Reforming fossil-fuel subsidies is crucial to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and hence meeting climate change goals. Since 2009, G20 leaders have regularly affirmed their joint commitment to rationalise and phase out “inefficient fossil-fuel subsidies that encourage wasteful consumption” over the medium term, while ensuring targeted support for the poorest. The 2020 OECD Inventory of Support Measures for Fossil Fuels documents over 1 300 government budgetary transfers and tax expenditures that support the production and consumption of fossil fuels. This Companion draws on the Inventory’s findings to provide insights on progress in reform.
The 2020 Inventory records fossil-fuel support in 50 OECD, G20 and European Union Eastern Partnership economies. Total support rose by 5% year-on-year to USD 178 billion in 2019, reversing a five-year downward trend. The increase was driven by a 30% rise in direct and indirect support for the production of fossil fuels, primarily in OECD countries, as governments provided additional funding and preferential tax treatment to help alleviate corporate debt and encourage fossil-fuel infrastructure investment. The massive upheaval to the global energy system caused by the COVID-19 crisis – both in terms of fuel prices and consumption – is set to enhance this trend, with many countries using COVID-19 recovery aid to shore up fossil-fuel and related industries.