Page added on May 7, 2019
Most people in the U.S. need to pay federal income taxes – but dozens of the most profitable U.S. corporations do not.
A recent report by the Institute on Tax and Economic Policy finds that 60 profitable companies that are on the Fortune 500 list paid no federal income taxes in 2018. These include many well known brands, such as Netflix, JetBlue, Goodyear, and Avis. The list also include Amazon – the most valuable company in the world, whose CEO, Jeff Bezos, is the world’s richest person.
All told, the 60 companies on the list did not merely avoid paying $16.4 billion in federal income taxes – they actually received a net tax rebate of $4.3 billion.
While Amazon’s presence on the list has garnered headlines, what’s less noted is that a whopping 40% – 24 of the 60 companies – are tied to the oil, gas, and utilities industries.
The fossil fuel and utilities companies on the list include powerhouses like Chevron, Halliburton, Kinder Morgan, and Duke Energy, as well as some lesser known firms. Of the 24 companies, 13 are categorized as utilities and 9 are categorized as oil, gas, and pipelines companies. Another two are in other sectors but do significant business with the oil and gas industry.
With two dozen major fossil fuel-tied companies paying zero dollars in federal income taxes, or even receiving tax rebates, while they also report big profits, one thing is clear: the very industry that is driving rising carbon emissions and our climate crisis is also, in effect, being subsidized to do so by the U.S. tax structure.
What top oil, gas, and utilities companies avoided taxes?
We’ve provided a table at the end of this article that lists the 24 profitable Fortune 500 oil, gas, and utilities companies that avoided paying federal taxes in 2018. These 24 companies reported a total of $38.119 billion in 2018 income, and they received $2.059 billion in tax rebates. This means that nearly half of the $4.3 billion in tax rebates to the 60 companies that the report identified went to these 24 companies.
To put it another way: on the whole, fossil fuel-tied corporations that are driving our climate crisis disproportionately benefited from paying no federal income taxes.
With a 21% corporate income tax on profits of U.S. companies, these companies should have paid over $8 billion in taxes.
The 13 electric utilities companies on the list reported a total of $19.117 billion in 2018 income but received $1.215 billion in tax rebates. The 9 oil, gas, and pipeline companies on the list took in $18.284 billion in income and received $580 million in tax rebates.
The top beneficiaries of the tax system among these companies included:
Chevron and EOG Resources also received $181 million and $304 million in tax rebates, respectively, though their effective tax rates were only minus-4% and minus-7% since they bring in so much income.
Here are some other observations about the companies on the list:
Here is a visual map of ten of the most well-known oil, gas, and utilities companies that paid no federal incomes taxes in 2018:

How did these corporations avoid paying federal income taxes?
The Institute on Tax and Economic Policy report surveys how the corporations on the list avoided paying federal incomes taxes. Quoting from the report, here are two tax breaks it describes that apply to the fossil fuel industry and utilities in particular:
Fossil Fuel Tax Subsidies
Oil and gas tax breaks including depreciation and percentage depletion helped Pioneer Natural Resources zero out its federal income taxes on $1.2 billion of U.S. income in 2018. Occidental Petroleum used the enhanced oil recovery credit to reduce its taxes by $158 million last year.
Alternative Energy Tax Subsidies
A number of companies took advantage of alternative-energy tax breaks as well. Duke Energy enjoyed $129 million in renewable energy production tax credits in 2018. The so-called Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 expanded these credits. DTE Energy reduced its taxes by $223 million using production tax credits. WEC Energy reported $12 million in production tax credits, and Xcel Energy claimed $75 million in wind production tax credits. CMS Energy also reported renewable electricity production tax credits of $14 million, and Dominion Energy claimed $21 million.
Oil and gas companies benefit from a number of tax breaks – indeed, by one account, oil and gas production will see over $36 billion in tax subsidies from 2017 to 2026. For more information on some of the most significant tax breaks for oil and gas companies, check out this overview – which argues that oil and gas companies significantly exaggerate the loss in production and jobs that would come with an end to their industry-specific tax preferences.
And while there’s broad agreement about the need for the government to play a role in expanding alternative energies, in this case we can see alternative energy subsidies being used to make companies whose primary business is still fossil fuels more profitable.
