- cross-posted to:
- green
- news@beehaw.org
- collapse@sopuli.xyz
- cross-posted to:
- green
- news@beehaw.org
- collapse@sopuli.xyz
Don’t worry folks, I’m sure we’ll magically turn this around before it’s too late!
We have seen that news a few days ago already and it’s mentioned in this article right away why the number is high:
Fossil-fuel subsidies surged to a record $7 trillion last year as governments supported consumers and businesses during the global spike in energy prices caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the economic recovery from the pandemic.
Another news article mentioned the increase was in 2022 compared to 2020. We don’t know the ‘real’ numbers without the Russian invasion but if that survey is done every two years, it might look completely different and way better in 2024 and we’re currently only having a temporary skewed statistic.
Meanwhile we’ve hit the elbow in the adoption curve for solar, wind, and EVs with grid-level batteries also on a major upswing.
For a weekly beat of good news on issues like this as well as conservation, public health, and more, I highly recommend the futurecrun.ch newsletter.
it might look completely different and way better in 2024 and we’re currently only having a temporary skewed statistic
The graph in the blog post does not suggest that. Sure it may very well fall next year, but not by much. Also, $7 trillion is just so much money. To put that into context, a quick search suggests ending world hunger would cost $330 billion. In total, not per year.
Now add up animal ag subsidies