George Eustice sparks Cabinet war by threatening to slap carbon tax on foreign meat

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GEORGE Eustice sparked a Cabinet war today by threatening to slap a carbon tax on foreign meat.

The Environment Secretary’s move could mean a levy being put on burgers from polluting mega-farms in Australia.

George Eustice sparked a Cabinet war yesterday by threatening to slap a carbon tax on foreign meat
Mr Eustice has been locked in a bitter battle with International Trade Secretary Liz Truss

Mr Eustice has been locked in a bitter battle with International Trade Secretary Liz Truss over the phasing out of meat tariffs on imports from Oz in the looming major trade deal.

But he said the meat tax could help protect British farmers from cheap imports.

His comments sparked fears he is plotting to sneak tariffs in by the back door and caused a backlash from some of his colleagues.

One government source warned it will hit consumers while doing absolutely nothing to protect the planet.

Mr Eustice told the BBC Radio 4 Today Programme that Britain is among “a lot of” countries looking at measuring the “consumption” of carbon emissions rather than just how much a country produces.

He added: “So you measure the carbon of the food and other goods that you import — not just what your emissions are.

“Then, some kind of carbon border adjustment tax, to recognise those countries that are falling behind on environmental standards, is the sort of thing which becomes possible.”

But one government source fumed: “At this stage, all it would do is hurt consumers.

“Carbon taxes only work if other nations have them too, otherwise all it amounts to is protectionism and limits consumer choice, possibly raising the cost of food too.

Boris Johnson is thought to be considering proposals for a carbon border tax

Stanley is a big fan of the carbon border tax

“Ironically, it does nothing to help the environment because countries will just send their food elsewhere.”

Boris Johnson is said to be considering proposals for a carbon border tax to protect British firms from competitors in polluting countries such as China.

His dad Stanley ­— a keen eco warrior — is a big fan.