U.N. Climate Report Recommends Ending Fossil Fuel Subsidies
One place where environmentalists and libertarians are on the same page

This month the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued its AR6 Synthesis Report, summarizing the latest findings on mitigating the effects of climate change. The full report advocates a number of strategies to that end, with the ultimate goal of cutting global greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030.
One welcome suggestion is the elimination of fossil fuel subsidies.
There are two primary types of fossil fuel subsidies. Production subsidies offset the costs for companies involved in energy production. Consumption subsidies make the final product less expensive for consumers.
The subsidies have their defenders. In 2011, when President Barack Obama suggested ending oil company subsidies amid rising gas prices, Sen. James Lankford (R–Okla.) countered that the proposal would "hurt the everyday consumer of energy and imperil the jobs of millions of hard-working people in American-based companies."
The IPCC's report recommended that "removing fossil fuel subsidies would reduce emissions, improve public revenue and macroeconomic performance, and yield other environmental and sustainable development benefits such as improved public revenue, macroeconomic and sustainability performance," a claim it made with "high confidence." The panel further posited that "fossil fuel subsidy removal is projected by various studies to reduce global [carbon dioxide] emissions by 1–4%, and [greenhouse gas] emissions by up to 10% by 2030," a statement it made with "medium confidence."
Environmentalists and free marketeers might not agree on some of the IPCC's other recommendations, but here is one subject where both groups are on the same page. Fuel subsidies lower the cost of energy and incentivize consumption: When the price of fuel is artificially lowered, more people will drive and fewer will turn to carpooling and other commuting alternatives. After all, there's a reason that demand for electric cars surges whenever oil prices spike.
"Prices for end-consumers rarely move in lockstep with international prices because of various buffers, contractual provisions or other mechanisms to smooth volatility," according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). Even as Russia's invasion of Ukraine rocked the global energy market, prices paid in many countries remained artificially low.
The reason? More than $1 trillion in global consumption subsidies in 2022, considerably more than any other recent year. The IEA found that subsidies on natural gas and electricity consumption more than doubled, while oil consumption subsidies rose by 85 percent. The International Monetary Fund found that total global fossil fuel subsidies, both production and consumption, totaled $5.9 trillion in 2020, or 6.8 percent of global GDP.
A decade ago, a study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research estimated that ending all fossil fuel subsidies would decrease global consumption by 29 billion gallons annually.
Last year's Glasgow Climate Pact was the first time an international climate agreement included a call to revoke subsidies. Even then, it came after significant opposition from developing countries such as India and China.
The IPCC report notes that ending subsidies can hurt "the most economically vulnerable." But the IEA noted that "subsidies are rarely well-targeted to protect vulnerable groups and tend to benefit better-off segments of the population." It recommends prioritizing "structural changes" over short-term relief, while the IPCC report argues that if you want to help poor people pay for transportation, it may make more sense to redistribute the revenue you saved by cutting the subsidies.
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"U.N. Climate Report..."
Stopped reading there. Ive read enough sci-fi where the world ends, I dont need more from a faux-credible agency
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Factets gleaned from brief internet search:
How much profit is in a gallon of gas?
Generally, the markup (or “margin”) on a gallon of gas is about 15 cents per gallon (gross profit before expenses). Factoring in expenses, which include rent, utilities, freight, labor and credit card fees, a retailer is left with about 2 cents per gallon in profit.
So not much margin for the end seller.
How much would a gallon of gas be without subsidies?
Without subsidies we would all be paying roughly $12.75 per gallon for gasoline. The subject area of interest is how budget cuts might actually get rid of dirty fuel subsidies.
Yeah, that would work out really well.
Also, why no end of subsidies for "green" energy? You'd think a libertarian site might mention that.
Green subsidies are nothing compared to the subsidies to fossil fuel upon which our foreign policy, reserve currency status, and transport infrastructure is based.
Just to give an example - how many gas stations are there v public charging stations?
How many of those gas stations are state owned?
Seriously, what point were you trying to make here?
There are vastly more IC vehicles out there than pure electric. Of course there are going to be more gasoline stations.
Jfree is a fucking joke, and a totalitarian dimwit.
I know, but that was even more fucktarded than normal.
God dammit that was retarded.
Holy fuck what a dumbass comment.
"Just to give an example – how many gas stations are there v public charging stations?"
That certainly is an example. Of your stupidity.
Hint: Gas stations aren't subsidized; charging stations are.
That is the point.
What point? That JFree is an ignoramus?
Another example - there is zero need to defend 'freedom of shipping' with green energy. There is also zero vulnerability to securing global supply chains for fuel.
Do you want to discuss the mining needs for the batteries? Controls a lot of our tolerance for China.
Oil is needed. Green energy is utterly unusable as a primary energy supply.
I'm pretty sure we need to worry about shipping those materials in.
Do you believe solar panels grow from a seed?
What specific fossil fuels subsidies are you referring to?
Our reserve currency status is being torn apart. Our leadership is too stupid to realize it.
Pretty sure I've read Reason articles criticizing those subsidies. Why mention them in an article specifically about fossil fuel subsidies? Amazing, some people around here complain about the writers mentioning their sacred cow in "every" article, others complain if their pet peeve isn't mentioned in every article.
If that's actually what it costs to produce a gallon of gas, then that's what we're paying. Subsidies just mean that we're paying much of the cost indirectly, and that the people paying most of it may not be the ones who benefit the most.
But keep the solar, wind *checks notes* biodiesel subsidies?
This will come as a total shock to you, but unlike the political left and the political right who argue over who and what gets subsidized, libertarians oppose all subsidies as a matter of principle.
That's not the argument I'm making.
And that's also not the argument that the author of the article is making, so you are happy to make a non sequitur?
