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US Embassy refuses to pay £14.6m London congestion cost invoice

The US Embassy in Britain has hit back at Sadiq Khan‘s Transport for London after being accused of owing nearly £15million in congestion charge debt.

TfL revealed diplomats from all countries owe a total of £145.5million in payments for the charge since it was introduced by former mayor Ken Livingstone in 2003.

The American embassy is the worst offender with £14.64million in debt – ahead of Japan at £10.07million, India at £8.55million and Nigeria at £8.40million.

Diplomats claim they should be exempt because they see the charge as a tax, which would therefore mean they would not have to pay under the Vienna Convention.

But TfL has insisted that the UK Government agrees with it that the scheme is a ‘charge for a service and not a tax’ and therefore diplomats are ‘not exempt’.

Now, a spokeswoman for the US Embassy in London has issued a statement on the row, telling MailOnline: ‘In accordance with international law as reflected in the 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, our position is that the congestion charge is a tax from which diplomatic missions are exempt.

The embassy for the United States of America in the Nine Elms area of London (file picture)

The embassy for the United States of America in the Nine Elms area of London (file picture)

Mayor Sadiq Khan, pictured at the Vatican last Thursday, is chair of Transport for London (TfL)

Mayor Sadiq Khan, pictured at the Vatican last Thursday, is chair of Transport for London (TfL)

‘Our long-standing position is shared by many other diplomatic missions in London.’

What is the Congestion Charge in London? 

The Congestion Charge is a £15 daily charge for those who drive within a specified zone in Central London.

It applies from 7am until 6pm Monday to Friday, and between 12pm and 6pm on weekends and bank holidays.

There is no charge between Christmas Day and the New Year’s Day bank holiday, inclusive.

Those who fail to pay the charge in time face a fine of £90, which rises to £180 if not paid within 14 days. 

The charge was brought in by Mayor Ken Livingstone at £5 a day in February 2003, and then increased to £8 in July 2005, £10 in January 2011, £11.50 in June 2014, and £15 in June 2020. 

The zone was extended west in 2007 before Boris Johnson abolished this when he became mayor in 2011. 

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The statement has put the US Embassy – which moved from Grosvenor Square to Nine Elms in 2018 – on a collision course with TfL, which is chaired by London Mayor Mr Khan.

TfL said it has been pushing for the matter to be taken up at the International Court of Justice, and has raised it with officials at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCDO).

MailOnline understands that the FCDO expects diplomatic missions and international organisations based in the UK to pay the congestion charge.

Officials there believe there are no legal grounds to exempt diplomats from paying it and the charge is comparable to a parking fee or a toll charge which diplomatic missions and international organisations are required to pay.

It comes ahead of New York City‘s plan to introduce a congestion charge from June 30 which will see drivers have to pay $15 (£12) every time they enter midtown Manhattan.

In a statement accompanying the diplomatic debt data, TfL said: ‘We and the UK Government are clear that the Congestion Charge is a charge for a service and not a tax. This means that diplomats are not exempt from paying it.

‘The majority of embassies in London do pay the charge, but there remains a stubborn minority who refuse to do so, despite our representations through diplomatic channels.

‘We will continue to pursue all unpaid Congestion Charge fees and related penalty charge notices and are pushing for the matter to be taken up at the International Court of Justice.’

MailOnline also understands that TfL wants support from the UK Government to recover outstanding congestion charge debt and related penalty charge notice payments.

A Transport for London map shows the zone for the Congestion Charge which began in 2003

A Transport for London map shows the zone for the Congestion Charge which began in 2003

A TfL spokeswoman added: ‘We are clear that foreign diplomats and consular staff are not exempt from paying the Congestion Charge. 

‘We continue to pursue all unpaid Congestion Charges and related penalty charge notices.’

The congestion charge involves a £15 daily fee for driving within an area of central London between 7am and 6pm on weekdays, and between noon and 6pm on weekends and bank holidays.

There are discounts and exemptions for various groups of people and vehicles, such as residents, taxis and fully electric cars.

The scheme is separate to the Ultra Low Emission Zone (Ulez) – expanded by Mr Khan last August – which is levied on a different basis.

Embassies and high commissions tend to lease vehicles when visiting London, which means almost all vehicles would meet the Ulez standards.

Other embassies in the top ten for congestion charge debt include China at £7.93million, Russia at £6.00million, Poland at £5.27million, Ghana at £5.00million, Kazakhstan at £4.65million and Germany at £4.64million.

