Subsidizing The Epocalypse

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I take as my subject for this post a claim made over at Forbes Magazine, viz:

I saw that and said “Whaaaa”? My urban legend detector light started flashing bright red at that claim that we’re on the primrose path to the epocalypse. 

Me, I always want to go the actual study instead of the media interpretation. In this case, the underlying study is by the IMF, the International Monetary Fund. It uses a most unusual definition of “subsidy”. Normally, subsidies are divided into direct and indirect subsidies.

A direct subsidy is money given to a producer or consumer. It’s actual cash.

An indirect subsidy, on the other hand, doesn’t involve actual cash, although it has a defined monetary value. An indirect subsidy includes things like tax rebates or R&D grants or the like.

The IMF definition, on the other hand, is quite bizarre. I’ve looked at a lot of studies of fuel subsidies, and only people with an axe to grind use one like this:

This paper updates estimates of fossil fuel subsidies, defined as fuel consumption times the gap between existing and efficient prices (i.e., prices warranted by supply costs, environmental costs, and revenue considerations), for 191 countries.

To highlight the difference between the standard definition and the IMF definition, let me give you a crystal-clear example of what the IMF considers to be a subsidy for “environmental costs” to the evil oil industries … but first I am obliged to warn you this stuff is not for the lily-livered or the faint of heart. So I’ll offer you a chance to avoid spoiling your digestion … any takers? OK, for those remaining hardy souls, one of the IMF’s many environmental subsidies is …

The cost of fixing the potholes on the road to my humble abode.

Truly. I’m not making this up. Pot-hole repair is part of their environmental “subsidy” that they claim is going to the energy companies. 

And what are “environmental subsidies” when they are at home? I thought you’d never ask. Fortunately, they give examples, viz:

local air pollution mortality, broader costs associated with the use of fuels in road vehicles, and global warming

In the strange IMF parallel universe, the cost of fixing each of those is considered as a SUBSIDY TO EXXON AND SHELL! Fixing potholes as a subsidy to the energy companies! Have you ever heard such a daft thing?

Let me pause a moment here. They say that we should include “broader costs associated with the use of fuels in road vehicles”, meaning building the roads, building the bridges, and maintaining both of them.

But if you’re going to include that, how about the “broader costs associated with the use of fuels in building construction”? Buildings, like roads, are built using fossil fuels and run on fossil fuels. So … why include the costs of one and not the other?

These kinds of sort-of-related-not-really-costs are generally called “externalities”. The HUGE problem with using them is once you start to include anything but direct costs … where do you stop? Why include the cost of road construction and maintenance, but not the cost of building construction and maintenance?

From the study, the claimed reason for including the road costs is:

Environmental costs are just as real as supply costs, and undercharging for an unbiased (albeit uncertain) estimate of them is tantamount to undercharging for the true social costs of consumption.

Well … no. For many reasons. First, supply costs have an actual dollar figure to them, to the penny. Environmental “costs” do not. You can just pick a number.

Next, if your estimate is “uncertain”, how on earth would you know if it is “unbiased”.

Next, there is no rule or even rough guideline regarding what to include. Roads? Bridges? Potholes only? The possibilities are endless.

Next, if you need a clear example of how ludicrous this process is, consider the total impossibility of putting a dollar figure on the last item in their list, “global warming”. Seriously?

And finally, here is the real difficulty—in calculating the “externalities”, they are only including the external COSTS that they claim are associated with fossil fuels. They are totally ignoring the external BENEFITS of fossil fuels. Yes, there is a cost to fixing the roads, but there are also benefits. 

These benefits, of course, are just as hard to put a price on as are the external costs. How much is it worth to have a good road to take me to the hospital after my seizure in November? Well … to me, a hell of a lot, although of course YMMV. I discussed this whole problem of monetizing externalities here.

And to me, this is why you should NEVER mix real costs and “monetized externalities”. One is real and very measurable. The other is an “accordion variable”, one that you can make as wide or as thin as you wish.

In other words, this IMF study has nothing to do with actual subsidies. The IMF: 

• calculates an imaginary “efficient” price level that the authors think fuel would be supplied at on some kind of imaginary ideal planet, 

• adds in the price of everything but the kitchen sink, e.g. they’ve added in the cost of “traffic congestion”, the cost to repair potholes, and even the imaginary cost of “global warming”, 

• subtracts from that giant bulked-up number the actual price, and 

• calls the difference a “subsidy”.

Yeah, when you add in highly suspect cost estimates of repairing potholes and traffic congestion and “global warming” as “subsidies” to fossil fuels, it’s easy to get up to a really, really big number. And that big number is many things. It’s impressive. It’s alarming. It scares children.

But it’s not a subsidy of any kind, direct or indirect. It’s a morass of monetized externalities, but only costs, not benefits.

For comparison, let’s look at real numbers. The US Energy Information Agency keeps records of actual subsidies. These cover both direct and indirect subsidies, viz:

• Tax expenditures: the amount of tax benefits or preferences received by taxpayers and forgone by the federal government

• Direct expenditures to recipients (i.e., both producers and consumers): the amount of grants, loans, or other financial assistance awards made directly to recipients

• Research and development (R&D) support: the amount of grants, loans, or other financial assistance awards made for R&D

• DOE loan guarantees: financial support authorized to be provided by DOE for innovative clean energy technologies that are typically unable to obtain conventional private financing because of their high technology risks.

This is the standard definition of subsidies. No nonsense about externalities. No ridiculous attempt to add in the fantasy cost of “global warming”

From Table 3 in the document linked to above, the total of direct plus indirect subsidies for oil and natural gas is about $2 billion dollars per year. For coal, it’s about $1.15 billion per year … a far, far cry from their claimed $649 billion. 

Grrrr …


Intermezzo:

I took a break to go visit the ocean with my gorgeous ex-fiancée. Analyzing this kind of IMF garbage tends to angrify my blood. We went to the point out at the mouth of Bodega Bay. No whales today, big waves though. The waves are supposed to keep building for a couple days, the surf spot at Mavericks will be pounding …

We went out on the point where there is a curious kind of Stonehenge-like monument to the men and women who go to sea, and to those who don’t return. That good woman and I used to fish commercially out of this harbor, so it holds many memories for us. Here’s the monument, set up like the bow of a ship, with a boat’s steering wheel hidden on the back side of the square center stone. You can stand there, hold the wheel, and look out to sea:

And here’s the brass plaque on the center stone:

We walked out to the point, and looked out over the channel between the shore and a nearby offshore island, the narrow entry that she and I would use to bring the boat back to harbor, the passage that the sailors call “between the rock and the hard place” …

And the wind and the sea did their usual magic, soothed my blood and left me enjoying the very last day of 2019.

But I digress …


To return to the article that I’m analyzing, the headline comparing subsidies with education expenditures is very deceptive. To begin with, their calculated “subsidy” (which is nothing of the kind) is $649 billion per year. This is a huge, monumental, unbelievable exaggeration … but let’s pretend it’s real for just a moment. This is indeed about ten times larger than FEDERAL spending on education.

But what they don’t bother to mention is, the Feds are only responsible for a tiny bit of US spending on education, only about $59 billion.

Most spending on education is at the state and local level. Between Federal, state, and local direct cash outlays, we spend $1.23 TRILLION on education, about twice the amount of even their bogus figure. See here for details. 

And the final problem with their analysis? It is that you cannot just look at raw subsidy numbers as they are doing. Once again, it’s a “cost/benefit” deal, and once again, they have left out the benefits. Consider: which one is better … spending $100 to subsidize the production of lots of energy, or spending $10 to subsidize a business like Solyndra that crashed and burned?

Obviously, the $100 option is far preferable to the $10 option. Raw subsidy numbers are meaningless.

So here’s a graph of those same EIA direct and indirect subsidies discussed above, but this time expressed per barrel of oil equivalent energy produced. 

As you can see, per the amount of energy produced, we’re spending a hundred times more subsidizing renewables than we spend subsidizing natural gas and oil.

SUMMARY:

• Total US subsidies for fossil fuels, both direct and indirect, are about $3.2 billion dollars with a “b”. Their $649 billion dollar figure is nonsense.

• Total US spending on education, combining Federal, state, and local, is about $1.23 trillion dollars with a “t”, or about five hundred times as much as we spend on fossil fuel subsidies. Their $59 billion figure is only about 5% of the total educations expenditures.

• Per unit of energy produced, subsidies on renewables (solar, wind, biomass) are about a hundred times as large as the subsidy on oil.

CONCLUSION:

• Epocalypse canceled, sorry, no ticket refunds.

My very best New Years wishes to all,

w.

PS: Misunderstandings are the bane of the intarwebs. When you comment, please QUOTE THE EXACT WORDS you are discussing, so we can all be clear just what and who you are referring to.

