The latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change should terrify policymakers and ordinary people around the world. The IPCC warns that some disastrous climate outcomes are now likely to occur not in the distant future, but within the next 15 years, or even the next decade.
But instead of waking up to the threat and responding quickly, policymakers remain focused on Russia's horrific war against Ukraine and its immediate consequences. While this may be understandable, the Ukraine crisis has also exposed the excessively short-term policy orientation of Western governments. Many have quickly reneged on even the relatively meagre and obviously inadequate climate pledges they made only a few months ago at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow.
The invasion of Ukraine and the subsequent Western-led sanctions against Russia triggered a sharp increase in fuel prices, when the market was already heating up because of the economic recovery in the United States and Europe. Yet, instead of seeing this price spike as an opportunity to hasten the shift away from fossil fuels, governments in advanced economies have tried to reduce the pain by keeping domestic energy prices low, for short-term political reasons.
US President Joe Biden's administration, after unsuccessfully imploring Saudi Arabia to increase oil production, has promised to release one million barrels a day from the US strategic reserves for the next six months. In Europe, which has been hit much harder by the fallout from the war because of its heavy reliance on Russian natural gas, the talk is not just of more nuclear energy but also of reviving coal-based power. Coal is by far the "dirtiest" fossil fuel, and rich countries routinely pillory India and China for using it.
Only those who previously swallowed Western governments' insincere green rhetoric, rather than examining the reality, should be surprised by this turn of events. These governments have been heavily subsidising their own fossil-fuel industries even as they exhorted much poorer countries to do more to reduce greenhouse=gas emissions. But the full extent of these subsidies has been hidden by the methods used to measure them.
The standard way to measure government support for fossil-fuel production or consumption is to look at direct budgetary transfers and subsidies, as well as tax breaks for the sector. Using this method, the OECD and the International Energy Agency estimate that governments across 52 advanced and emerging economies -- accounting for about 90% of global fossil-fuel energy supply -- provided fossil-fuel subsidies worth an average of US$555 billion (about 18.68 trillion baht) per year from 2017 to 2019.
This support declined to $345 billion in 2020, mainly because of the collapse in fuel prices and drop in consumption during the Covid-19 pandemic. But, even before the Ukraine war, there were fears that rebounding fuel prices could push up subsidies as the global economy recovered.
It turned out that the bleakest estimates massively understated the actual fossil-fuel subsidies that governments provide. In a recent study, the International Monetary Fund devised a more comprehensive measure that includes both explicit subsidies, or undercharging for supply costs, and implicit subsidies, or undercharging for environmental costs and foregone consumption taxes.
The IMF estimated that global fossil-fuel subsidies in 2020 totaled $5.9 trillion, more than ten times the OECD-IEA estimate. That is not surprising: Implicit subsidies accounted for 92% of the total.
Under both methodologies, India is a heavy subsidiser of fossil fuels. But other countries' rankings change in interesting ways when implicit subsidies are considered. Russia was the largest provider of explicit fossil-fuel subsidies, but the US -- with an estimated $662 billion of implicit subsidies in 2020 and nearly $800 billion last year -- extends significantly more subsidies overall. China provided the largest implicit subsidies in 2020, totaling an estimated $2.2 trillion.
These important numbers highlight the extent to which government intervention is skewing prices, and therefore market incentives, in favour of fossil fuels, rather than against them. While governments were supporting the fossil-fuel industry to the tune of $5.9 trillion in 2020, the IPCC estimates that global climate finance from both public and private sources totaled only about $640 billion that year.
Given this huge disparity, no one should be shocked at the fossil-fuel industry's resilience. The world is rapidly running out of time to limit global warming to 1.5° Celsius and avert a climate catastrophe. But the global economic system and many governments appear unable to take the threat seriously. ©2022 Project Syndicate
Jayati Ghosh, Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, is a member of the UN Secretary-General's High-Level Advisory Board on Effective Multilateralism. Debamanyu Das is a research scholar at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.