Diplomats owe £145.5million in congestion charge debt since the scheme started, TfL said

Diplomats owe £145.5million in congestion charge debt since the scheme started, TfL said

Outside of the top ten, further countries include Sudan at £3.94million, Kenya at £3.26million, Pakistan at £3.13million and South Korea at £2.64million.

France‘s debt is £2.55million, Cuba‘s is £2.47million, Tanzania £2.30million, Spain £2.19million, Algeria £2.19million and South Africa £1.98million.

The cleanest record belongs to Togo which owes just £40 – followed by Dominica and Finland, both at £120. Turkmenistan, Panama, Macedonia and Monaco are all at £130.

The figures relate to unpaid fees and fines accrued by diplomats between the launch of the congestion charge in 2003 and the end of last year.

Ministers revealed in Parliament last September that foreign diplomats in London owe nearly £150 million in congestion charge debt, but the full breakdown by country has now emerged.

Figures given to MPs at the same time showed that 15 serious and significant offences, including sexual assault and drunk-driving, were allegedly committed by diplomats or those entitled to diplomatic immunity between 2019-2022.

Japan's embassy in London  is in second place with a congestion charge debt of £10million

Japan’s embassy in London  is in second place with a congestion charge debt of £10million

Junior foreign minister David Rutley said at the time: ‘We consider that there are no legal grounds to exempt diplomatic missions and international organisations from the London congestion charge, which is comparable to a parking fee or toll charge they are required to pay.’

The congestion charge was brought in by Mr Livingstone at £5 a day in February 2003.

It was then increased to £8 in July 2005, £10 in January 2011, £11.50 in June 2014, and £15 in June 2020 – at which it remains today.

TfL faced a financial crisis during the pandemic when income plummeted due to a collapse in journey numbers due to successive lockdowns.

It receives a series of government bailouts with the most recent funding deal of £250million agreed with the Department for Transport last December.

In February 2020, then-foreign secretary Dominic Raab issued a written ministerial statement revealing that his officials have written to ‘a number of diplomatic missions and international organisations’ to ‘press for payment’ of money owed relating to the congestion charge, parking fines and business rates.