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Gary Pearse
January 1, 2020 10:33 am

It would also be good to show what the fossil fuel industry and all its employees pay in taxes. Heck, add in the federal, state, etc tax take added at the pump. Renubles don’t pay anthing.

brians356
Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 1, 2020 12:15 pm

Compared and contrasted with total taxes paid by education industry employees.

John Green
Reply to  brians356
January 1, 2020 5:10 pm

There was a typo in the image at the top of the article.
Correction:
United States spend ten times more on fossil fuel subsidies than on indoctrination.

Reply to  brians356
January 1, 2020 7:35 pm

You are confusing two types of taxes. Almost all education institutions are not-for-profit, so they pay no income tax (unlike Exxon, Chevron, Shell, etc.). The employees pay income and payroll taxes like any employee of any industry.

Federal and state governments derive revenue from sale of oil/gas exploration permits, usually sold at auction. There is no equivalent tax on the education industry.

Additionally, both federal and state governments (and some municipal jurisdictions) levy a retail sales tax on fuel. This is effectively paid by the consumer not the oil company per-se, but again there is not equivalent tax collected per semester-hour of class time.

Finally, the federal government guarantees a good portion of student loans, enabling a somewhat lower than market interest rate. This is effectively a subsidy to the borrower and should be accounted as such (just as should federal loan guarantees for nuclear plant construction).

Taken all together, government derives substantial revenue as a direct result of the exploration, extraction, refining and sale of fossil fuels, and absolutely none from the operation of educational institutions. To the contrary, education represents a very substantial net outlay at all levels.

Roads and bridges and fixing potholes are funded out of fuel taxes and aren’t really a subsidy. The power of eminent domain used to acquire right-of-way for roads could be considered a subsidy, but if so it’s just a fair to call it a subsidy of the automobile makers.

Transportation infrastructure is one of the essential underpinnings of a modern industrial society. If you take away roads and bridges we’ll be back living in the 18th century and we’ll all be too busy just trying to survive to complain about real or imagined subsidies to the fossil fuel industry.

Randy Wester
Reply to  Alan Watt, Climate Denialist Level 7
January 2, 2020 6:35 am

No, if you took away communication infrastructure we would be living in the pre-telegraph 18th century.

If you completely took away transportation infrastructure we would be living in the Stone Age.

Taking away widespread internal combustion would only set us back a century to before the Aluminium Age.

Reply to  Alan Watt, Climate Denialist Level 7
January 2, 2020 10:07 am

Corporations don’t pay taxes, they collect them from workers and customers. All corporate outlays are included in the prices of their products.

Randy Wester
Reply to  Sam Grove
January 2, 2020 1:25 pm

By that logic, no organization ever pays taxes, only individuals.

And individuals required to contribute out of the profits of their employment earnings or commerce with customers or investments in business, or government support, never pay taxes either?

John Endicott
Reply to  Sam Grove
January 3, 2020 10:08 am

By that logic, no organization ever pays taxes, only individuals.

Yes, Randy, that is basically correct. Think About it. Companies factor into the price of their good and services *ALL* the costs of doing business. All costs includes the costs of paying taxes. Increases in the cost of labor gets factored into the price. Increases in the cost of materials gets factored into the price. And, yes, increases in the cost of taxes gets factored into the price. Same as the cost of any other component of doing business.

If, for whatever reason, they can’t raise their price, then they cut back on costs (hire less workers, substitute lower quality materials, etc.). And if they can neither raise prices nor cut costs, resulting in losses instead of profits, they’ll end up going out of business. This is all Econ 101 level stuff.

Randy Wester
Reply to  John Endicott
January 3, 2020 10:37 pm

Rural municipalities in Alberta are owed $81 million in unpaid property taxes, by oil and gas producers.

If a corporation doesn’t really pay taxes, i guess that’s why they can make potholes by running service rigs and tankers over the county roads but then don’t have to pay to grade them.

2hotel9
Reply to  Randy Wester
January 4, 2020 3:13 am

So, what you are saying is the people who own property are not paying taxes. Oil and Gas companies lease the right to operate on land, the owners of said land have to pay taxes on it. Try again.

Randy Wester
Reply to  2hotel9
January 4, 2020 8:43 am

The Person who owns the land is Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. Her tenants who have the right to work the surface have a duty to pay taxes, as well as the tenants who were granted mineral rights before 1905, and the Hudsons Bay company, and the Canadian Pacific Railway.

Most oil companies pay for a Crown lease for mineral rights, and every tenant who owns property must pay property taxes for the maintenance of common goods.

In other words, these good ol’ boys ran off without paying their share of the maintenance of a Common Good, and left a toxic mess / public nuisance that the other tenants have to pay, to clean up. We are Not Amused.

2hotel9
Reply to  Randy Wester
January 4, 2020 4:00 pm

Really?!? You are claiming Her Majesty is not paying Her taxes? Wow, government always gets “its” money no matter what name is at the top of the sheet. Again, try again.

Randy Wester
Reply to  2hotel9
January 5, 2020 10:59 pm

No, the oil and gas companies’ property is in and on the land. And the land owner is Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. She doesn’t pay tax to herself.

The farmers and smallholders are freehold tenants, but pay taxes on their ownership of the right to work the surface.

The cost of constructing and maintaining roads is largely paid through property (not fuel) tax. Most fuel tax is excise/royalty tax paid to the Crown.

The petrolrum industry receives little or no subsidy, except unintentionally by bankruptcy.

2hotel9
Reply to  Randy Wester
January 6, 2020 5:23 am

Land owners pay property taxes. Companies doing business on that land pay the land owners, then the land owners pay the property taxes with a portion of that payment to them. If your government is participating in a scheme to avoid paying their lawfully required taxes you need to take that up with them, not me or oil/gas/mining/timbering companies.

Reply to  Sam Grove
January 4, 2020 3:24 pm

@Sam Grove:

In the sense of who ultimately foots the bill you are correct; corporations simply pass through the taxes they pay as part of the cost they build into the sale of their products and services.

But in an accounting sense corporations do pay taxes, and it appears as a line item on their balance sheets, and the amount paid directly reduces the earnings distributed to shareholders. And the distinction here is that for-profit corporations like energy companies are assessed and must pay income taxes on their net earnings, while non-profit corporations like universities do not. So back to the focus of this post, education corporations are not taxed on their income, and the amount of taxes avoided should be counted as a “subsidy” if we’re being consistent.

2hotel9
Reply to  Alan Watt, Climate Denialist Level 7
January 4, 2020 3:53 pm

Oh, another direct hit! You don’t tend to walk rds around the area, go right for the point of maximum damage. Good on you, sir.

Irfan Ali
Reply to  Alan Watt, Climate Denialist Level 7
January 2, 2020 8:45 pm

Alan, eminent domain usually involves compensation for those lands that are private.

Reply to  Irfan Ali
January 4, 2020 3:16 pm

@Irfan All:
Under the US Consititution, eminent domain always involves compensation. But just because you receive “fair market” value for your property doesn’t mean you would willingly sell it at that price. Exxon cannot force you to sell you land to advance their plans; government can. The exercise of that power is in effect a subsidy, as it enables a sale that might not otherwise take place.

Randy Wester
Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 2, 2020 6:11 am

Energy production equipment installations are taxed whether a petroleum pipeline or a hydrogen pipeline, a gas turbine or wind turbine, a power line frim a coal plant or a solar farm.

Solar and wind ‘farms’ themselves are also taxed. The total value is tiny by comparison, as are the taxes, and there are some subsidies.

Buying anything attracts sales and import taxes, whether a rooftop solar or rope start backup generator or a new furnace. But also not everything at your house adds to property tax, even if it’s screwed down and wired into the panel.

I think it’s better to counter the stream of riduculous propaganda from the left, with facts rather than with more propaganda.

If only politicians would counter propaganda like:

“You. Bought. A. Pipeline!”

with:

“You. Bought. A. Diesel. Campaign. Bus!!”,

Which would be countered with “What’s that Trudeau jet run on?”

It might lead to some honest discussions.

Randy Wester
Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 2, 2020 6:50 am

Renewables also pay property and sales taxes, in large scale installations like wind and solar farms. They don’t pay severance or royalties, obviously, but if they were ever significantly large, there surely would be new taxes invented.

Rooftop PV installations here have sales and payroll taxes, but not property tax.

Let’s not add to the propaganda, wild exaggeration, and misinformation around petroleum and energy. The article neatly and thoroughly skewers the notion that the petroleum industry is getting a free ride.

Rob Duncan
Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 2, 2020 6:55 am

Agree,
Don’t forget to include fees paid by coal companies to pay for the reclamation/environmental clean up of pre-SMCRA coal mining through the Abandoned Mine Land program.

From the Department of Interior
Revenue and disbursements
Fees paid by coal mine operators fund the AML Reclamation Program.

