Environmental Taxes Bulletin commentary (June 2022)
Updated 30 June 2022
1. Headlines
Total provisional Climate Change Levy (CCL) and Carbon Price Floor (CPF) receipts for the last complete financial year 2021 to 2022 were £1,913 million, which is £135 million (7.6%) higher than the previous financial year.
Total provisional Landfill Tax (LFT) receipts for the last complete financial year 2021 to 2022 were £667 million, which is £101 million (17.9%) higher than the previous financial year.
Total provisional Aggregates Levy (AGL) receipts for the last complete financial year 2021 to 2022 were £410 million, which is £51 million (14.3%) higher than the previous financial year.
2. About this release
This bulletin was created in June 2021 and will be updated annually every June. The content was previously published in three separate bulletins, and was created following a consultation on the reduction and consolidation of HMRC statistics publications.
HMRC welcomes user engagement to improve the departments National and Official Statistics. You can contact statistics producers on GOV.UK or the team responsible for this bulletin directly.
This publication provides statistics for:
- CCL and CPF
- LFT
- AGL
The latest release has been updated with provisional receipts data up to to May 2022 and provisional declarations data to April 2022.
Difficulties faced by taxpayers submitting returns during the coronavirus pandemic also means these statistics should be treated with additional caution in the financial year ending in 2021.
The ‘Environmental Taxes Bulletin’ is Crown Copyright. The information contained can be used as long as the source is made clear by the user.
3. Historical trends in environmental tax receipts over the past 10 years
Figure 1: Total environmental tax receipts for the previous 10 financial years, in £ million
Figure 1 demonstrates the following trends:
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CPF was introduced on the 1 April 2013, which added a new rate for fossil fuels used to generate electricity; consequently, there was a substantial increase in CCL and CPF receipts from the financial year ending in 2013; since the financial year ending in 2015, CCL and CPF have been the largest environmental tax
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LFT was the largest environmental tax until the financial year ending in 2015; from financial year ending 2014 receipts have decreased year on year until financial year ending 2021; for financial year ending 2022, receipts have increased from the previous year, which was impacted by the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic; the standard rate of LFT charged over this period has increased substantially
-
AGL receipts have been the smallest of the three environmental taxes over the past 10 financial years; receipts have generally increased over this 10 year period
Table 1: Financial year environmental tax receipts for the previous 10 complete financial years, £ million
Financial Year | CCL and CPF | LFT | AGL |
---|---|---|---|
2012 to 2013 | 635 | 1,092 | 265 |
2013 to 2014 | 1,068 | 1,189 | 285 |
2014 to 2015 | 1,491 | 1,144 | 342 |
2015 to 2016 | 1,763 | 919 | 356 |
2016 to 2017 | 1,864 | 874 | 374 |
2017 to 2018 | 1,861 | 757 | 376 |
2018 to 2019 | 1,922 | 683 | 367 |
2019 to 2020 | 2,004 | 641 | 397 |
2020 to 2021 | 1,778 | 566 | 359 |
2021 to 2022 | 1,913 | 667 | 410 |
4. Climate Change Levy and Carbon Price Floor receipts and declarations
CCL is chargeable on the industrial and commercial supply of taxable commodities for lighting, heating and power by consumers in the following sectors:
- industry
- commerce
- agriculture
- public administration
- other services
CCL does not apply to taxable commodities used by domestic consumers or charities for non-business use.
CCL is charged on taxable supplies. Taxable supplies are certain supplies of the following taxable commodities:
- electricity
- natural gas as supplied by a gas utility
- petroleum and hydrocarbon gas in a liquid state
- coal and lignite
- coke and semi coke of coal or lignite
- petroleum coke
CPF is a tax on fossil fuels used in the generation of electricity. It was achieved through changes to the existing CCL regime for gas, solid fuels and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) used for electricity generation. These changes included the introduction of new carbon price support (CPS) rates of CCL.
This publication provides Official Statistics for CCL and CPF receipts and declarations by fuel type:
- electricity
- gas
- solid and other fuels, including liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)
It is not possible to provide accurate separate receipts statistics for CCL and CPF because taxpayers pay receipts for both as one payment. An estimate of separate receipts statistics for CCL and CPF is provided using taxpayer returns data and should be treated with caution.
CCL and CPF taxpayers mainly follow quarterly accounting periods. Tax returns are due by the end of the month following the accounting period. Payment of tax is also generally due to HMRC by the same time, but taxpayers who pay by direct debit are given a 7 day extension.
These accounting periods and payment patterns cause a 1 to 2 month lag between accounting periods ending and receipts being received by HMRC.
