Taxpayer Groups, Environmentalists, Students Call on Congress to End $4 Billion Annual Oil Industry Subsidies

1-DSC09675
on

In an open letter sent to Congress today, a coalition of 40 national taxpayer, labor, environmental and other groups called on the federal government to repeal almost $4 billion in annual tax breaks for the oil and gas industry, calling them wasteful and lambasting Congress for subsidizing activities that will make climate changeย worse.

The groups called on Senators to support the FAIR Energy Policy Act, which would slowly phase out nine special tax breaks for the fossil fuelย industry.

โ€œOil companies receive billions in tax breaks, despite being among the worldโ€™s largest and most profitable corporations,โ€ the groups wrote. โ€œFor too long, America has subsidized the oil industryโ€™s bottom line at middle class Americansโ€™ย expense.โ€

Another law passed earlier this year revokes the wind industry’s production tax credit, and the FAIR Energy Policy Act would wind down some of the oil industry’s subsidies on the sameย schedule.

โ€œIf we are phasing out tax credits for clean energyโ€”something I opposeโ€”then why are we still committing to permanently support the fossil fuel industries with tax preferences they donโ€™t need?โ€ said Senator Brian Schatz, a Democrat from Hawaii who sponsored that bill.ย ย โ€œIt is based on the very simple idea that there should be a level playing field for fossil fuels and cleanย energy.โ€

Of course, unlike the wind industry, which is still relatively new and therefore is quickly evolving, oil and gas drilling has been around for a long time โ€“ and unlike the wind industry, the oil and gas industry is a key driver of climate change, which is part of the reason that its subsidies are in the crosshairs of taxpayerย groups.

โ€œThe first thing you do when you are in a hole is stop digging,โ€ said Greg Dotson, Vice President for Energy Policy at the Center for American Progress Action Fund. โ€œWe know today that we are putting too much carbon pollution into the atmosphere โ€“ and we should stop using tax payer dollars to encourage evenย more.โ€

The campaign to end those is tax breaks also backed by a student-led campaign, #4billion4us, which is targeting the House of Representatives and has already gained the support of celebrities including Leonardo DiCaprio, comedian Keegan-Michael Key and environmentalist Robert F. Kennedy,ย Jr.

โ€œWe could sendย 166,000 kidsย to college every year with the $4 billion that is instead squandered on Bigย Oil,โ€ Brad Woodhouse, President of Americans United for Change,ย explained.

Among the tax breaks for the oil industry are several that the groups argue defy common sense. For example, the drilling industry currently receives a tax break designed to keep jobs in the U.S., a loophole the Center for American Progress says adds up to a give-away of $10.9 billion in taxpayer dollars over the next 10 years. โ€œThis tax break is a handout to the industry,โ€ the Center wrote, โ€œas domestic oil and gas productionโ€”by definitionโ€”cannot moveย abroad.โ€

The groups also argued that the oil industry’s campaign donations โ€“ rather than sound public policy โ€“ helped to drive those tax breaks for the drillingย industry.

โ€œMembers of Congress have been a very lucrative investment for the oil industry,โ€ saidย Stephen Kretzmann, the Executive Director of Oil Change USA. โ€œFor every $1 they put in in campaign contributions, they get back more than $188 in subsidies, even using these very conservative [Joint Committee on Taxation]ย subsidyย figures.โ€

Estimates for the fossil fuel industry’s total government subsidies vary broadly, with industry advocates like the American Petroleum Institute arguing that drillers receive no taxpayer subsidies, and environmentalists estimating as high as $52 billion a year orย more in handoutsย from the U.S.ย government.

Worldwide, the tally is far higher, with a 2015 International Monetary Fund report concluding that including โ€œexternalitiesโ€ โ€“ likeย the costs of environmental damageย โ€“ brings the global total that the public shoulders for the fossil fuel industryย up to $5.3 trillion dollars aย year.

The letter calling for a curb on $4 billion in annual oil and gas tax breaksย also comes on the heels of the #WebOfDenial speech blitz on the floor of the U.S. Senate carried out by 19 Senators who accused their colleague of blocking meaningful action on climate change and obfuscating the central role that human activities like drilling for oil and gas plays in driving globalย warming.

โ€œFirst, they all propagate what by any reasonable scientificย standard is preposterous nonsense, and masquerade it as science and independentย opinion,โ€ said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse. โ€œSecond, they all get massive funding from fossil fuel interests, andย line up always, obediently, with those interests. Third, they interlock. The interlocking is almost too complicated to track, in staff, in board members, in funding sources. But it all traces back to fossil fuelย money.โ€

Photo Credit: Accounting, byย http://401kcalculator.org, viaย Flickr

1-DSC09675
Sharon Kelly is an attorney and investigative reporter based in Pennsylvania. She was previously a senior correspondent at The Capitol Forum and, prior to that, she reported for The New York Times, The Guardian, The Nation, Earth Island Journal, and a variety of other print and online publications.

Related Posts

Analysis
on

The celebrity investor pitched โ€˜Wonder Valleyโ€™ with no committed investors, no Indigenous partnership, and about 27 megatonnes of projected annual emissions.

The celebrity investor pitched โ€˜Wonder Valleyโ€™ with no committed investors, no Indigenous partnership, and about 27 megatonnes of projected annual emissions.
on

City Council OKs private equity firmโ€™s purchase of Entergy gas utility, undermining climate goals and jacking up prices for the cityโ€™s poorest.

City Council OKs private equity firmโ€™s purchase of Entergy gas utility, undermining climate goals and jacking up prices for the cityโ€™s poorest.
on

With LNG export terminals already authorized to ship nearly half of U.S. natural gas abroad, DOE warns build-out would inflate utility bills nationwide.

With LNG export terminals already authorized to ship nearly half of U.S. natural gas abroad, DOE warns build-out would inflate utility bills nationwide.
Analysis
on

We reflect on a year of agenda-setting stories that charted the political influence of fossil fuel interests in the UK and beyond.

We reflect on a year of agenda-setting stories that charted the political influence of fossil fuel interests in the UK and beyond.