HOW MUCH EACH EMBASSY OWES IN LONDON CONGESTION CHARGE DEBT 
Embassy Debt
American Embassy £14,645,025
Embassy of Japan £10,073,988
Office of the High Commissioner for India £8,551,835
High Commission for the Federal Republic of Nigeria £8,395,055
Embassy of the People’s Republic of China £7,936,890
Embassy of the Russian Federation £5,998,095
Embassy of the Republic of Poland £5,267,770
High Commission of the Republic of Ghana £5,001,105
Embassy of the Republic of Kazakhstan £4,652,755
Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany £4,637,610
The Embassy of the Republic of the Sudan £3,941,600
Kenya High Commission £3,260,940
High Commission for the Islamic Republic of Pakistan £3,129,060
Embassy of the Republic of Korea £2,636,320
Embassy of France £2,548,500
Embassy of the Republic of Cuba £2,466,240
High Commission for the United Republic of Tanzania £2,295,470
Embassy of Spain £2,194,440
Embassy of Algeria £2,191,230
High Commission for the Republic of South Africa £1,975,280
Sierra Leone High Commission £1,924,395
Embassy of Romania £1,868,260
Embassy of Ukraine £1,673,830
Embassy of Greece £1,665,450
Turkish Embassy £1,578,100
Cyprus High Commission £1,435,080
Embassy of the Republic of Hungary £1,374,870
High Commission for the Republic of Zambia £1,146,140
Embassy of the Republic of Yemen £1,060,680
Botswana High Commission £959,160
Embassy of the Republic of Bulgaria £923,510
High Commission of the Republic of Mozambique £864,360
High Commission for the Republic of Malawi £842,165
Embassy of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia £826,960
Uganda High Commission £819,290
High Commission for the Republic of Zimbabwe £800,105
Embassy of the Republic of Côte d`Ivoire £785,100
Kingdom of Eswatini High Commission £776,530
High Commission for the Republic of Cameroon £761,280
Embassy of the Republic of Belarus £734,185
High Commission for the Republic of Namibia £726,550
Malta High Commission £722,915
Embassy of the Slovak Republic £691,720
Mauritius High Commission £674,315
High Commission for the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri £666,060
Embassy of the Republic of Lithuania £655,275
Embassy of the Kingdom of Morocco £651,880
Embassy of the Republic of Liberia £627,150
Belgian Embassy £618,120
Embassy of the Islamic State of Afghanistan £607,190
Embassy of the Republic of Equatorial Guinea £557,690
High Commission of the Kingdom of Lesotho £537,070
Embassy of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam £519,900
Embassy of the Republic of Guinea £501,250
Embassy of the Democratic Republic of the Congo £485,940
Embassy of the Czech Republic £481,450
Jamaican High Commission £479,320
Embassy Of The Republic Of Iraq £473,760
Austrian Embassy £421,780
Embassy of the Republic of South Sudan £417,990
Royal Danish Embassy £405,995
Embassy of the Republic of Slovenia £391,850
High Commission for Antigua And Barbuda £348,765
Embassy of the Republic of Latvia £346,190
Embassy of Portugal £329,650
Embassy of Luxembourg £326,675
Tunisian Embassy £295,000
Belize High Commission £281,850
Embassy of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea £276,320
Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt £243,820
Embassy of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan £243,590
Embassy of the Republic of Estonia £224,090
High Commission of the Republic of Maldives £211,490
Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia £211,210
Embassy of Austria £209,910
High Commission for Guyana £189,190
Embassy of the State of Eritrea £185,350
High Commission for Seychelles £169,935
Embassy of the Dominican Republic £164,650
Embassy of the Republic of the Philippines £157,900
Embassy of Tunisia £156,720
Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Mauritania £150,110
Embassy of El Salvador £130,525
High Commission for Saint Lucia £128,180
Embassy of the Republic of Albania £124,480
Embassy of the Kyrgyz Republic £121,130
Embassy of the Republic of Moldova £114,850
The Gambia High Commission £102,850
Embassy of Bosnia And Herzegovina £100,120
Embassy of the Republic of Senegal £97,275
Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran £80,240
High Commission for Grenada £80,030
Embassy of the Sultanate of Oman £73,770
Embassy of Kosovo £61,100
Embassy of the Republic of Gabon £51,240
Embassy of Belgium £51,180
Embassy of the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic £48,900
Embassy of the State of Qatar £48,260
Embassy of Tajikistan £43,580
Embassy of Georgia £34,680
Embassy of Guatemala £32,280
High Commission for the Peoples Republic of Bangladesh £30,810
Libyan Embassy £29,950
Embassy of Nicaragua £21,020
Embassy of the Republic of Tajikistan £20,750
Royal Thai Embassy £18,430
Embassy of Honduras £18,110
Embassy of the United Arab Emirates £17,860
Embassy of Italy £17,740
Benin Consulate £17,730
Embassy of the Republic of Madagascar £17,200
Ambassade De La République Du Burundi £14,660
Embassy of the Republic of Uzbekistan £12,900
Embassy of Brazil £11,750
Embassy of the Republic of Angola £10,090
Embassy of Iceland £8,520
Malaysian High Commission £5,870
Embassy of the State of Kuwait £5,810
Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia £5,690
High Commission of the Republic of Fiji £4,620
Embassy of the Principality of Andorra £4,040
Embassy of Mongolia £4,000
Embassy of the Union of Myanmar £3,900
Barbados High Commission £3,770
Embassy of the Syrian Arab Republic £3,160
Embassy of the Azerbaijan Republic £3,080
Embassy of Chile £2,940
Embassy of Cambodia £2,780
Canadian High Commission £2,690
Papua New Guinea High Commission £2,400
Embassy of Mexico £2,160
Embassy of the Republic of Serbia £2,030
Embassy of the Republic of Rwanda £1,930
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia £1,600
Embassy of Haiti £1,560
Colombian Embassy £1,530
Embassy of the Argentine Republic £1,520
Embassy of Slovakia £1,460
High Commission for Saint Vincent and the Grenadines £1,460
Central African Republic £970
High Commission for the Republic of Trinidad And Tobago £960
Embassy of Peru £800
Australian High Commission £760
Embassy of the State of Bahrain £720
Embassy of the Republic of Croatia £610
Tonga High Commission £600
Brunei Darussalam High Commission £520
High Commission for Saint Christopher And Nevis £520
Embassy of Israel £370
Embassy of Paraguay £320
The Royal Embassy of Cambodia £250
Embassy of Costa Rica £160
High Commission for the Commonwealth of the Bahamas £160
Royal Norwegian Embassy £160
Consulate-General of Monaco £130
Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia £130
Embassy of the Republic of Panama £130
Embassy of Turkmenistan £130
Embassy of Finland £120
The High Commission for the Commonwealth of Dominica £120
Embassy of the Republic of Togo £40
TOTAL EMBASSY DEBT £143,527,113