Spaniards Rebel Against New Solar Taxes
Instituted by decree, and huge fines for those who don't pay
Two weeks after Spain's government slapped a series of levies on green energy, Inaki Alonso hired two workmen to remove the solar panels he had put on his roof only six months earlier.
Alonso, an architect who specializes in ecological projects, calculated the cost of generating his own power under a new energy law and decided the numbers no longer added up.
Neither was it possible to leave the panels on his Madrid home without connecting them to the electricity grid; that would have risked an astronomical fine of between 6 million and 30 million euros ($8 million-$40 million).
"The new law makes it unviable to produce my own clean energy," Alonso said.
(Hat tip to Nick Sibilla)
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"The new law makes it unviable to produce my own clean energy," Alonso said.
And it's far from given that solar panels constitute 'clean energy'.
It is all about the money. Notice that after the initial tax breaks for buying electric vehicles came mileage taxes and other assessments on electric vehicles to make up for the gas taxes they are avoiding. Governments have to have the money flowing so they can dispense favors.