The Conversation: Fossil Fuel Companies Collect Lots of Renewable Energy Subsidies

Essay by Eric Worrall

Fund a green project, prop up an oil company – two University of Texas academics have figured out that in Texas at least, oil companies frequently collect the cash at the end of the green rainbow.

Who benefits from renewable energy subsidies? In Texas, it’s often fossil fuel companies that are fighting clean energy elsewhere

Published: August 4, 2022 10.20pm AEST

Nathan Jensen Professor of Government, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts

Isabella Steinhauer Master of Public Affairs Candidate and Graduate Research Assistant, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts

Texas is known for fiercely promoting its oil and gas industries, but it’s also the No. 2 renewable energy producer in the country after California. In fact, more than a quarter of all the wind power produced in the United States in 2021 was generated in Texas.

By reviewing the applications and ownership documents, we were able to track who actually builds and owns a large portion of the nation’s renewable energy, when and how those assets change hands, and who ultimately benefits from the tax incentives.

The results might surprise you. The majority of utility-scale solar and wind energy projects in Texas aren’t owned by companies focused on renewable energy – they’re owned by energy companies or utilities that are better known for fossil fuels, including some that have aggressively opposed renewable energy and climate policies in other states and nationally.

To our surprise, almost half of the projects built in 2020 or 2021 had changed hands by 2022. Some were due to company acquisitions. Many other projects were sold.

This changed the composition of owners. While renewable energy companies owned roughly half the projects at the application stage, by 2022, two-thirds of the projects were owned by utilities and energy companies with fossil fuel assets.

The original developers may have benefited from the first year or so of the tax break, but the new owners are poised to reap the majority of the remaining years of the 10-year property tax incentive.

Read more: https://theconversation.com/who-benefits-from-renewable-energy-subsidies-in-texas-its-often-fossil-fuel-companies-that-are-fighting-clean-energy-elsewhere-187832

Personally I find this hilarious – big oil is collecting the lions share of the subsidies which are meant to be helping green energy businesses compete with big oil.

I have no doubt oil companies are at the end of a lot of other green rainbows, not just Texas. Oil companies are experts at positioning themselves to make money, and have vast experience with milking dictatorships, rigged markets and command economies.

Keep up the funding for big oil, greens.

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August 7, 2022 12:32 am

But, but, but wind and solar don’t need subsidies, they’re cheaper than chips

Gerry, England
August 7, 2022 4:25 am

Why would you not accept the free cash when it is on offer as long as you are sensible enough to realise that relying on government handouts for your business is risky.

Shell quickly dumped an experiment on CC&S when the UK government stopped the cash. In their statement they said it was a shame that such a good opportunity was going to waste. So good that they were not interested in investing their own money – or that of us shareholders – to continue it.

roaddog
August 7, 2022 9:52 pm

Thankfully the US Senate just approved spending $375 billion to fight Climate Change. Grifters for the win!

niceguy
August 10, 2022 8:05 pm

Any gov intervention is deep inside a fossil fuel use subsidy.
Prove me wrong!

(Fossil run pretty much everything. People find the best configuration which minimizes inputs including fossils. Any intervention deviates from that point.)