Figure 2: Total CCL and CPF receipts by financial year, in £ million
Figure 2 demonstrates the following trends for total CCL and CPF receipts:
-
CCL and CPF receipts have fallen in the financial year ending in 2021, potentially due to impacts from the government’s response to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, as national lockdown policies most likely reduced the demand for energy amongst commodities covered by CCL and CPF
-
CCL and CPF receipts peaked in the financial year ending in 2020 at £2,004 million, this grew from £635 million in the financial year ending 2013
Figure 3: Total CCL and CPF declarations split by electricity, gas, and solid and other fuels by financial year
Figure 3 demonstrates several trends for total CCL and CPF declarations:
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CCL and CPF declarations increased substantially between financial years ending 2013 and 2017, mainly driven by increasing gas declarations between these years; since financial year ending 2017, CCL and CPF declarations have remained quite stable
-
electricity declarations have generally increased since financial year ending 2015, with the highest level being in financial year ending 2020
-
gas receipts increased substantially each year from years ending 2013 to 2017; thereafter receipts have generally stabilised
-
declarations for solid and other fuels have followed a consistent downward trend since financial year ending 2014, likely reflecting declining quantities of coal used for electricity production in the UK
-
the provisional 2021 to 2022 financial year (April to March) total for CCL and CPF declarations is £1,862 million, which is £116 million (6.6%) higher than the previous financial year
5. Landfill Tax receipts and declarations
LFT is a tax paid by landfill operators on the disposal of material at a landfill site. The tax is passed onto businesses and local authorities through the gate fee for disposing of waste at a landfill.
The tax aims to provide incentive for the diversion of waste from landfill to other less harmful methods of waste management such as recycling and incineration.
The tax is charged by weight. There are two rates; standard rate and lower rate.
- lower rate applies to non-hazardous and less polluting materials
- standard rate applies to all other taxable materials including all disposals at an unauthorised site
With effect from 1 April 2022, the following rates apply:
- lower rate: £3.15 per tonne
- standard rate: £98.60 per tonne
Exemptions exist for dredging, mining and quarrying waste, pet cemeteries, filling of quarries and waste from visiting forces.
Figure 4: Total LFT receipts by financial year
Figure 4 demonstrates the following trends to LFT receipts:
-
LFT receipts have fallen substantially in the last 10 financial years, in the financial year ending 2014 they stood at £1,189 million, by the most recent financial year ending in 2022, they had fallen to £667 million; whereas the financial year ending 2021 was impacted by the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, LFT receipts in financial year ending 2022 were higher than for the previous 2 years
-
LFT rates have increased year on year over the past 10 years; standard rate charged has increased from £72.00 in 2013 to £98.60 a tonne in 2022, whereas LFT receipts have fallen throughout this period
-
a ‘shortfall’ in LFT receipts should not necessarily be considered as a concern because the tax aims to provide incentive for the diversion of waste from landfill to other less harmful methods of waste management such as recycling and incineration, this turn away from standard rated waste can be seen below in the declarations data
Figure 5: Total LFT tonnage declared split by taxable tonnage, taxable tonnage of which relieved and exempt tonnage by financial year
Figure 5 demonstrates several trends for LFT tonnage:
-
total tonnage has shown a downwards trend over the last 10 years, with the financial year ending 2022 picking up from previous year, mainly due to the previous year being impacted by the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic
-
standard rate tonnage has shown a downwards trend over the last 10 years in both number and proportion of LFT declarations
-
lower rate tonnage has shown a slight downwards trend over the last 10 years but has increased as a proportion of LFT declarations due to falling standard rate tonnage
-
exempt tonnage has shown greater fluctuation but with a general downwards trend over the last 10 years; in the financial year ending in 2019, exempt waste was at its highest proportion of total waste (29%)
-
the provisional 2021 to 2022 financial year (April to March) total for LFT tonnage declared is 23, which is 3 (15.2%) higher than the previous financial year
6. Aggregates Levy receipts and declarations
This publication provides Official Statistics on AGL receipts and declarations.
AGL covers digging, dredging or importing aggregate commercially in the UK.
The current rate is £2 per tonne.
Traders become liable for the levy when an aggregate is:
- used for construction purposes
- mixed with anything other than water (excluding special circumstances)
- removed from:
- its originating site
- a connected site which is registered under the same name as the originating site
- a site where it had been intended to apply an exempt process to it, but this process was not applied
Total AGL tonnage declared is calculated by summing taxable and exempt tonnage declared (relieved tonnage is excluded from the calculation in order to avoid double counting as it’s contained within taxable tonnage). As taxable tonnage forms the majority of the total tonnage declared, the pattern of total tonnage is dominated by patterns in taxable tonnage.
Figure 6: Total AGL receipts by financial year
Figure 6 demonstrates several trends for AGL tonnage receipts:
-
AGL receipts have generally increased over the last 10 financial years, with some fluctuation, from £275 million in the financial year ending in 2013 to £438 million (provisional) in the financial year ending in 2022
-
The Aggregates levy rate has remained constant over this period at £2 per tonne
Figure 7: Total AGL tonnage declared split by taxable tonnage, taxable tonnage of which relieved and exempt tonnage by financial year
Figure 7 demonstrates several trends for AGL tonnage declarations:
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taxable AGL declarations generally increased between the financial years ending in 2013 and 2020; it then fell in financial year ending 2021, mainly due to the impact of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic
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the proportion of taxable tonnage has been generally increasing over this period being at its highest (83%) in the financial year, ending 2022
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the provisional 2021 to 2022 financial year (April to March) total for AGL tonnage declared is 245, which is 15 (6.6%) higher than the previous financial year