European 
Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis has suggested he was open 
to German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble's proposal for a special 
tax on petrol in EU member states to finance refugee-related costs.
	
In
 comments published by German magazine Der Spiegel on Saturday, 
Dombrovskis said he agreed with Schaeuble's call for "innovative 
European concepts to cope with the refugee crisis".
	
Schaeuble
 attracted criticism from fellow conservatives and the Social Democrats 
(SPD) for suggesting earlier this month that the money from the extra 
levy could be used to pay for strengthening Europe's joint external 
borders.
	
He did not specify how 
high the additional tax on gasoline should be and whether Brussels or 
the EU member states would be in charge of collecting it.
        
        
	
"A gasoline tax, be
 it on a national or on a European level, could be a possible source of 
funding, especially when you consider that the oil price is at a 
historically low level now," Dombrovskis was quoted as saying.
        
        
	
He added that measures under consideration to better secure Europe's external borders were expensive.
	
"Security is a public good that Europe should ideally ensure collectively," he said.
	
(Reuters)