I converted my Lexus GS about 6 months ago and it has been a revelation, a big smooth V6 saloon with the fuel consumption of a Micra.

I was a cynic beforehand but there really don't seem to be any drawbacks, other than the awkward nature of the fuel fillers (it is a pain in the backside compared to petrol but you get used to it). Now I'm just thinking why didn't I go for a BMW 540 V8 instead?!! I just feel this is too good to be true and suddenly the prices will go shooting up.

Incidentally anyone checked out the latest EVO? They tested an LPD'd Renault Megane 225 and said it was fantastic. If these kind of cars can be converted, why not Porsche Boxsters and 350Zs? Actually I saw a converted 350Z for sale on auto trader...