The Biden administration quietly issued a 59-page report outlining the current scope of federal energy-related subsidies, revealing that the renewable energy sector enjoys significantly larger taxpayer backing than the fossil fuel industry.
The report — authored by the Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration (EIA) and published in August — represents the first of its kind since 2018. [emphasis, links added]
The EIA analyzed data from 2016 through 2022 and determined that, during that time period, the federal government doled out $183.3 billion in direct and mainly indirect taxpayer subsidies, more than half of which came over the last three years.
“For years Democrats have claimed technologies like solar energy are cheaper than coal, oil, natural gas, and nuclear. This report makes clear that solar is largely dependent on heavy subsidies with taxpayer dollars,” Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Ranking Member John Barrasso, R-Wyo., told Fox News Digital.
In early 2021, Barrasso and Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., requested the analysis to help inform congressional policymaking in a letter to then-EIA Acting Administrator Stephen Nalley.
The pair argued such a report would be particularly relevant “as Congress considers calls for a greater level of federal involvement in the nation’s energy systems and markets.”
“Under the Biden Administration, American families are paying too much for energy as it is,” the Wyoming Republican continued. “They shouldn’t have to fork over their hard-earned money to support liberal special interests. Solar should be competing for sales in the marketplace, not for subsidies in Washington.”
According to the EIA report, while renewable energy sources like wind and solar power account for about 21% of domestic electricity production, such sources received a staggering $83.8 billion in subsidies, by far the largest share compared to any other category.
Energy end-use subsidies, like energy efficiency- and conservation-related tax provisions, represented the next-largest slice of energy sector federal subsidies after renewable power, according to the EIA report.
End-use sources received $64.8 billion in subsidies, equivalent to 35% of total energy-related subsidies doled out by the federal government.
While renewable and end-use sources accounted for more than 80% of total energy industry subsidies, fossil fuel sources — namely natural gas, petroleum, and oil, which account for more than 60% of electricity production and the vast majority of transportation energy — benefited from $24.5 billion, or 13%, in subsidies.
Nuclear power, which produces another 18% of U.S. electricity, received $2.9 billion in subsidies during the analyzed timeframe, the equivalent of 2% of total subsidies awarded.
The report’s findings suggest far more taxpayer money is being spent per energy unit produced by green energy sources than for the equivalent energy produced by fossil fuel energy.
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