Top

How ‘Clean’ Coal Subsidies Have Let Wall Street and the Energy Industry Clean Up With Profits

December 4, 2018

Via: Fortune
Category:

“Clean coal” subsidies have let Wall Street and the energy industry make a lot of money at taxpayer expense, as several new reports suggest.

The term “clean coal” refers to two entirely separate technologies. One is the chemical treatment of coal to make it more environmentally friendly. The other uses sequestration techniques to capture carbon dioxide before it escapes through coal power plant smoke stacks. But both are financial engineering profit engines.

Under the George W. Bush administration, the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, a bill passed with bipartisan support, created subsidies for the first type of clean coal. A new Reuters investigative report has found that those payments currently cost taxpayers $1 billion a year in tax credits largely snatched up by investors, including Wall Street banks, insurers, meat packers, and drug companies.

Read More on Fortune