Companies pay a per-ton fee to OSMRE:

$0.28/ton on surface mined coal
$0.12/ton on deep-mined coal (subsurface)
$0.08/ton on lignite
Congress set the current rates when the fee was extended in the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, lowering the rates 20% from the original amounts set in 1977.

Interest from AML fees pays for a portion of the costs for health care plans for the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA).

Just ask Wyoming how much taxes are paid by the fossil fuel folks and the benefits to their communities.

Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 2, 2020 10:14 am

In 2018, ExxonMobil generated $290.2 billion in gross revenue. XOM spent $259.2 billion to generated that revenue. $32.7 billion was spent on “other taxes and duties” – Payments to government entities. This left them $31 billion of income before income taxes. They paid $9.5 billion worth of income taxes on the $31 billion, leaving $21.4 billion in net income.

For every $1 of net earnings, governments confiscated $2 worth of taxes and duties.

https://corporate.exxonmobil.com/-/media/Global/Files/investor-relations/annual-meeting-materials/annual-report-summaries/2018-Summary-Annual-Report.pdf

Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 2, 2020 1:16 pm

Thank you Willis for this article.

The warmist fraudsters frequently toss out this blatant falsehood about government subsidies to the oil industry. The fact is that the oil industry is often the primary funder of governments around the world.

In Canada, the oil industry in the province of Alberta is one of the primary funders of the entire country, through tax transfers via the federal government to the other provinces. Tax transfers exist when the feds collect tax money in Alberta and spend it in other provinces.

Here is a summary of tax transfers from province to province. Since 1961, only Ontario, Alberta and BC are net positive, contributing more money to the rest-of-Canada than they took out. Now, only Alberta is positive. Ontario’s manufacturing economy has been severely harmed by costly, intermittent green energy policies. BC has also recently become a subsidized province.

The contributions since 1961 from each Alberta family-of-four to the rest of Canada is about one million dollars – and the average Alberta family is not worth even close to one million dollars.

Regards, Allan

Post Script:

Why do the warmists frequently spread their false propaganda? Because that is what they do; that is their policy – Lie, lie, lie!

A few quotes by Lenin will shed further light on this process:
https://www.azquotes.com/author/8716-Vladimir_Lenin

Truth is the most precious thing. That’s why we should ration it.
[aka “Lie, lie, lie!”]

We can and must write in a language which sows among the masses hate, revulsion, and scorn toward those who disagree with us.
[There are many such examples in the global warming/climate change scam – for example, climate scammers call climate skeptics “deniers” and refuse to debate the bogus CAGW “settled science”.]

There are no morals in politics; there is only expedience. A scoundrel may be of use to us just because he is a scoundrel.

Free speech is a bourgeois prejudice.

The press should be not only a collective propagandist and a collective agitator, but also a collective organizer of the masses.

People always have been and they always will be stupid victims of deceit and self-deception in politics.

It is, of course, much easier to shout, abuse, and howl than to attempt to relate, to explain.

Democracy is indispensable to socialism.

The goal of socialism is communism.

The way to crush the bourgeoisie is to grind them between the millstones of taxation and inflation.

Trust is good, but control is better.

As an ultimate objective, “peace” simply means communist world control.

One of the basic conditions for the victory of socialism is the arming of the workers Communist and the disarming of the bourgeoisie the middle class.
[aka “We must get rid of the Second Amendment and disarm the populace.”]

One man with a gun can control 100 without one.

Give me four years to teach the children and the seed I have sown will never be uprooted.
[Is that four years of public school or four years of university, or both? Why are so many teachers doctrinaire leftists?]

Give me just one generation of youth, and I’ll transform the whole world.

**************************

Reply to  ALLAN MACRAE
January 3, 2020 10:59 am

CANADA – FEDERAL TAX TRANSFERS
Tax transfers exist when the feds collect tax money in Alberta and spend it in other provinces.

Province 1961-2017 Per Family
Cdn$ Billions of Four (Cdn$)

NL -$172.3 -$1,254,228

PEI -$49.1 -$1,506,396

NS -$305.8 -$1,375,752

NB -$202.7 -$1,121,532

QC -$476.3 -$267,216

ON +$722.9 +$279,300

MB -$175.2 -$618,336

SK -$98.8 -$398,316

AB +$611.0 +$837,672
+2%int.+$906.5 +$1,242,827

BC +$120.8 +$125,628

TERR -$113.2 -$5,035,608

Source: Statistics Canada data and computations by R. Mansell and M. Khanal

John M
January 1, 2020 10:36 am

I recall looking through the list of FF subsidies and saw things like funding the strategic petroleum reserve and home heating oil subsidies for low income families.

This is what happens when FF “subsidies” are removed:

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ecuador-protests-idUSKBN1WI25Q

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-protests-tehran-rouhani-subsidies-a9208021.html

I suspect the only protesting to be heard if renewable subsidies were removed would be from “Green” investors.

Reply to  John M
January 1, 2020 11:57 am

In the US, the GreenSlime investors have bought and paid for the Democrat politicians and Enviro-NGOs mouthpieces to do their whining and protesting for them.

Reply to  John M
January 1, 2020 2:07 pm

A few years ago, and it was easy to track down the individual components of the alleged subsidies.

Then it became known that DOE’s research facilities, a sizeable number, were booked as subsidies supporting fossil fuels.
Plus all of those tax subsidies towards people buying renewables, those are charged against fossil fuels as well.

During 2016, it became very frustrating trying to delve into the individual subsidies; where footnotes and references lead deeper into convoluted documents that list might gross amounts, but fail to divulge individual details as to exactly the source and where applied.

From the report Willis supplied a link to above; “Direct Federal Financial Interventions and Subsidies in
Energy in Fiscal Year 2016”: the description under their “Table 1” chart:

“Table1. Federal direct expenditure and R&D expenditure subsidies: DOE: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the Chief Financial Officer, Base Financial Data, FY 2010, FY 2013, and FY 2016; FY 2010 and FY 2013: U.S. General Services Administration, USASpending.gov – Government spending at your fingertips, https://www.usaspending.gov/, accessed October 22, 2014; FY 2016: U.S. Department of the Treasury, USASpending.gov, https://www.usaspending.gov/, accessed November 16, 2017.
Loan guarantee programs credit subsidy: Computed from data from U.S. Department of Energy, Loan Program Office, https://www.energy.gov/lpo/portfolio/portfolio-projects, accessed January 20, 2015 and EIA, Direct Federal Financial Interventions and Subsidies in Energy in Fiscal Year 2010, July 2011, -Table 29.

4 Section 1703 of Title XVII of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 authorizes the U.S. Department of Energy to support innovative clean energy technologies that are typically unable to obtain conventional private financing due to high technology risks. In addition, the technologies must avoid, reduce, or sequester air pollutants or anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases.
The Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing (ATVM) Loan Program was established in Section 136 of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 to support the production of fuel-efficient, advanced technology vehicles and qualifying components in the United States.
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 amended Loan Guarantee Program’s authorizing legislation, creating Section 1705.”

All words that strongly suggest loans, R&D, tests, salaries, buildings, heating and cooling costs are still charged against fossil fuels.

Willis’s excellent analysis above shows how even with IMF, Forbes, EIA and IEA’s financial thumbs on the scale, fossil fuels are extremely beneficial for the alleged subsidies lodged against them and how uneconomical the alleged renewables.

Now, I am left wondering if all of the land costs necessary to support renewable energy sources are somehow charged against fossil fuels as a ‘subsidy to fossil fuels’?

Peter D
Reply to  John M
January 2, 2020 2:02 pm

When I lived in Indonesia, I observed riots when the Government pushed up fuel costs. I saw riots because locals wanted jobs in the resource industry and they’d already employed too many people.
What I never saw was renewables. Too expensive.

A C Osborn
January 1, 2020 10:40 am

Their “estimated” subsidies (lies) will be banded about everywhere by warmists and extinction alarmists.
You know what they say about lies circling the world.

MarkG
Reply to  A C Osborn
January 1, 2020 12:03 pm

They’ve been doing this for years. Every time I investigated some absurd ‘subsidy’ claim it turned out they’d just made up some number for ‘environmental cost’ or some such nonsense and called that a subsidy. Literally created trillions of dollars of ‘subsidies’ out of thin air.

Ed Zuiderwijk
January 1, 2020 10:57 am

The state is subsidising your and my breathing. Because they do not tax it. And if they were taxing it they still would be subsidising it because they wouldn’d tax it enough.

People who promote such logic out to be sectioned. Or worse.

Greg
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
January 1, 2020 11:36 am

sectioned as in draw and quartered ?

WSJ is run by dyslexics, they meant is to be called SJW. As for the IMF, I’m not sure that I is for but I can read the MF loud and clear.

Jan E Christoffersen
Reply to  Greg
January 2, 2020 9:29 am

Christine Lagarde was the managing director of the IMF for seven years until November 2019. Now she is President of the European Central Bank.

