http://harvardmagazine.com/2014/01/the-fix-in-fossil-fuels
this article came out last year, but I was browsing for current subsidy levels and came across it today. I am interested in understand what subsidies exist specifically for oil/gas/coal (or functionally for oil/gas/coal) and what they purport to provide the economy and what they actually do provide to the economy.
Versus what those same dollars could do if applied to alternative/renewable/sustainable energy subsidies.
“If you just look at the track record of these subsidies in the U.S. tax code and what’s happened to U.S. production over the last 40 years…[there is] basically no correlation,” he reports. “The problem is that the current tax breaks do not target new technologies, nor do they target pollution-reducing technologies. The current tax breaks are indiscriminate and apply even now, when oil prices have been at their highest all-time levels over the past five years. They enrich firms that would have drilled wells anyway. In fact, the impact on U.S. production is negligible.”
If the subsidies were eliminated everywhere, global oil consumption could fall by more than four million barrels per day—benefiting consumer nations, including the United States. In addition, global carbon dioxide emissions contributing to climate change could fall about 7 percent by 2020 and about 10 percent (more than five billion tons of carbon dioxide per year) by 2050. “If the U.S. could actually deliver on what the president committed to in 2009, and…get rid of these production subsidies,” he says, “it has the potential to leverage a lot of change and behavior in other countries.”
this article came out last year, but I was browsing for current subsidy levels and came across it today. I am interested in understand what subsidies exist specifically for oil/gas/coal (or functionally for oil/gas/coal) and what they purport to provide the economy and what they actually do provide to the economy.
Versus what those same dollars could do if applied to alternative/renewable/sustainable energy subsidies.