For Republicans So Loved The Oil & Gas Industry That They Gave An Extra $40 Billion In Subsidies Over The Next 10 Years
As we all know, if there's one thing Republicans care about, it's protecting the Free Market. They may not have actually read "The Wealth of Nations," but they know it says there's nothing more sacred than the Free Market. And if you ever doubted the Republican love of the Free Market, a new report has found that Trump's economic law will give the oil and gas industry an additional $40 billion in new subsidies, Wired reports.
That $40 billion won't be paid out all at once, though. Instead, it works out to about $4 billion a year for the next decade. That's, of course, on top of the $30.8 billion in subsidies the oil and gas industry already receives. It's also "the largest single-year increase in subsidies we've seen in many yearsat least since 2017," Collin Rees, the US program manager for Oil Change International, a pro-environmental organization, and the author of the report, told Wired.
That said, the recently passed Republican law may be even more beneficial to the oil and gas industry than the $4 billion that Oil Change International tallied up, with Rees telling Wired that figure is "likely to be an undercount." As he put it, "There's probably some things that we missedsome corners of the budget that are funding fossil fuels in different ways." So the $34.8 billion the oil and gas industry gets every year is probably just a baseline, and it also doesn't include local and state subsidies that would inflate that figure even further.
So, where did those billions come from, mere months after Elon insisted he went to Washington to cut waste? The biggest change is related to a process known as carbon capture, which involves pulling CO2 from the environment and storing it underground. But it can also be used to tap into difficult-to-reach reserves and improve oil production, as the University of Texas Geosciences department explains here. Under the Biden Administration's Inflation Reduction Act, oil and gas companies got more money for CO2 storage that wasn't related to oil production, but under the new Republican bill, they both count equally, giving the oil and gas industry an extra $1.4 billion per year to pump more oil. From Wired:
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https://autos.yahoo.com/policy-and-environment/articles/oil-gas-industry-40-billion-200500708.html