Heaven help the Europeans.

Hivemind
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
January 1, 2020 4:33 pm

Haven’t you heard of a “Carbon Tax”?

Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
January 1, 2020 11:06 pm

Are you still subsidizing the local grocery store? Surely anything you spend there is a subsidy of that business by the definitions used by the IMF.

John Endicott
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
January 3, 2020 10:59 am

“Government’s view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.” – Ronald Reagan

BillP
January 1, 2020 11:08 am

If constructing and maintaining roads is a subsidy for fossil fuels, then it is also a subsidy for electric and other non-fossil fuel vehicles. So add that into the “alternative energy” subsidies.

MarkW
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
January 1, 2020 1:44 pm

pun intended?

Bob boder
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
January 2, 2020 8:13 am

Ah, but Willis there is an end and its called Communism and state control of everything, eliminates all issues with corporations.

Reply to  Bob boder
January 2, 2020 8:57 am

The tendency is toward fascism where corporations will still be officially “private”, but just controlled by paid puppets. Already going on now to some extent (media, google, academia, etc).

commieBob
Reply to  BillP
January 1, 2020 1:35 pm

Indeed.

The kiddies have to travel to school. Therefore any government activity that fosters that travel has to be counted as a subsidy.

All the fossil fuel subsidies, like filling potholes, should also be counted toward education spending.

There is an almost infinite gulf between those who seek after the truth and those who are just trying to prove a case. Dr. Mann would be exhibit ‘A’ in that regard.

Phoenix44
Reply to  BillP
January 2, 2020 1:46 pm

Its entirely unclear why road costs are a subsidy for fossil fuel companies but not for car companies?

But of course they are not a subsidy at all, as roads are paid for by the users of the roads. If I pay the cost of something then there cannot be a subsidy.

John Endicott
Reply to  Phoenix44
January 3, 2020 12:06 pm

Ultimately it’s the consumer who pays. And as the tax is currently based on fuel/gas tax in most states, it’s not the road users (some of whom drive electric, ride bikes or horses, or otherwise don’t consume gasoline when using the roads) but rather the gasoline users (some of whom aren’t necessarily driving on the roads when using the gas, for example those operating lawmowers, gas-powered generators, etc) who are doing the paying.

Gary Pearse
January 1, 2020 11:09 am

If we did accounting like Nouveau Monde Phillistines, we would be arrested for defrauding government. I think as a nice contrast between renewables’ and fossil fuels’ effect on the government treasury, you should show what the fossil fuel industry (and its employees) pays in taxes

Gary Pearse
January 1, 2020 11:11 am

[Mods please remove last comment a partial repeat]

cuz Lorne
January 1, 2020 11:23 am

“Epocalypse” may be a great term for the ‘Climate Emergency’ that seems to be strangling our epoch.

Is it your invention?

rbabcock
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
January 12, 2020 5:47 pm

I first heard Tom Lehrer when I was a wee one. My favorite was “The Hunting Song” with the refrain: “There are 10 stuffed heads in my trophy room right now: Two Game Wardens, Seven Hunters and a pure-bred Jersey Cow.” The guy was genius.

2hotel9
January 1, 2020 11:24 am

This is precisely why IMF should be eliminated and Forbes boycotted out of business.

Stevek
January 1, 2020 11:29 am

The Forbes article is dishonest.

It is only looking at Federal spending on education which is roughly 10 pct of total primary and secondary education money spent. The vast majority of funds for education comes from state and local government.

DaveK
January 1, 2020 11:35 am

Another excellent piece, Willis!

As you say, calculating the real cost of something gets into some pretty gray areas when you start adding the costs of so-called indirect subsidies. I suppose there is a bit of legitimacy to the argument that filling potholes is an indirect subsidy, but to do that you need to apportion those costs to EVERYTHING that is indirectly subsidized by that activity.

So, what other activities might also be indirectly subsidized by that? I guess, just about everything that somehow involves movement on the highways, since leaving potholes unfilled would undoubtedly increase the cost of those activities. Unfortunately, the article would seem to allocate the entire cost as a subsidy to fossil fuels. If it was allocated properly, I doubt that anything but a trivial subsidy could be allocated to any individual activity. Further, the cost of pothole filling is SUPPOSED to be paid through taxes already paid for the consumption of those fossil fuels, so our government already figured an arguably equitable way for the users of the highway system to pay for its maintenance. [An aside… I say arguably equitable because the damage to roads and highways is largely caused by heavy and overweight trucks, but most of the tax revenues come from taxes on passenger car fuel.]

Ah, well, number manipulators will always do so to support their arguments, and the least we can do is try to be aware of their flummery.

Doug
January 1, 2020 11:41 am

Each year I file a tax return on my miniscule ownership in some in oil and gas wells, and search for my subsidy. I never find one. There is a thing called “domestic production credits” which helps small producers of goods produced in the USA. It would work if I were producing something like sand or gravel, but the last line of the form states “subtract % of total derived from the production of oil and gas”.

Leonard Weinstein
January 1, 2020 11:42 am

Why is road work due to fossil fuel use? Don’t electric cars also use the road. If all transportation were using electric, the pot holes would still occur.

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Leonard Weinstein
January 1, 2020 1:14 pm

The Good Roads Movement occurred in the United States between the late 1870s and the 1920s. Advocates for improved roads led by bicyclists turned local agitation into a national political movement.
[Wikipedia]

Blame bicyclists!

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Leonard Weinstein
January 1, 2020 1:53 pm

“Why is road work due to fossil fuel use? Don’t electric cars also use the road. If all transportation were using electric, the pot holes would still occur.”

But they don’t pay the gas tax. That’s one reason why Washington State is moving towards taxing per mile, with a transponder in the vehicle.

Clyde Spencer
Reply to  Leonard Weinstein
January 1, 2020 7:20 pm

Leonard
“The cost of fixing the potholes on the road to my humble abode.”
The answer should be obvious! If the zealots get their way, and there is a complete transition to non-fossil fuel vehicles, they will no longer repair potholes. That eliminates the hated subsidy.

Phoenix44
Reply to  Leonard Weinstein
January 2, 2020 1:59 pm

It’s not, it’s a subsidy for Ford..or is it the buses…maybe logistics companies…or the businesses we get to by driving…

Its absurd, the users pay the full price. Thus there is no subsidy.

Randy Wester
Reply to  Phoenix44
January 3, 2020 10:28 pm

That transponder thing would be fairer all around. Right now we pay property tax that is used to pay for road and alley maintenance.

There’s no rebate for any homeowner or landowner without a road vehicle. But there is an off road fuel tax rebate.

Hugs
January 1, 2020 11:43 am

As I’ve said this is the era of peak stupid. It can only last for years, not decades. Forbes.com publishing this kind of communist ineconomy is a sign of the top being reached. I’m relieved, since it can’t get any worse.

Did I just invoke Murphy?

Gary Pearse
Reply to  Hugs
January 1, 2020 1:03 pm

Hugs, so peak stupid is not sustainable. Lets hope they don’t discover a way to sustain it.

commieBob
Reply to  Gary Pearse
January 1, 2020 1:45 pm

“Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe.” Einstein

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Hugs
January 1, 2020 1:49 pm

It’s already gone on for decades, and shows no signs of slowing.

John Endicott
Reply to  Hugs
January 3, 2020 10:18 am

Unfortunately, peak stupid is just like peak everything else. every time someone claims we’ve reached or are about to reach the peak, a higher peak is usually found. We’ve been hitting peak stupid for decades, and as this forbes article shows, the stupid always seem to find a higher peak to hit.

Detengineer
Reply to  Hugs
January 5, 2020 6:38 am

You think we’ve reached peak stupid?

Here, hold my beer.

son of mulder
January 1, 2020 11:51 am

But as non-fossil fuels take over so there is a mass transfer of infrastructure (I mean subsidies to the Green Industries) such as, roads, electric power infrastructure etc. Now that’s a massive subsidy over just a few years.

cuz Lorne
January 1, 2020 11:54 am

I’ve been struggling for years to comprehend what Subsidies are given to which form of energy: fossil fuels, electricity from each of Coal, Nuclear, Hydro, Wind, Solar – each has blessing & bane. Thanks for your explanation & analysis!
-/-

“Consider: which one is better … spending $100 to subsidize the production of lots of energy, or spending $10 to subsidize a business like Solyndra that crashed and burned?”

However, Solyndra had an ingenious technology (cylindrical panels receiving light from many directions via underlying mirrors) that was valid when Solar Panel prices were above a certain amount.

When the Crash of 2008 destroyed many American banks, warehouses quickly filled with Solar Panels. Solar Farms are built by Banks: no banks = no Solar Farms.

Solar suppliers quickly cut prices to maintain cash flow. China chose to distribute its Quantitative Easing funds by building Solar Farms in China to keep their producers in business. That meant their producers could also continue worldwide sales, which today approach domination status.

