By Alex Doukas, Programme Director at campaign group Oil Change International.
Aย studyย published last week, by a group led by the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), indicates that eliminating fossil fuel subsidies could curb global greenhouse gas emissions by as much as 5% through 2030 while saving hundreds of billions of dollars in publicย money.
Despite this seemingly good news, the framing of the study wasย strangely downbeat, casting these reductions as โonly a small effect on CO2ย emissions.โ
What we know from reading the actual findings of this study, as well asย severalย otherย analysesย on the climate impacts of fossil fuel subsidy removal, is that nixing oil, gas, and coal subsidies would be a big win for the climate, would save money, and could free up financial resources to help the poorest and mostย vulnerable.
Setting aside some serious methodological issues with the new study, its authors draw some curious conclusions from their results. The analysis finds that a single policy tool โ fossil fuel subsidy removal โ could deliver emissions reductionsย equivalent to one-quarter of all current country commitments under the landmark Paris Agreement on climate change. Thatโs a big deal, especially when you consider that governments would save hundreds of billions of dollars in theย process.
When it comes to fossil fuel subsidy removal, itโs not a question of how much these emissions reductions will cost government, but a question ofย how much governments can saveย while also significantly reducing emissions. Ending fossil fuel subsidies would free up scarce public money for priorities like education, healthcare, and cleanย energy.
While there is no single silver bullet solution that will address the majority of global greenhouse gas emissions, eliminating fossil fuel subsidies is an obvious way to harvest low-hanging fruit, and, despite the odd framing, this studyโs findings seem to confirm that eliminating fossil fuel subsidies has the potential to make a major contribution to global climateย action.
Coming back to the problems with the studyโs methodology, perhaps the studyโs biggest failing is that it considers only the dollar value of subsidies to fossil fuel producers โ not their real-world impact on fossil fuel production and investmentย decision-making.
Anotherย recent peer-reviewed studyย by the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), published in the journal Nature Energy, took a more bottom-up approach to the question of subsidies and their impact on fossil fuel production and emissions. It assessed how oil subsidies could influence investor decision-making and found that the impact of subsidies on oil production (and associated emissions) in the U.S. was potentially veryย high.
โWhen it comes to fossil fuel subsidy removal, itโs not a question of how much these emissions reductions will cost government, but a question ofย how much governments can saveย while also significantly reducingย emissions.โ
In fact, the SEI study found thatย without federal and state subsidies,ย nearly halfย of future U.S. oil production would be unprofitable at $50-per-barrel oil prices. This finding underscores the importance of understanding how subsidies impact investor decisions, something that the global models used by IIASA canโt tellย us.ย
Thatโs not the only methodological issue: their study also undercounts subsidies to oil, gas, and coal production, relying on an estimate of $23 billion in production subsidies instead of theย more than $70 billionย weโve identified in G20 countries alone. While the study conducts a sensitivity analysis that includes one scenario with higher levels of production subsidies, the fact that the modelโs outputs seem to barely register a tripling of production subsidies raises some questions, especially in light of the findings of the other recent U.S. study led by the Stockholm Environment Institute and EarthTrack describedย above.
This failure to consider the real-world effects of fossil fuel subsidies at the national level shows up not only in the IIASA studyโs findings, but also in some of the commentary from the authors that surrounded its release. When asked about fossil fuel subsidies in the U.S., the studyโs lead author saysย โ[t]he U.S. can remove them. Theyโre soย small.โ
Iโd agree with that first assertion, but certainly not theย second.
Ourย research has foundย that U.S. subsidies to oil, gas, and coal producers average more than $20 billion each year. Thatโs not chump change. In fact, itโs enough toย buy a lot of political influenceย through campaign contributions and spending on lobbying. By eliminating handouts to the fossil fuel industry, U.S. leaders could also advance climate action more broadly by loosening the stranglehold industry has on our politicalย processes.
While flawed, itโs important to note that this IIASAโs new study has merit. Itโs an important contribution to ongoing efforts to develop new analytical approaches that allow us to better understand the pernicious effects of fossil fuelย subsidies.
Itโs only unfortunate that the studyโs framing was so out of step with its central conclusion that eliminating even some fossil fuel subsidies could deliver significant climateย benefits.
This article was originally published on priceofoil.org
Image: Herry Lawford/Flickr CC BYย 2.0
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