FOSSIL FUEL SUBSIDIES
By Anton Antonio
December 9, 2015
What are fossil fuel subsidies? According to the International Energy Agency
(IEA), fossil fuel and energy subsidies artificially lower the price of energy
paid by consumers, raise the price received by producers or lower the cost of
production. Globally, governments spend
more than US$ 500 billion annually to keep domestic process for oil, gas and
coal products artificially low. Fossil
fuel subsidies increase carbon emissions and lock us into a high carbon
future. However, fossil fuel subsidies
cost generally out weight the benefits.
To better understand the concept behind fossil fuel or
energy subsidies, please read the following researched material…
“HERE’S HOW MUCH THE WORLD’S BIGGEST ECONOMIES SPEND ON
FOSSIL FUEL SUBSIDIES
By Natasha Geiling
November 12, 2015
The world’s 20 top economies spend more than $400 billion
dollars each year propping up fossil fuel production, a practice that threatens
to seriously undermine the world’s mitigation of climate change, according to a
new report by the environmental advocacy group Oil Change International. Despite pledging to end fossil fuel subsidies
in 2009, G20 countries spent a combined average of $452 billion on fossil fuels
in 2013 and 2014, through a mix of direct spending, tax breaks, investments by
majority-state owned companies, and public finance from government-owned banks
and financial institutions. According to
the report, that’s more than four times the amount given to renewables in
2013. “I think it’s gross hypocrisy for countries
to be handing out billions to fossil fuel companies at the same time they are
pledging to reduce emissions,” Alex Doukas, senior campaigner with Oil Change
International and co-author of the study, told ThinkProgress. “We can’t tackle the climate change problem
it we are propping up the production of fossil fuels.” Since 2009, G20 countries have reaffirmed
their promise to cut fossil fuel each year --- but in most cases there has been
little progress, with some countries actually increasing their fossil fuel
subsidies over the past six years. The
United States, for instance, has increased its fossil fuel subsidies 35 percent
since 2009, which has mirrored an increase in domestic fossil fuel production as
part of the Obama administration’s “all of the above” energy policy. The Obama administration has attempted to
reign in fossil fuel subsidies by proposing cuts in every budget that the
administration has sent to Congress, but that strategy has been met with
opposition from lawmakers. “Some credit
should go to the Obama administration for trying to send budgets to Congress
that would eliminate or reform fossil fuel subsidies, but it hasn’t resulted in
much,” Doukas said. Annually, the United
States government gives out $20.5 billion to support the production of oil,
coal, and gas, with $17.2 billion of that coming at the federal level and $3.3
billion coming at the state level. A
large percentage of the subsidies that fossil fuel companies receive in the
United States comes in the form of tax breaks.
Oil companies, for instance, are to claim costs associated with cleaning
up after an oil spill as a standard business expense. That means that of the when the U.S. attorney
general fined BP with a $20.8 billion dollar settlement in October for its role
in the Deepwater Horizon disaster, BP can legally claim a large portion of that
settlement as a tax deductible business expense --- only $5.5 billion of the
fine cannot be classified as such. Coal
subsidies --- though not as common as oil and gas subsidies --- also help
incentivise the production of fossil fuels in the United States. The Powder River Basin, the largest coal
reserve in the United States, is not actually designated as a coal-producing
region, allowing coal companies to lease federal lands at a lower cost that if
the lands were designated as coal-producing.
That means that federal leases for the Powder River Basin are really
good deal for coal companies, saving them the equivalent of a $1 billion
subsidy each year. Recent studies argued
that ending federal coal subsidies for the Power River Basin would
significantly decrease production of coal in the region, as well as greenhouse
gas emissions. Government subsidies that
support fossil fuel production make it more difficult to keep the fuels in the
ground, Doukas said. As the report
notes, both the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the
International Energy Agency (IEA) have warned that three-quarters of existing
fossil fuel reserves must stay in the ground if the world is to avoid more that
2 degrees Centigrade of warming. In
terms of national subsidies for fossil fuels, only Russia spends more money ---
$22.8 billion each year. Other
countries, like Japan, China, and South Korea, dole out subsidies largely in
the form of international public financing for fossil fuels --- $19 billion,
$17 billion, and $10 billion, respectively.
The report highlights some leaders in the movement to cut fossil fuel
subsidies, including Germany, which has pledged to end coal subsidies by 2018,
and Canada, which is currently phasing out several subsidies to oil, gas, and
mining, including targeted support for the country’s tar sands industry. Other countries, like the United Kingdom,
appear to be ramping up their support for fossil fuel subsidies, introducing a
set of tax breaks for oil and gas companies in 2015 that are estimated to cost
U.K. taxpayers more than $2 billion through 2020. The report comes just weeks before more than
140 countries are set to convene in Paris for the U.N. climate conference. “With Paris around the corner, it doesn’t
make a lot of sense for G20 countries to be subsidizing fossil fuel
production,” Doukas said. “Fossil fuel
subsidies are something that we need to address, and right now they are not
being addressed.”
The amount being shelled out by governments all over the
world for fossil fuel and energy subsidies is quite mindboggling. And it doesn’t require us to take a course in
rocket science to know that big money fill the pockets of oil and energy
producers. I’m just wondering… if
governments stopped this practice of providing fuel and energy subsidies and
simply invested in clean and green energy, wouldn’t this planet be a better and
healthier place to live in? Would
renewable energy be a wiser choice than carbon-emitting energy that, by some
strange government and private sector arrangement/agreement, would still
require fossil fuel subsidies?
Thoughts to
promote positive action…
(Please
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REFERENCE:
Think Progress, (2015). “Fossil Fuel Subsidies”. Retrieved on December 9, 2015 from http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/11/12/3721677/g20-fossil-fuel-subsidies/
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