The price of Solar Panels dropped 80% in <2 years. 10 long term, excellent American Solar Panel makers were driven out of business, including newcomer Solyndra.

A further tragedy happened when Solyndra’s bankruptcy receiver destroyed the cylindres instead of donating them to researchers for improvement.
-/-

The other hidden question in your Solyndra question is whether it’s better for a society to have Centralised or Distributed generation of electricity. Please analyse for us & explain your opinion.

January 1, 2020 12:00 pm

So what about ‘subsidies’ to education, on top of the huge direct expense? Schools need books. That requires paper, which means cutting down trees, and all the environmental impacts of that. They also need school buses, which require those potholes to be filled, and buses spew out harmful emissions (and non-harmful ones, like CO2).

And schools require land, destroying natural habitats. There are environmental costs to fabricate, er, estimate.

I’m sure there are billions and billions of dollars spent on these and other ‘subsidies’.

The whole thing thing is a scam, but one thing is certain: if these idiots win any concessions wrt the use of fossil fuel, the most profitable companies in the world will be those which make yellow vests.

Ty
Reply to  jtom
January 1, 2020 8:58 pm

Legions of misinformed voters have elected an unending stream of monetary idiots Landing us $22 trillion in debt with $100+ trillion in unfunded liabilities. Using the IMF approach this should arguably be added to the cost of education.

January 1, 2020 12:00 pm

From my observations of the nearby school I would make a SWAG that 10 percent of the average family expenditure is spent on driving to/from school, and while for keeping the family car warm in the winter and cool in the summer when dropping off/picking up their kids at school. Cars are backed up for more than half a mile for about 30 to 45 minutes twice a day.

The other non subsidy that they call a subsidy is the deletion allowance on the oil/NG removed from the ground. Meanwhile, the State, County and/or city collect “Property” taxes on that new found wealth buried in the ground. In reality, they are taxing the fossil fuel balance their budget which raises the price for all users. I would also make a SWAG that the total of all of these “Property”taxes, nationwide, is more than that $649 Billion.

Red94ViperRT10
January 1, 2020 12:02 pm

The cost of fixing the potholes on the road to my humble abode.

So they’re admitting that without fossil fuels there would be no transportation? Nothing fast enough to care (much) about a pothole in the road, anyway. Which leaves out anything faster than a horse-drawn conveyance.

Red94ViperRT10
Reply to  Red94ViperRT10
January 1, 2020 1:03 pm

Tax expenditures: the amount of tax benefits or preferences received by taxpayers and forgone by the federal government

I generally have a huge problem with this, as well. See, what they’re saying here is, all income belongs to the government, and if we allow you to keep any of it, that’s a subsidy!!! Wrong! All income belongs first (and only!) to the one who earned it. Any that winds up in government hands, except by donation, is taken coercively, whether it’s called a tax or fee or whatever! Now most of us obey tax laws and so the actual presence of a gun is not required, but the threat of one is still always there. Why am I the only one that has brought this up?

J Mac
Reply to  Red94ViperRT10
January 2, 2020 9:18 am

Just so, Red!

Reply to  Red94ViperRT10
January 2, 2020 4:19 am

In the UK some of potholes are a danger to cyclists, some might consider that a good thing until it damages their wheel and or suspension.

Philip
January 1, 2020 12:03 pm

So roads and bridges are not used by EVs? And they don’t cause potholes?
Being heavier and delivering more torque, I would have expected them to tear up the roads and bridges more…

Ossqss
January 1, 2020 12:03 pm

The term “renewables” is terribly misleading. The vast amount of said “renewable” energy generation is from burning wood and dung, according to the IEA. That said, it would be better to know how much of the subsidy allocation above actually went to wind and solar, which provides a miniscual amount towards our global energy demand.

It has become quite difficult to filter the “less than complimentary” renewable data out of the recent IEA documents.

https://www.iea.org/data-and-statistics

Richard
January 1, 2020 12:05 pm

From this same paper “Efficient fossil fuel pricing in 2015 would have lowered global carbon emissions by 28 percent and fossil fuel air pollution deaths by 46 percent, and increased government revenue by 3.8 percent of GDP. ”
Amazing.
First of all why did they pick the year 2015?
So all they have to do to fix carbon emissions, air pollution and the economy is to have “efficient” fossil fuel pricing. “Efficient” as in fixing the price through legislation rather than through the market. Right. Just like in Venezuela.
Who pays for this Sh#t/Paper?

Curious George
Reply to  Richard
January 1, 2020 12:31 pm

Who pays? I do. You do. Let’s drain the swamp.

MarkW
Reply to  Richard
January 1, 2020 1:51 pm

“lowered global carbon emissions by 28 percent”
“and increased government revenue by 3.8 percent of GDP”

First they assume that increased taxes will lower the use of fossil fuels, then they calculate the amount of taxes with the assumption that there will be no drop in the use of fossil fuels.

“fossil fuel air pollution deaths by 46 percent”

Can anyone actually find any such deaths?

January 1, 2020 12:06 pm

The UK government states that in the UK there are no subsidies for fossil fuels – just lots of taxes on them. Renewables are very heavily subsidised (as in the rest of the world).

January 1, 2020 12:08 pm

Great exposé, Willis — one that should be publicized far and wide.

I found pretty much the same thing during a conversation with one of my brothers, back in 2015. He said that coal is far more subsidized than “renewables,” and cited a Science mag paper by Ottmar Edenhofer, titled, “King Coal and the queen of subsidies.”

Edenhofer claimed that fossil fuels are subsidized world wide to the tune of $550 billion.

Like you, I checked the numbers at the US Energy Information Agency. And like you, I found that per unit of power generated, the US subsidized renewables at 35 times the rate of fossil fuels.

Edenhofer cited “IEA, World Energy Outlook 2014 (IEA, Paris, 2014),” which gives the $550B number as an unreferenced statement.

Edenhofer based his subsidy on the so-called social costs of carbon — calculated on the assumption that all the disaster-loving IPCC projections are true. Which they are not. It’s entirely a phantasmagorical crock.

And, of course, it passed peer review and editorial appraisal in that bastion of climate integrity, Science magazine.

Ottmar Edenhoffer is an economist who famously said that UN climate policy is not about the environment, but about redistributing wealth. In short, he’s a moralizing tyrant.

Here is the US Energy Information Agency data for that analysis.

Table ES2. Quantified energy-specific subsidies and support by type, FY 2010 and FY 2013 (million 2013 dollars)
For FY 2013:
Coal, 2013: $1.085 billion
Natural Gas and Petroleum Liquids, 2013: $2.346 billion
Solar, 2013: $5.328 billion
Wind, 2013: $5.936 billion
Renewables, 2013 total: $15.043 billion

Table ES4. Fiscal year 2013 electricity production subsidies and support (million 2013 dollars, unless otherwise specified)
Coal: 6% of subsidies
Natural gas and petroleum Liquids: 4% of subsidies
Renewables: 72% of subsidies.

In 2013 in the US, renewables got 7x the subsidies of fossil fuels (Table ES4) and produce about 5x less power (Table ES5). That’s 35x the subsidies of fossil fuels per unit power produced.

Curious George
January 1, 2020 12:12 pm

Redefining words is a modern pastime. “Marriage” is not what it used to be. “Free speech” is not what it used to be. “Gender” is not what i used to be. “University” is not what it used to be. “Subsidy” is not what it used to be. IMF is not what it used to be.

Reply to  Curious George
January 1, 2020 11:22 pm

More than a few rather important words in the U.S Constitution, and the legislation enacted under it, no longer mean what they used to mean for the the first 100+ years.

n.n
January 1, 2020 12:16 pm

Welcome to the Twilight fringe, where you can have your baby and plan her, too.

Stevek
January 1, 2020 12:40 pm

I’m not sure how much USA collects in gasoline tax but feds take in 36 billion annually and California 16 billion. I won’t be surprised if total state and federal gasoline tax revenue was over 100 billion.

John Endicott
Reply to  Stevek
January 3, 2020 11:20 am

It varies by state. according to:
https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/statistics/motor-fuel-tax-revenue
In 2015, the states pulled in $43.8 Billion from gas taxes ($5.7 billion of that just from California) Add that to your $36 billion number gets us close to $80 billion, and considering gas taxes have increases in several states over the past 5 years and your $100 billion estimate probably isn’t too far off the mark

John F. Hultquist
January 1, 2020 12:45 pm

Thank Willis.
These folks would divide by zero, given the chance.

HD Hoese
January 1, 2020 12:50 pm

As to potholes, I frequent a four-way stop, 3 paved, one gravel. They keep filling the potholes on the gravel and eroded asphalt with gravel. If they extended the fossil fuel a little farther, they wouldn’t have quite the problem of vehicles turning corners. Also frequented by hikers, bikers, even occasional horse. Need to figure in cost of incompetent education.

