Oil companies pushed ineffective carbon capture while reaping tax benefits

A congressional investigation found that oil companies misled the public about the effectiveness of carbon capture technology while benefiting from substantial tax credits.

Amy Westervelt reports for Vox.


In short:

  • The fossil fuel industry promoted carbon capture as a key solution to climate change despite knowing its limited effectiveness.
  • Internal documents revealed ExxonMobil and other companies were aware that carbon capture technology could only minimally reduce emissions.
  • The industry lobbied for and profited from increased tax credits for carbon capture, despite minimal environmental benefits.

Key quote:

“What the IPCC actually said in its mitigation report was that carbon capture might be necessary for hard-to-abate industries, but that it’s one of the most expensive options and it only equates to small emissions reductions.”

— Paul Blackburn, an environmental lawyer and advisor to the Bold Alliance

Why this matters:

The promotion of carbon capture as a viable climate solution diverts attention and resources from more effective strategies like renewable energy. Taxpayer money is being used to fund these technologies, which may not significantly reduce overall carbon emissions.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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