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Britain will scrap carbon tax on electric generation in April 2028

By ?Susanna Twidale

LONDON 16 APRIL - Britain will scrap its carbon 'tax' on electricity production in April 2028. The?government announced this on Thursday as it tries to control the rising cost of energy. The Carbon Price Support tax was introduced in Britain on April 13, 2013 to make coal power more expensive and help meet its climate targets.

In the budget of last year, the government set a tax of 18 pounds ($24), per metric ton of carbon dioxide, until April 2028. "CPS is no longer suited to its original purpose. Dan Tomlinson said, "Coal has been pushed?off grid" in a written announcement to parliament. The last coal-fired plant in Britain closed its doors in 2024. Since then, the government has accelerated its use of?renewable energy to achieve a goal to decarbonize Britain's electricity sector largely by 2030. Tomlinson stated that "with 'our Clean Power 2030 mission we are already reducing the reliance of our electricity system on volatile fossil fuels, and we do not need this additional tax to provide incentives to our grid to 'decarbonise it," The tax is paid on top of the costs under the Emissions Trading System in which benchmark prices are currently around 49 pounds per tonne by fossil fuel electricity generators.

(source: Reuters)