Current:Home > ScamsHigh Oil Subsidies Ensure Profit for Nearly Half New U.S. Investments, Study Shows -Wealth Legacy Solutions
High Oil Subsidies Ensure Profit for Nearly Half New U.S. Investments, Study Shows
View
Date:2025-04-17 09:30:28
Government subsidies to American energy companies are generous enough to ensure that almost half of new investments in untapped domestic oil projects would be profitable, creating incentives to keep pumping fossil fuels despite climate concerns, according to a new study.
The result would seriously undermine the 2015 Paris climate agreement, whose goals of reining in global warming can only be met if much of the world’s oil reserves are left in the ground.
The study, in Nature Energy, examined the impact of federal and state subsidies at recent oil prices that hover around $50 a barrel and estimated that the support could increase domestic oil production by a total of 17 billion barrels “over the next few decades.”
Using that oil would put the equivalent of 6 billion tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere, the authors calculated.
Taxpayers give fossil fuel companies in the U.S. more than $20 billion annually in federal and state subsidies, according to a separate report released today by the environmental advocacy group Oil Change International. During the Obama administration, the U.S. and other major greenhouse gas emitters pledged to phase out fossil fuel supports. But the future of such policies is in jeopardy given the enthusiastic backing President Donald Trump has given the fossil fuel sector.
The study in Nature Energy focused on the U.S. because it is the world’s largest producer of fossil fuels and offers hefty subsidies. The authors said they looked at the oil industry specifically because it gets double the amount of government support that coal does, in the aggregate.
Written by scientists and economists from the Stockholm Environment Institute and Earth Track, which monitors energy subsidies, the study “suggests that oil resources may be more dependent on subsidies than previously thought.”
The authors looked at all U.S. oil fields that had been identified but not yet developed by mid-2016, a total of more than 800. They were then divided into four groups: the big oil reservoirs of North Dakota, Texas and the Gulf of Mexico, and the fourth, a catch-all for smaller onshore deposits around the country. The subsidies fell into three groups: revenue that the government decides to forgo, such as taxes; the government’s assumption of accident and environmental liability for industry’s own actions, and the state’s below-market rate provision of certain services.
The authors then assumed a minimum rate of return of 10 percent for a project to move forward. The question then becomes “whether the subsidies tip the project from being uneconomic to economic,” clearing that 10 percent rate-of-return threshold.
The authors discovered that many of the not-yet-developed projects in the country’s largest oil fields would only be economically feasible if they received subsidies. In Texas’s Permian Basin, 40 percent of those projects would be subsidy-dependent, and in North Dakota’s Williston Basin, 59 percent would be, according to the study.
Subsidies “distort markets to increase fossil fuel production,” the authors concluded.
“Our findings suggest an expanded case for fossil fuel subsidy reform,” the authors wrote. “Not only would removing federal and state support provide a fiscal benefit” to taxpayers and the budget, “but it could also result in substantial climate benefits” by keeping carbon the ground rather than sending it into a rapidly warming atmosphere.
veryGood! (75)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Hyundai, Kia recall 91,000 vehicles for fire risk: ‘Park outside and away from structures’
- A federal appeals court just made medication abortions harder to get in Guam
- Albuquerque teens accused of using drug deal to rob and kill woman
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Keith Urban, Kix Brooks, more to be inducted into Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame
- Justin Jones, Justin Pearson win reelection following 'Tennessee Three' expulsion vote
- Appeals court allows Biden asylum restrictions to stay in place
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Hyundai, Kia recall 91,000 vehicles for fire risk: ‘Park outside and away from structures’
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Want to live like Gwyneth Paltrow for one night? She's listing her guest house on Airbnb.
- When does 'Only Murders in the Building' Season 3 come out? Release date, cast, trailer
- Judge rejects attempt to temporarily block Connecticut’s landmark gun law passed after Sandy Hook
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Upgrade your home theater with these TV deals on LG, Samsung, Fire TV and more
- Court throws out conviction after judge says Black man ‘looks like a criminal to me’
- When temps rise, so do medical risks. Should doctors and nurses talk more about heat?
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Trump's day in court, an unusual proceeding before an unusual audience
FBI gives lie-detector tests to family of missing Wisconsin boy James Yoblonski
Louisville police fatally shoot man who fired at them near downtown, chief says
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles return, rebooted and reinvigorated, for 'Mutant Mayhem'
Why Tia Mowry Is Terrified to Date After Cory Hardrict Divorce
Horoscopes Today, August 3, 2023