Skip to main content

Truck tolls set to replace French ecotax

The controversial ecotax on heavy goods vehicles that sparked protests across France last year has been consigned to the scrapheap, according to a report in French newspaper The Connexion. Prime Minister Manuel Valls has confirmed that the government will roll out a new system of road tolls on trucks using roads with particularly heavy freight traffic. The charge will be imposed on vehicles weighing more than 3.5 tonnes using 4,000 kilometres of roads that carry more than 2,500 heavy goods vehicles a day
June 24, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The controversial ecotax on heavy goods vehicles that sparked protests across France last year has been consigned to the scrapheap, according to a report in French newspaper The Connexion.

Prime Minister Manuel Valls has confirmed that the government will roll out a new system of road tolls on trucks using roads with particularly heavy freight traffic. The charge will be imposed on vehicles weighing more than 3.5 tonnes using 4,000 kilometres of roads that carry more than 2,500 heavy goods vehicles a day. Agricultural vehicles and milk lorries will be exempted from the toll, which is set to come into force next year.

The measures, will generate about US$749 million a year, about half of the projected revenue from the ecotax on heavy freight vehicles, which was to have taken effect on 1 January but was delayed indefinitely following protests. Former Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault was forced to suspend that scheme after demonstrators took to the streets and drivers blocked roads across the country, saying it would hit business.

The news tolls will be introduced at the start of next year after three months of testing, officials said.

Ecology Minister Ségolène Royal is expected to officially unveil plans for the new toll later this week.

Related Content

  • Call for truck tolls on Austria’s rural highways
    April 18, 2012
    The Austrian Traffic Club (VCÖ) which is the principal organisation in the country working for environmentally sustainable, socially just, and economically efficient mobility, has called for the introduction of truck tolls for rural highways. The organisation says that trucks wear down roads 35,000 times more than cars and also claims that in 2010 truck transport caused road infrastructure-related costs of US$4.78 billion but it paid only $3.46 via tolls and taxes.
  • Foundation funds research for informed campaigning
    April 29, 2015
    ITS International talks to Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the transport research and lobbying organisation, the RAC Foundation. It is through the eyes of an economist that Professor Stephen Glaister, emeritus professor of transport and infrastructure at Imperial College London and director of the RAC Foundation, views current and future transport problems. Having spent 30 years at the London School of Economics and another 10 at Imperial, the move to the RAC Foundation was a radical departure from
  • Thales shows MoRSE tolling solution in Bordeaux
    October 6, 2015
    One of the most unusual of objects on display here in Bordeaux is undoubtedly Thales’ MoRSE (Moveable Roadside Equipment) device. The large white cylindrical box is in fact a mobile system of three technologies for tolling and road user charging (RUC).
  • Swarco sets up live-lane running on Germany's A8
    March 7, 2023
    System spans 2.8km along hard shoulder of motorway between Karlsruhe and Karlsbad