I beg to move,
That the Committee has considered the draft Motor Vehicles (International Circulation) (Amendment) Order 2022.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Hosie. The instrument will provide an exemption from paying vehicle excise duty for a specific group of specialist hauliers in Great Britain. If approved, the legislation will support British specialist event hauliers. The UK is a market leader in this specialised part of the haulage sector, so it is important that the Government provide practical support to ensure its continued operation.
Specialist event hauliers are a small but important sub-sector of hauliers that transport equipment for touring cultural events, including concert tours, art exhibitions and sporting events. They typically undertake a significant number of internal movements or tour stops in the UK and the EU. Prior to the end of the EU transition period, UK hauliers operating in the EU were able to undertake unrestricted cross-trade movement—the movement of goods between two other countries—and up to three cabotage movements, which is the movement of goods within a single country. Under the UK-EU trade and co-operation agreement, UK hauliers are now restricted to one cabotage and one cross-trade movement or two cross-trade movements within the EU. As such, specialist event hauliers’ business models have been significantly affected; that is why the Government are taking action to support this part of the haulage sector in adapting to the changes via a dual registration measure.
Great British specialist event hauliers that are able to establish an international base in the EU or beyond, while maintaining their UK base, will be able to temporarily transfer their EU-registered vehicles to their GB operator licence while they operate in Great Britain, without the need to pay UK vehicle excise duty. Dual registration will allow operators that wish to operate in the EU both to function as EU operators, benefiting from single market access rights, and to operate in the UK as GB operators, benefiting from their status as domestic GB operators, without needing to swap their specialist vehicles in the middle of a tour. Overseas haulage companies that set up a base in Great Britain can also benefit from that approach.
The main function of the statutory instrument is to provide an exemption from vehicle excise duty for hauliers that wish to utilise the dual registration arrangements. Without the vehicle excise duty exemption, that approach would not be viable. I am therefore grateful that time has been found for the debate to take place quickly, and I welcome the speed with which the Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments scrutinised the instrument.
The draft Motor Vehicles (International Circulation) (Amendment) Order 2022 will exempt certain vehicles brought temporarily into Great Britain from vehicle excise duty. Without that amendment, specialist event hauliers would be unable to operate within Great Britain, due to the time that it would take to register their vehicles on to their GB licence and register to pay UK vehicle excise duty. The change will enable an efficient process when operators switch vehicles from their EU operator licence to their GB licence, allowing them to use market access arrangements in the respective territories.
To utilise dual registration, a number of criteria will need to be met, and those are set out in full in the draft statutory instrument. The haulier must be operating under a hire or reward model, and it must establish and maintain an operating base in Great Britain, as well as another base abroad. The vehicle being used must be specifically designed or substantially modified to carry the goods needed for cultural tours. The specific goods that the haulier may carry are property, equipment or animals being transported to specific venues or events. The goods being carried from place to place during a tour should remain unaltered. In line with existing rules on the temporary import of vehicles, the vehicle may be registered in Great Britain for up to a maximum of six months in any 12-month period.
The instrument is vital to the specialist sub-sector of hauliers who are restricted by the number of cabotage and cross-trade movements set out in the UK-EU trade and co-operation agreement. The instrument addresses that problem by providing an exemption from paying UK vehicle excise duty for specialist touring haulier operators with bases established both in Great Britain and abroad. The change would therefore enable an efficient process when operators switch vehicles from their EU operator licence to their GB one, allowing them to make use of the market access arrangements in the respective territories. I commend the order to the Committee.
I really welcome the shadow Minister’s collaboration and the positive way in which she has set out her willingness not to oppose the statutory instrument. The vast majority of UK haulage journeys to and from the UK will continue. We very much hope and expect that they will be able to run exactly as they did before the end of the transition period. The instrument is essential to ensure that specialist event hauliers can continue to be a market leader in this part of the haulage sector.
I hope that the Committee has found the debate informative, and I am delighted that its members will join me in supporting the order. In terms of the timescale that the shadow Minister asked for, we expect the instrument to come into force once the Privy Council has approved it in August, 28 days after it has been signed.
Question put and agreed to.