http://www.enn.com/news/2004-02-17/s_12687.asp

EarthTalk: Why is gasoline more expensive in Europe than in the United States?

Tuesday, February 17, 2004

 From the editors of E/The Environmental Magazine

Dear EarthTalk: Why is gasoline so much more expensive in Europe than 
in the United States?

- Bo White, Chicago, Illinois

There are multiple components to gasoline prices, according to the 
Energy Information Administration, an independent statistical agency 
within the U.S. Department of Energy: the cost of production and 
delivery, including the cost of crude oil to refiners and refinery 
processing costs; marketing and distribution costs; retail station 
costs; and taxes. 

In 2002, crude oil accounted for about 43 percent of the cost of a 
gallon of regular grade gasoline; refining costs and profits 
comprised about 13 percent; distribution, marketing, and retail 
dealer costs and profits made up 13 percent; and federal, state, and 
local taxes accounted for approximately 31 percent of the cost.

Gasoline prices in countries such as the United Kingdom and Norway 
can sometimes reach $5 per gallon because of high taxes. According to 
the Wall Street Journal, taxes in the United Kingdom account for 80 
percent of the pump price, while the Europe-wide average is between 
60 and 70 percent.

In Germany, gasoline taxes account for a whopping 20 percent of all 
government revenues. Across Europe, such taxes have resulted in more 
fuel-efficient vehicles.

According to John DeCicco, a policy analyst at Environmental Defense 
and author of Automakers' Corporate Carbon Burdens: Reframing Public 
Policy on Automobiles, Oil, and Climate, "The higher taxes have 
contributed to fuel efficiency that averages 30 percent higher [than 
U.S. levels]. However, they have not motivated ongoing conservation."

If gasoline taxes in the United States had the same effect on driving 
that cigarette taxes have had on some smokers, higher gas prices 
could provide the motivation for some consumers to switch from, say, 
large SUVs to smaller more fuel-efficient cars. According to a study 
published in the American Journal of Public Health, every 10 percent 
increase in the price of cigarettes reduces smoking among pregnant 
women by 7 percent.

The average American driver is certainly not as motivated to "do the 
right thing" as a mother-to-be, but it stands to reason that, like 
the effect of cigarette taxes, increased gas taxes might drive 
motorists to drive more fuel-efficient cars, and those tax revenues 
could be used to further promote fuel-efficiency and develop 
alterative fuels.



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