Spain
Levies Consumption Tax on Sunlight
26
July, 2013
Proving
that idiocy truly has no bounds, Spain issued a "royal decree"
taxing sunlight gatherers. The state threatens fines as much as 30
million euros for those who illegally gather sunlight without paying
a tax.
The tax is just enough to make sure that homeowners
cannot gather and store solar energy cheaper than state-sponsored
providers.
Via Mish-modified Google Translate from Energias
Renovables,
please consider Photovoltaic
Sector, Stunned
The
Secretary of State for Energy, Alberto Nadal, signed a draft royal
decree in which consumption taxes are levied on those who want to
start solar power systems on their rooftops. The tax, labeled a
"backup toll" is high enough to ensure that it will be
cheaper to keep buying energy from current providers.
Spain
Privatizes the Sun
If
you get caught collecting photons of sunlight for your own use, you
can be fined as much as 30 million euros.
If
you were thinking the best energy option was to buy some solar panels
that were down 80% in price, you can forget about it.
“Of
all the possible scenarios, this is the worst,” said José Donoso,
president of the Spanish Photovoltaic Union (UNEF), which represents
85% of the sector’s activity.
Before
the decree it took 12 years to recover the investment in a
residential installation of 2.4 kilowatts of power. Following the
decree, it will take an additional 23 years according to estimates by
UNEF.
Petition
of the Candle Makers Revisited
And
so the "Petition
of the Candle Makers"
comes to pass.
I
have written about the "petition"
on many occasions, but here is the latest reference: Extremely
Difficult to Keep Up With Economic Stupidity
Reflections
on "Unfair Competition"
Corporations
always consider it "unfair"
when any other company can do things faster, smarter, or cheaper than
they can. The buggy whip industry once protested cars.
Today,
land-line telecom companies have to compete with wireless and they
don't like it. Now, we see protests about VOIP (voice over internet
protocol).
Technology
marches on. But France does not like it. The French solution is to
tax Skype because it has an "unfair
advantage".
This
is an age-old unwinnable argument.
Petition
of the Candle Makers
The
ultimate irony is France's preposterous "unfair
advantage"
argument was lampooned by French economist Frederic Bastiat back in
1845 when he penned 'Petition
of the Candle Makers'.
In
his article, candle makers were incensed that the light of the sun
could be had for free. The sun's unfair trade advantage was to the
"detriment of fair industries" who could not compete
against the sun's price.
Something
had to be done to "shut off as much as possible, all access to
natural light, and thereby create a need for artificial light"
so that "industry in France will encouraged".
The
moral to this story is "Don't propose something purposefully
stupid hoping to make a point. Some idiot might actually think it's a
good idea and do it".
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