Chancellor urged to impose pay-per-mile scheme on UK drivers
Public transport charity Campaign for Better Transport issued the plea, claiming it would have public support.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is being urged to impose a pay-per-mile scheme on UK drivers to avoid a āblack holeā from lost fuel duty revenue.
Public transport charity Campaign for Better Transport (CBT) issued the plea, claiming it would have public support.
It is proposing that drivers of zero emission vehicles (ZEVs), such as electric cars, should be charged based on how far they travel.
The new Chancellor faces a looming black hole
Under the plan, drivers with a ZEV before the implementation date would be exempt, incentivising the switch to electric motoring.
Duties levied on petrol, diesel and other fuels generate around £25 billion a year in revenue for the Treasury.
This figure is expected to dwindle as more drivers transition from traditionally-fuelled cars to ZEVs.
But successive governments have found the prospect of introducing per-mile charges ā known as road pricing ā to be too politically toxic.
CBT director of policy and campaigns Silviya Barrett said: āThe new Chancellor faces a looming black hole. She can avoid it, in a way which is fair and which garners broad public support. But she should start now, as this issue will only get more pressing.
āIt should be cheaper to drive a zero-emission vehicle than a more polluting vehicle, but itās only fair that these drivers should pay a share, and a pay-as-you-drive model can achieve this.ā
Ms Barrett wrote a letter to Ms Reeves stating that āZEV drivers should fairly contribute towards vehicle taxationā and calling for a āsimple chargeā based on āregular odometer readingsā.
She added: āWe fully appreciate that such a change would be perceived as difficult and criticised by the opposition and by certain representative groups.
āHowever, our research demonstrated the general public supports such a move.ā
CBT leads a forum consisting of 37 transport-related organisations, which it said would all āsupport a Treasury move on vehicle taxationā.
One member, motoring services company RAC, said a āreplacement form of taxation needs to be introduced to avoid losing billionsā.
It called for the new system to be āsimple and fair to drivers of both conventional and electric vehiclesā.
Another forum member, the Confederation of Passenger Transport, which represents bus and coach operators, said pay-as-you-go vehicle taxation could āhelp curb congestionā, making public transport āmore attractiveā.
Labour has committed to reverse then-prime minister Rishi Sunakās decision in September last year to delay banning the sale of conventionally fuelled new cars from 2030 until 2035.
Ms Reeves will deliver her first budget on October 30.