I have been to the big rift of Bodega Bay area, have a picture of huge surf, big rip knocking down breaker. I prefer running aground on mud or sand.

January 1, 2020 12:52 pm

Federal highway funds (from the federal gas/diesel tax) goes to States to help maintain the Interstate highway system, at least that is the intent. But that is drop in the bucket compared to what the States, counties, and cities also spend on local highway road maintenance budgets, money that comes from a State gas tax and/or property taxes.

The Federal gasoline tax / diesel tax is: $0.184/gal / $0.244/gal.
State fuel taxes range from:
Lowest: $0.1466/gal / $0.144/gal (Alaska), $0.1742/gal / $0.1742/gal (Missouri – lower 48)
Highest: $0.612/gal +2.25% sales tax / $0.8693/gal +9.25% sales tax (California)

My Arizona is $0.19/gal / $0.27/gal. One of the lowest. Gas around Tucson right now is about $2.45/gal (and no sale tax on top of that.)
Whereas just down the road in San Diego, gas prices today $0.90 higher, around $3.30-$3.35 / gal.
That difference is an additional $20 to fill up a Chevy pickup ~(22-23 gallons) like I own.

The crazy thing of course are the states that have a sales tax on top of the total retail fuel price. So they are applying a sales tax to the fuel (excise) tax to generate more revenue, and when wholesale gas prices go up, so too does the state’s revenue. This gas sales tax is mostly confined to Blue States where the Democrats can never turn down an opportunity to slap on another tax. The only exception is Indiana, which is generally considered Red toady but was Democrat controlled when the fuel sales tax was enacted.
Like any sales tax on an essential item for getting to/from work, these fuel taxes are highly regressive, hitting the lowest incomes the hardest. Where for the rich, these fuel taxes are a minuscule as a fraction of wealth/income.

Of course, EV’s pay no “fuel” tax. But an EV is pricey compared to a comparable ICE vehicle, and they are essentially a luxury item affordable to the affluent and unaffordable/impractical for the blue collar working family making less than $60K/yr. So the lack of an EV fuel tax is a subsidy to the rich.

On this topic, I frequently think of the Atlas Shrugged movie scene where protagonist Dagney Taggert fills up her car and its something like $850, which she can easily afford because she is rich.

I think for 2020, I need to re-watch that 3-part movie based on Ayn Rand’s novel.

Who is John Galt?

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
January 1, 2020 1:37 pm

In Washington State (not the D.C. place) a few years ago, we voted in higher gas taxes (and studies are underway about a per mile charge for EVs or maybe all vehicles).
There has been a growing need of highway repair and improvements. New standards (think safety — ex: Impact Attenuators) raise costs, as do higher wages and materials cost.
Improvements, see: https://i90wildlifebridges.org/

yirgach
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
January 1, 2020 2:02 pm

And lets not forget the Federal Tax Credit (subsidy) for the first 200,000 EVs produced by a manufacturer.

The federal Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax credit is for $2,500 to $7,500 per new EV purchased for use in the U.S. The size of the tax credit depends on the size of the vehicle and its battery capacity. To find out specific tax credit amounts for individual vehicles, visit FuelEconomy.gov’s Tax Credits for Electric Vehicles and Tax Credits for Plug-in Hybrids pages.

See https://www.energy.gov/eere/electricvehicles/electric-vehicles-tax-credits-and-other-incentives

Reply to  yirgach
January 1, 2020 5:28 pm

Tesla’s tax credit is completely gone as of today.

John Endicott
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
January 3, 2020 11:39 am

That’s the Federal EV tax credit. Some states (and even some other countries) may still have their own tax credits and/or other subsides that Tesla and/or Tesla buyers are still eligible for.

Randy Wester
Reply to  John Endicott
January 3, 2020 8:24 pm

And the Canadian federal tax credit of $5,000 on the base Model 3 and other entry level EVs started last April. Quebec and British Columbia have additional provincial credits on most EVs.

There’s a lot of market outside the U.S. and a lot of sales without subsidies.

2hotel9
Reply to  Randy Wester
January 4, 2020 3:04 am

Tax credits are not subsidies? Really?

Randy Wester
Reply to  2hotel9
January 5, 2020 11:22 pm

Some people were, and are, buying Tesla cars and neithr receiving a tax credit or a subsidy. The end of the U.S. subsidy isn’t automatically the end of Tesla. Certainly the stock value didn’t collapse Dec 31.

The Canadian federal subsidy only started nine months ago, and is only on the base Model 3. There had been Provincial subsidies or credits in some provinces before that, and more are sold with than without it.

And before Tesla, Canadian government and provincial subsidies and tax breaks have been granted feom time to time to makers and end users of trucks, trains, aircraft, cars, hydro dams, combines, nuclear power plants, wheel loaders, video cards, a national Oil Company ‘PetroCanada’…

2hotel9
Reply to  Randy Wester
January 6, 2020 5:19 am

So, tax credits are subsidies, thanks for clearing that up. Now, you got actual proof that tesla buyers are not receiving the subsidies you clearly admit exist?

John Endicott
Reply to  John Endicott
January 6, 2020 5:49 am

2hotel9 : Tax credits are not subsidies? Really?

Yes and no.

On the no side: Technically a tax credit is not a subsidy as a subsidy is the government giving money to a business where as a tax credit is the government not taking your money from you in the first place. so by the strict definition it’s not unless you assume all your money belongs to the government and any that they let you keep is a subsidy.

On the yes side: Certain tax credits (such as the EV tax credit), however, have the same ultimate effect as a subsidy – assisting a business by enabling them to get sales (and thus more money) then they otherwise would not have without the tax credit. which is why such credits often get technically mislabeled as subsidies.

2hotel9
Reply to  John Endicott
January 6, 2020 6:08 am

My point all along, Electric Vehicle sales receiving tax credits are a subsidy. EVs are a niche market item. Until auto makers come out with an electric vehicle which has a generator onboard supplying electricity for them to run they are still just a gimmick, not a viable option for people who actually use vehicles.

Red94ViperRT10
Reply to  John Endicott
January 6, 2020 11:48 am

And there are tax “credits” that come to you even if you pay no tax, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit. Two or even three of my tax returns ended with money coming to me even though I paid no tax. I said then (though maybe not out loud) that “credit” was mislabeled.

2hotel9
Reply to  Red94ViperRT10
January 7, 2020 6:46 am

I know quite a few people who only get a “tax refund” because of EITC and they are smug about it, saying they are getting over on the government.

John Endicott
Reply to  John Endicott
January 6, 2020 5:54 am

The end of the U.S. subsidy isn’t automatically the end of Tesla.

No, but it’ll likely lead to a drop in sales. Everywhere else EV tax credits have disappeared have seen a drop in EV sales follow, I see no reason why Tesla would buck that trend.

Certainly the stock value didn’t collapse Dec 31.

the two aren’t well correlated. Tesla hasn’t made a profit in any year that it’s been in existence, and that hasn’t hurt it’s stock value. If Tesla’s stock value matched the companies performance, it’d be a penny stock.

Michael Jankowski
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
January 1, 2020 3:57 pm

Blue state-red state thing is silly.

Categorization tends to be on Presidential voting, and he has no influence on state gas taxes or sales taxes. In some states, governors are often the opposite part of the alleged red state-blue state categorization.

John Endicott
Reply to  Michael Jankowski
January 3, 2020 11:32 am

not silly, though obviously not a 100% match either. However, it does tend to reflect the general political spectrum of those states. The “blue” states tend to be more liberal, and the “red” states tend to be more conservative (and not just when it comes to picking the President). Of course some “red” and some “blue” states are actually more “purple” in that they’re more evenly split between the two sides of the spectrum.

Robert Austin
January 1, 2020 1:01 pm

“Epocalypse”? Is that a creative variation on apocalypse similar to “Anthropocene”. I suggest “ecopocalypse” as being closer in describing alarmist predictions.

David McKeever
January 1, 2020 1:08 pm

Bodega Bay… isn’t that the bay in Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Birds’ ? Look out for crows.

January 1, 2020 1:12 pm

This is politically motivated accounting so it would get a big fat ‘F’ in an accountancy exam, unless corruption is involved? Also, it’s just making any old connection with made up stuff to make an implausible plot work, a bit like a really bad B movie.

Bob boder
Reply to  Stephen Skinner
January 2, 2020 8:14 am

actually this is the kind of thing that gets you an A now days.

John Michelmore
January 1, 2020 1:14 pm

Willis, The ratio of subsidies in relation to the total fossil fuel industry vs renewables compared to that of energy produced doesn’t seem right to me. I might be wrong but I would have thought that in relation to energy produced the ratio would get worse not better!

January 1, 2020 1:27 pm

This article brings us another good example of ‘Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics’. renewables are Unsustainables.

