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Environment & Energy
In reply to the discussion: Sweden to Become One of World’s First Fossil Fuel-Free Nations [View all]RiverLover
(7,830 posts)2. I really don't get that either. And WE are subsidizing oil with our representatives' blessings.
There are 800 different programs around the world that subsidize fossil fuels, according to a new report from the OECD. The OECD released the report ahead of the international climate change negotiations set to take place in Paris in December, where the world has a moral imperative to reach an ambitious and actionable agreement.
Tackling climate change will be a monumental task, but key to the effort will be scrapping lose-lose fossil fuel subsidies, as the OECD calls them. Subsidizing oil, natural gas, and coal leads to distortions in prices, contributes to overconsumption of energy, and saps developing countries of revenues that could be used for much better investments in education and infrastructure.
They also lead to environmental fallout, with capital flowing to pollution-heavy industry and energy extraction. These investments, once made, can last for decades, essentially locking-in pollution for a long time to come.
That is one of the glaring downsides to subsidizing fossil fuels. Because they change the stream of income investors expect to receive for holding a particular asset, those subsidies influence investment choices and change the allocation of capital across sectors.
In the case of certain fossil-fuel subsidies, there is therefore the risk that investors end up favouring sectors that produce fossil fuels or use them intensively, at the expense of cleaner forms of energy and other economic activities more generally, the OECD wrote....
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/There-Are-800-Fossil-Fuel-Subsidies-Around-The-World.html
Tackling climate change will be a monumental task, but key to the effort will be scrapping lose-lose fossil fuel subsidies, as the OECD calls them. Subsidizing oil, natural gas, and coal leads to distortions in prices, contributes to overconsumption of energy, and saps developing countries of revenues that could be used for much better investments in education and infrastructure.
They also lead to environmental fallout, with capital flowing to pollution-heavy industry and energy extraction. These investments, once made, can last for decades, essentially locking-in pollution for a long time to come.
That is one of the glaring downsides to subsidizing fossil fuels. Because they change the stream of income investors expect to receive for holding a particular asset, those subsidies influence investment choices and change the allocation of capital across sectors.
In the case of certain fossil-fuel subsidies, there is therefore the risk that investors end up favouring sectors that produce fossil fuels or use them intensively, at the expense of cleaner forms of energy and other economic activities more generally, the OECD wrote....
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/There-Are-800-Fossil-Fuel-Subsidies-Around-The-World.html
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I really don't get that either. And WE are subsidizing oil with our representatives' blessings.
RiverLover
Sep 2015
#2
And its dressed up as patriotism & "fighting them over there" & support our troops...
RiverLover
Sep 2015
#9
Maybe your city should swap out the motors in the buses and install the "clean diesel"
Dustlawyer
Sep 2015
#5
they are the ones programmed to have emissions systems off during normal driving and turn on when
Dustlawyer
Sep 2015
#14
It's amazing that a large and fairly popular corporation would think that is the way to do business?
fasttense
Sep 2015
#16
Wow, what has happened? Have corporations and big business always been scoundrels, liars and cheats?
fasttense
Sep 2015
#31
Can someone explain to me what they will use for space and water heating? (eom)
StevieM
Sep 2015
#25
Can you explain how biomass is used for home and water heating? Does it have to be done at the house
StevieM
Sep 2015
#27
Do you understand how a distributed energy system is different from a centralized system?
kristopher
Sep 2015
#28