Motor scrap scheme is a positive, says survey

by GreenWire.org.uk. Published Sun 29 Mar 2009 19:53
Could cash-for-scrap green the nation's motor fleet?
Could cash-for-scrap green the nation's motor fleet?

Results from an independent consumer survey commissioned by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) show that 76% of consumers are in favour of the UK government introducing a scrappage incentive scheme similar to those currently running across Europe.

The proposed scheme could see drivers of cars over nine years old offered a £2,000 incentive towards a new or nearly new car in return for scrapping their existing one1. A similar scheme already operating in Germany has successfully boosted the new car market, increasing registrations by 21.5% in February - the first year-on-year monthly rise since July 2008.

The survey, undertaken by MM-Eye, a market research company specialising in automotive research, showed that 61% of people said they were likely to take up the offer and 66% of people agreed with the idea of taking older cars off the road and replacing them with newer ones because of the positive environmental impact.

An average new car emits 14.6% less CO2 than a nine year old model so the scrappage scheme would continue the trend in reducing car emissions. The survey backed this further, showing that people likely to take up the offer would be buying cars at the smaller end of the market, with the lowest CO2 emissions.

The research revealed 88% of those likely to take up the offer said they’d spend up to £10,000 on a new car in addition to the £2,000 incentive.

According to JATO Dynamics, the world's leading provider of automotive data and intelligence, nearly a third of cars newly registered in 2008 fell into this category2 and is the typical cost of a supermini model, which in 2008 emitted 137.7g/km, 12.8% below the national average and over 25% below the 1999 market average.

Commenting on the survey, SMMT chief executive Paul Everitt said; “The scrappage incentive scheme is a popular way for government to support the automotive industry and provides good value for money for the tax payer. The increased VAT revenue to government largely offsets the cost of the scheme, yet the positive impact it could have on building consumer confidence and boosting the new vehicle market are extremely valuable to the UK automotive sector and the 800,000 people that work within it”.

In Germany the so-called "scrapping bonus" for new vehicles purchases, launched in January was supposed to end soon.

The government had allotted €1.5 billion for the car bonanza stimulus programme — enough to provide €2,500 bonus payments for around 600,000 trade-ins. Hundreds of thousands have already applied and the funds were only expected to last a maximum of several more weeks.

However, last Wednesday, the German government agreed to extend the programme so that the boom can continue.

Similar scrap-for-cash schemes are also running in Austria, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Romania and Spain.



Editorial@greenwire.org.uk





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Comments about Motor scrap scheme is a positive, says survey

They wont be getting my car, even tho its 9yo. 2 grand wont buy anyone a new car. Govt just wants people to BORROW and take on more debt.
CD, north somerset around 2 years, 10 months ago


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