MarkW
January 1, 2020 1:43 pm

Even the $3.2 billion “subsidy” is almost entirely fictitious as it is nothing more than depreciation, which all companies take advantage of and from a financial point of view, is entirely defensible.

Herbert
January 1, 2020 2:18 pm

Willis,
On the external benefits of fossil fuels, you will recall Judge William Alsup’s dismissal of San Francisco’s ridiculous action against Chevron and other Oil companies reported here by Anthony on June 25, 2018-
“Breaking: California Judge tosses global warming lawsuit against oil companies.”
In the memorable words of his Honour-
“With respect to balancing the social utility against the gravity of anticipated harm,it is true that carbon dioxide released from fossil fuels has caused ( and will continue to cause) global warming.But against that negative, we must weigh this positive,our industrial revolution and the development of our modern world has literally been fuelled by oil and coal.”
End of argument.
Now if only someone would explain that to the IPCC, Al Gore and Greta Thunberg.

Bill Murphy
Reply to  Herbert
January 1, 2020 5:08 pm

RE: Now if only someone would explain that to the IPCC, Al Gore and Greta Thunberg.

The IPCC is corrupt, Al Gore is a divinity major turned corrupt politician turned eco-profiteer and Greta is a teenage mentally ill school drop-out. You’d have better results explaining Special Relativity to the average dog.

RiHo08
January 1, 2020 2:40 pm

“Environmental costs are just as real as supply costs, and undercharging for an unbiased (albeit uncertain) estimate of them is tantamount to undercharging for the true social costs of consumption.”

“Environmental costs” are real, it’s just that they are hard to calculate as they appear to vary with each and every item, location, and timing. The shoreline environmental cost of a “king” tide in a rising sea level scenario is somewhat different than at low tide. And then again, every king tide is not the same. Hence, sea level rise impacts are variable, as, I might say, they have been for a while now.

“local air pollution mortality, broader costs associated with the use of fuels in road vehicles, and global warming”

We should expect the health morbidity and mortality impact of air pollution from diesel fuel vehicles to be measurable in Paris these last multiple summers; Beijing, which is polluted every year by dust from the Gobi Desert; or, New Delhi and the pollution from farmers burning their rice crop residue every year. These are big measurable pollution events and still…it is hard to measure increased morbidity let alone mortality. All estimates are by model. Now, the London Fog of 1952, with its more modern day measurements of excess mortality (12 K) although itself a modeled number, did spark renewed legislative action to reduce home coal use which had been of concern since the 13th Century.

It is important to use a benchmark that we all can agree upon. Deaths is such a distinct and agreed upon benchmark, so that we are talking likes-to-likes. Otherwise, we get off track which seems, in my mine to be the point of extremists, confusing real numbers with made up model numbers.

Calculating environmental impact costs with made up numbers for those who are effected is hardly a way to convince the public at large that one’s view point has validity.

niceguy
January 1, 2020 2:46 pm

“• calculates an imaginary “efficient” price level that the authors think fuel would be supplied at on some kind of imaginary ideal planet,”

In other words, the IMF just became another SOVIETOID organization.

January 1, 2020 3:28 pm

IMF’s thinking reminds me of an old quote:

“Any road will get there if you don’t know where you;re going”.

Rudolf Huber
January 1, 2020 3:33 pm

The IMF study puts anything that has ever been taught about public finance to shame. They define some imaginary price they would like on oil and gas and if this price is not being met by the market, that’s a subsidy then. So, if one country taxes the Bejesus out of its own population driving them into poverty, they are the good ones as they don’t subsidize energy. And those with a light hand on their own people are horrible subsidizers. Asking your entire population for fewer takes is no subsidy. Its called a government that does not sledgehammer its own people. A subsidy is money or monetizable. Which means that Oil & Gas don’t get subsidies in developed countries. They pay taxes.

wsbriggs
January 1, 2020 3:39 pm

Willis I hate to nit pick, but the X-axis label reads Years, rather than Energy Sources.

Of course you’re dead on as usual.

Toto
January 1, 2020 3:44 pm

“They are totally ignoring the external BENEFITS of fossil fuels”

Exactly. We’ve been using fossil fuels for a while, let’s round it off to one hundred years.
Before fossil fuels, we had to rely on animals, and we were animals ourselves back then because “manpower” included slaves and women. Without fossil fuels, that is still where we would be. Using whale oil probably.

So think of everything as it is now compared to what life was like back one hundred years ago; what a difference. And that difference, rounded off a bit, is fossil fuels. In history, the development of fossil fuels is just about as big as the discovery of fire.

Phoenix44
Reply to  Toto
January 2, 2020 2:05 pm

No, no and no again.

This is about the price of something, that’s all. The benefits are totally irrelevant.

The price of water is set by how much it costs to produce, not the benefits of staying alive. That’s why water is cheap and Ferraris are expensive.

Oil may well provide benefits, but if in producing it I make lots of noise, I should compensate my neighbours for that and charge my consumers accordingly.

John Endicott
Reply to  Phoenix44
January 3, 2020 11:57 am

Sorry Phoenix44 but you are dead wrong. You can’t just look at one side of the ledger. That’s *not* how cost/benefit analysis works. You look at *both* sides to determine if the cost is greater than the benefits or vice versa and then act accordingly.

Editor
January 1, 2020 5:18 pm

w. ==> Never fear — even nuttier things are done in the name of Saving The Planet From Climate Change.

NASA/NOAA still add the imaginary GIA Adjustment to the Global Mean Sea Level — it is not, of course, even pretended to be an actual increase in sea surface height — but, despite the fact that it does not increase the height of the sea surface, they add it in as if it did. This is not even hidden — it is openly admitted. In the satellite era, the not-actually-an-increase-in-sea-surface-height GIA Adjustment has added just over 13mm or 1/2 inch to “GMSL”. Spent much of yesterday confirming this from raw sat data.

Ya gotta hand it to the Climateers — they really know how to jigger the data.

Happy New Year.

January 1, 2020 5:44 pm

“• Tax expenditures: the amount of tax benefits or preferences received by taxpayers and forgone by the federal government”

So, when I file my taxes and claim, let’s say, $100 in deductions, that means that the government (and my fellow taxpayers) are subsidizing me to the tune of $100?

No, I won’t accept that definition as valid. Figuring out how to legally keep a little more of my money is not a subsidy.

Christopher Chantrill
January 1, 2020 6:27 pm

Anyone that makes the mistake of assuming that the federal education budget equals the total government education budget in the US is a fool that “literally knows nothing.”

Let us assume that the well-connected twentysomethings at the IMF indeed “know nothing.” No big deal. But this went all the way up the chain of command. So, are we to assume that the top dogs at the IMF are equally clueless?

And so the twentysomethings at Forbes also “literally know nothing.” But whatabout the layers of editors?

Thank you, Willis, for your service!

January 1, 2020 7:05 pm

There is no longer any accountability for anything that anybody states……MSM or most other realms.

There is only a main objective to convince people of something they think is important……….like “saving the planet” or “global socialism” or “President Trump must go” using false narratives, manufactured realities and fake news with the ends justifying the means.

The biased sources use convincing sounding words/verbiage, along with pretending to have science and morals on their side while smearing anybody that disagrees with them.

In the case of the MSM, many of whom are progressive activists in a profession intentionally chosen because it allows them to impose their belief system on readers/viewers as they abuse ethical and professional journalistic standards…….but get away with it because of freedom of the press laws.

Who has weather records on their computer to check them when they present every weather extreme as unprecedented or caused by the climate crisis?
Who even understands climate well enough and would check to see that they actually rewrote climate history(with the hockey stick graph) to wipe out the Medieval Warm Period?

Who knows that the last 40 years on this greening planet has featured the best weather/climate for life in at least the last 1,000 years?

Instead, they rely on the fake 97% of climate scientists narrative repeated over and over which mis-characterizes what scientists actually believe?

https://www.marketforum.com/forum/topic/41293/

Who knows that 80% of scientists are liberals and up to 50% of them are at the extreme end of that spectum with strong political views and not all unbiased Mother Theresa’s with white coats that don’t vote or let politics or money(funding) or group think, ego and reputation affect their views?

How many know that our colleges have become an ideal location to indoctrinate our young people into the climate religion cult?

https://www.marketforum.com/forum/topic/42610/

The age of information has become the age of using these powerful communication tools to push propaganda on a people who are losing their ability to do critical thinking and too lazy to do the work to check facts because its so much easier to have them handed to you on a silver platter.

I did all the work for you in these discussions:

https://www.marketforum.com/forum/topic/27864/

If it was all about the authentic science, then experts in authentic science would be the messengers, using authentic science……..empirical data, observations……realities.

Instead, we have marketing schemes and sensationalism.