This i9s the evil piece of lefty shit who supports murder of unarmed protesters as a preventative measure:
JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
Yes, by all means, we should all keep supporting those mostly peaceful rioters.
Which specific subsidies are you referring to?
"oppose all subsidies..."
Stay tuned for the condemnation of subsidies for solar and EV.
Criticizing some subsidies is not the same as defending others. I'm pretty sure the general editorial consensus around here is that the best subsidy is a dead one.
Those awful subsidies- How dare a business be able to deduct the cost of doing business? Why is this allowed? I can only imagine - Im sure Kroger pays income tax on the full price of every can and box sold.
I love hearing about these so-called "subsidies".
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Is-The-Oil-Industry-Really-Subsidized.html
There are three different definitions of subsidies to the oil industry.
The first is direct government cash through reduced commodity pricing. Numerous oil and gas producing countries, all with state controlled production, sell fuel to their domestic economies below the market price. Some even import oil at the world price and sell it to their own citizens well below cost. In 2011 in Iran, for example, that country provided oil to its citizens for about $40 billion less than it would have received had the crude been sold on world markets or if the state oil company had charged consumers the world price.
The second definition of subsidy is taxes not collected. This newer derivative includes depletion and capital cost allowances, accelerated or otherwise. Depreciation deductions against income taxes payable are not restricted to oil and gas. Historically, corporations which invest capital in property, plant or equipment to create future revenue streams, employment, and corporate and personal taxes have been permitted under the tax act to deduct some portion of such investments from current income taxes. This tool to help businesses more quickly recover invested capital has been around forever because it usually results in employment, corporate and personal taxes that would not otherwise exist. Unlike the cash subsidies in case one, this is usually considered a tax deferral because what governments forfeit today is collected tomorrow, often several times over.
The third and furthest stretch of the definition of subsidy comes from climate change activists who claim health and environmental damages caused by the consumption of fossil fuels which may be borne by future governments are a subsidy to companies and industries which produce and market petroleum, coal and natural gas. This includes health costs to people harmed by air pollution as well as the effects of floods, droughts, and storms caused by carbon-induced climate change. The subsidy allegation includes events which have not occurred yet but surely will, so long as fossil fuels remain the primary energy source for the world’s economy. The world’s hapless consumers who buy and burn this stuff for survival, comfort, convenience and entertainment are not required to bear any responsibility for their actions.
Joe Lancaster -L (Iran)
This was such a helpful analysis by him and doesn’t at all conflate and confuse idiotic Lefty talking points with how things work in the US
Thank you for that; but I believe the objective of the UN and activists is simply to render carbon fuel so expensive that no one can buy it; be that to drive their car, heat their home, dry their laundry, or cook their food.
What do you suppose the price of a gallon of gas would be in the US if all such "subsidies" were eliminated?
Exactly the same. It just means that the costs would be paid more directly by those who benefit more directly.
EXACTLY; There is no oil subsidies in the US by the most basic of standards of definition.
Even the news this article points to shows only $500B GLOBALLY with Iran, Russia, India as the largest subsidizers..
Yeah none of these would qualify as a "subsidy" to most people. Even the so called cash subsidies are simply state controlled energy companies selling domestically for less than the international market price. That doesn't mean that they aren't making a profit and lower energy costs obviously benefit their local economies. Really a silly article.
You would think he would notice that little matter. I also notice that the amount of taxes taken out per unit of fossil fuels is ignored.
He has an agenda to declare progressivism and libertarianism as aligned. Where libertarians will agree is that subsidies should be eliminated in all senses. Where we disagree is when it is used to tank an industry and socially engineer the market
So, any list of subsidies by country?
Click the link in the article.
You still haven't described what counts as a fossil fuel company "subsidy". Companies (and the courts) are going to rightly look skeptical at claims that generally-available tax treatments like being able to capitalize R&D counts as a "subsidy". So what exact "subsidies" unique to the fossil fuel industry are you complaining about here?
Beyond a vague reference to production and consumption, that is interestingly undefined. We are left with the impression that petroleum is just one be crony capitalist gorging on government excess.
I would very much like to see an actual breakdown of "subsidies" by country, and what that actually means.
There are some specific tax breaks to the fossil fuel industry, but that's just because equivalent tax breaks need sector-specific language. I can't find any direct subsidies for fossil fuels in the US.
Green energy, on the other hand, has massive tax breaks specific to green energy and even direct subsidies and government "investment".
Except the U.N. loves other subsidies.
And how much 'subsidy' is offset by all the fees and permit related expenses that are expended solely because of government involvement?
As two letter organization, the UN only gets 66% of the faith that I give three letter government organizations.
And I cut that in half for international organizations as opposed to national ones.
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Fossil Fuel Subsidies in the USA = ZERO.
Wind & Solar (ONLY) subsidies in the USA. ( Well over $1T ).
Yeah; Lets talk about ending subsidies WHERE they exist.
Libertarians are in favor of cutting actual subsidies, not imagined ones. So I can’t say we’re really working in the same territory here. It’s best to start with actual facts before advocating a position.
What other countries choose to subsidize is of not interest to the United States.
"...It’s best to start with actual facts before advocating a position."
Watermelons have yet to do so regarding the dangers of climate change at all.
The idea that fossil fuels are "subsidized" is b.s. What the green lobby calls "subsidies" is just the normal tax breaks and write-downs companies get in lots of industries.
The article itself lists no subsidies.
The only actual direct subsidies related to fossil fuels I can find is low-income home energy assistance. Feel free to eliminate those, but that's negligible.
On asking for specifics, you'll get BS like 'the US defense budget - it's just to support our oil suppliers'.
Do not expect honesty.
My budget report recommends eliminating the UN.
Can you imagine what the real estate in Manhattan under that plaza is worth?