For example, using a 16 year old know nothing about science spouting absurd, end of the world, catastrophic scenario’s that have nothing in common with the truth, authentic science or actual conditions of this current climate optimum.
Or Al Gore and his climate snake oil selling charade and never ending, greatly exaggerated/failed predictions.
Or physics/energy defying Green New Deal plans that have a zero chance of being viable or working.

This is what defines the new reality here in 2020. You can say anything that you want and never be held accountable. Especially if its about something that is coming in a decade………which was supposed to happen already and was supposed to happen a decade ago before that (as it almost always is not as bad as predicted) but somehow, turns into one of those false narratives of being “worst then expected”.
Every good creature/life form on the planet is threatened with extinction, while the exact same conditions will cause every bad creature/life form to thrive and experience explosive growth.

Again, it’s no longer about authentic science and it doesn’t even make sense when you think about it rationally/critically but that no longer matters. You can state anything without being held accountable here in 2020.

In fact, in 2019/20, you can be 16 years old and spout complete anti science nonsense, while hoodwinking millions and because of that………be nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize and recognized as the person of the year by Time Magazine and seen as a hero.

60 years ago, before climate science was hijacked, if you had asked scientists what temperature was best for life on this planet, 97% would have said with confidence: WARMER!

If you had showed them statements similar to what Greta makes, they would have thought you were nuts, laughed or told you to leave them alone.

January 1, 2020 7:09 pm

Subsidizing The Epocalypse = Apocalypse.

WR2
January 1, 2020 11:09 pm

I’ve had the discussion many times with alarmists who claim that fossil fuels are subsidized more than renewables, which is laughable on it’s face. But the reason they think so is that:
1. They count any tax deduction/credit taken by oil companies, even if that tax deduction/credit is not specific to oil/gas companies, but is available to any company and is simply an artifact of the tax code. The best example is the tax deduction taken by oil companies for failed discovery investments (like any company or individual can deduct investment losses). This is simply not a subsidy by any reasonable definition.
2. They don’t count green energy mandates as subsidies. Of course it’s a subsidy, it’s just harder to unwind exactly how much they are getting due to market distortion. If I force you to use a product a certain % of the time, or force a price for the product above the free market price, then that’s a subsidy.

However, this article you reviewed goes even beyond these two ludicrous stances. The intellectual dishonesty of these people is breathtaking.

January 2, 2020 2:20 am

I’m quite sure that when trees are mowed down to build a road to the top of a mountain, where a wind turbine is built, the cost of that road will not be counted as a subsidy… By the way, I suppose EVs are specially conceived that they can “functionally ignore” potholes? Or do we need street segregation: fossil fuel vehicles one one road, EVs on the other road?

Reply to  Eric Vieira
January 2, 2020 6:22 am

EVs are the precursor of (long promised) flying cars, so to them potholes don’t matter.

John Endicott
Reply to  Rainer Bensch
January 3, 2020 10:57 am

Potholes? where we’re going we don’t worry about potholes (with apologies to Doc Brown).

January 2, 2020 5:26 am

If they are going to include negative externalities like potholes and global warming, they should include positive externalities like not having to walk 10 hours round trip to the store for groceries. Or the truck delivering the groceries to the store in the first place, or the Farmer running his tractor on diesel.

Or me not freezing to death in the winter when it drops below freezing for a couple of weeks. But then again they would probably not count me surviving the winter as a positive externality, but include my continued consumption as a negative externality the oil companies are responsible for.

Reply to  Kazinski
January 2, 2020 5:38 am

One other thing, it’s really easy to make a case the oil companies are subsidizing us to the tune of a few trillion a year. Just 4 or 5 years ago oil was over $100 a barrel, and we were willing to pay that price because it makes our lives happier, longer, healthier, etc. We might have used a few barrels less around the margins, but everyone was willing to pay double the current price to continue life as we know it.

When the ruling class tells us that we can no longer use oil, then I guess we are going to to have to find another use for all those lamp posts.

Bob boder
January 2, 2020 6:47 am

“externalities”
This is the basis for almost all economic education these days, i have spent countless hours deprogram my kids and nephews and nieces on this subject.
Socialism at its best, confuse the subject to the point that there is no meaning left in anything any one talks about.

January 2, 2020 7:12 am

Thanks Willis, nice of you to expose the media’s lies again. I’ve said it before, first thing the media-marxists do is to corrupt numbers — I guess they assume the mal-educated public won’t be able/willing to examine the numbers.

J Mac
January 2, 2020 9:29 am

What is most troubling to me is the overt dishonesty embedded in the IMF study and given credibility and wide distribution by Forbes magazine. It is a genuine collusion between agenda driven agencies and main stream media to spread lies for public suasion that advance their crooked and mutual socialist goals.
‘The Ends Justify The Means.’

Thank you, Willis Eschenbach, for exposing this overt fraud.

January 2, 2020 11:12 am

Re: your ` intermezzo :
Reminds me of a monument along the oosterscheldekering connecting the ` islands of zeeland I took a pic of when visiting friends in Middelburg Zeeland .
Hier gaan over het tij – de maan, de wind en wij | Here the moon and the wind go over the tide

http://www.cosy.com/y06/Images/Europe/DSC00043adj.jpg

Phoenix44
January 2, 2020 1:55 pm

There’s nothing wrong with the economic concept of externalities – a business that creates noise or pollution should pay for that, with the consumers paying a higher price for the product they consume.

The fact that the product has benefits is utterly irrelevant – this is about the price including all costs, including those borne by non-consumers of the product. The benefits if something can be vast, but so that? Thd price should still include all the costs.

Once again I’m afraid Willis simply doesn’t understand pretty basic economics. Of course it’s difficult to price correctly, but that doesnt mean it shouldn’t be done. Ignorantly trying to trash externalities because you don’t agree climate change is a problem is like not bothering to put out wildfires because people claim they are caused by climate change. Externalities and the fires still exist.

d.deacon
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
January 3, 2020 11:24 am

you could also remind her, mr. Eschenbach, that controlled burns work to prevent wildfires, but that precisely the radical treehugger-acc crowd is opposed to it.
and that by using a computer and/or the hundreds of things around us with synthetic oil-derived products, she does too consume fossil fuels. ergo, she reaps in the net benefits, so idk what her cost complain is.

John Endicott
Reply to  Phoenix44
January 3, 2020 11:47 am

The fact that the product has benefits is utterly irrelevant

No, it’s not. It’s called cost/benefit analysis for a reason. You look at both the costs and the benefits *together*. For example, say there was a new drug that cures cancer. Would you really want the FDA to only look at the costs (causes flatulence, acne, constipation, skin discoloration, and tiredness for example) and not look at the benefits (cures freaking cancer) when determining if the drug should be allowed to go to market? of course not, you want to look at both sides of the ledger to determine if the costs outweigh the benefits or vice versa.

John Endicott
Reply to  Phoenix44
January 3, 2020 11:51 am

Once again I’m afraid Willis simply doesn’t understand pretty basic economics

Bwahahaha. Project much. Willis has a much better understanding of basic economics than you’ve shown. Cost/Benefit analysis 101 would tell you that you look at *both* costs *and* benefits, not just one to the exclusion of the other. If you knew half as much about basic economics as you think you do, you’d already have known that.

Eric Porter
January 3, 2020 7:08 am

If fossil fuels are being subsidized, how about we eliminate all government taxes and subsidies for the industry? If it’s receiving subsidies, then surely the price of gas would go up with government interference removed.

The fact is that fossil fuel companies are net payers of taxes and schools are recipients of tax money. It doesn’t make sense to compare the two.

d.deacon
Reply to  Eric Porter
January 3, 2020 11:29 am

yeah, you’d think greens would want high gas prices so people finally can get off fossil fuels like we totally can… except no, we cannot, even if it could be cleaned-up fossil fuels of course.

plus, it’s the IMF who sells this research as an excuse to ask them for more penalties on the fossil fuel companies, which in turn will pay less taxes, which will make countries ask for more loans from the IMF… and likewise, the IMF will ask for subsidies to inefficient greens, which will again recover less of their money, pay less taxes, and thus force the countries to ask for IMF loans… and the cycle will continue, and the IMF will keep destroying the world, and blame it all on a small raise of 1-2C …

Oddgeir
January 6, 2020 7:27 am

Epocalypse..

One letter wrong here?

Are we looking at apocalypse or ecocalypse?

Oddgeir

Bob Cherba
January 6, 2020 7:54 am

On potholes and road maintenance: I’m not going to fact check myself, but I believe it’s safe to say that every state has a gasoline/diesel fuel tax which which is supposed to provide for road maintenance. In Arizona it amounts to about 18 cents per gallon. This yields Tucson and Pima County, AZ, about $180 million a year. Unfortunately, very little of this money actually fixes potholes and maintains our roads. At any rate, drivers pay separately for this “externality” and it should not be included as a subsidy.