For more information on how the U.S. government subsidies the fossil fuel industry, check out this report by Oil Change International from October 2017.
Table of Fossil Fuel & Utilities Companies that Avoided Paying Federal Incomes Taxes
| Company | U.S. Income (in millions) | Federal Tax (in millions) | Effective tax rate |
| AECOM Technology | $238 | -$122 | -51% |
| Ameren | $1,035 | -$10 | -1% |
| American Electric Power | $1,943 | -$32 | -2% |
| Atmos Energy | $600 | -$10 | -2% |
| Celanese | $480 | -$142 | -30% |
| Chevron | $4,547 | -$181 | -4% |
| Cliffs Natural Resources | $565 | -$1 | 0% |
| CMS Energy | $774 | -$67 | -9% |
| Devon Energy | $1,297 | -$14 | -1% |
| Dominion Resources | $3,021 | -$45 | -1% |
| DTE Energy | $1,215 | -$17 | -1% |
| Duke Energy | $3,029 | -$647 | -21% |
| EOG Resources | $4,067 | -$304 | -7% |
| FirstEnergy | $1,495 | -$16 | -1% |
| Halliburton | $1,082 | -$19 | -2% |
| Kinder Morgan | $1,784 | -$22 | -1% |
| MDU Resources | $314 | -$16 | -5% |
| Occidental Petroleum | $3,379 | -$23 | -1% |
| Pioneer Natural Resources | $1,249 | — | — |
| PPL | $1,110 | -$19 | -2% |
| Public Service Enterprise Group | $1,772 | -$97 | -5% |
| UGI | $550 | -$3 | 0% |
| Wisconsin Energy | $1,139 | -$218 | -19% |
| Xcel Energy | $1,434 | -$34 | -2% |
| Totals | $38,119 | -$2,059 |
Source: https://itep.org/notadime/
10 Comments on "Top Fossil Fuel & Utilities Companies Didn’t Pay Any Federal Income Taxes Last Year"
Duncan Idaho on Tue, 7th May 2019 2:56 pm
Paying taxes is for the common folk—
“The taxpayer is the new permanent underclass.”
― Andrew Wilkow
Anonymouse on Tue, 7th May 2019 4:52 pm
The united states of (corporate) subsidies.
What is that rallying cry the amerijews came up with back whenever?.
Oh yes, No Taxation without representation.
uS oil companies are well represented.
And they pay no taxes.
In fact the uSgov PAYS oil corporations to do what they do. A form of inverse taxation if you will.
PSA: Get the to the nearest mental health clinic asap prick-face.
makati1 on Tue, 7th May 2019 5:55 pm
Agree with both above comments. Hypocrite Trump blaming the Chinese for subsidies when the US subsidizes ALL of it’s major industries, and especially the banking sector. GO TRUMP! TRUMP IN 2020! LMAO!
Sissyfuss on Wed, 8th May 2019 9:02 am
The system is rigged from top to bottom and defended to the last campaign contribution by the corporate politicians of both flavors. Only collapse can change the games make-up and it will sooner or later.
Robert Inget on Wed, 8th May 2019 11:15 am
https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/07/politics/trump-tax-returns-losses/index.html
Outcast_Searcher on Wed, 8th May 2019 2:04 pm
Companies are allowed to deduct expenses and carry forward tax losses. Deal with it, or work to get the laws changed. Whining doesn’t change anything. LOTS of companies in lots of industries see this happen. Think Apple and Amazon, for example, which to my knowledge aren’t producing any oil.
Robert Inget on Thu, 9th May 2019 11:58 am
https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/09/politics/us-north-korean-cargo-ship-sanctions/index.html
US Seizes NK Deadly Coal Cargo Ship
One would think sneaking tons of Mexican pot into the US was hard. But (deadly) habit forming coal, that’s way harder.
(Smoke only domestic weed. Oregon grown)
Asians, hooked on snorting coal dust has been a serious problem for decades.
At last, US Navy is interdicting coal smugglers.
Anonymouse on Thu, 9th May 2019 5:35 pm
Seizing vessels on the open seas, who are engaged nothing more sinister than what we would call, ‘trade’ is, by definition, piracy. North Korea is entitled to engage in moving cargo for the prupose of trade across the worlds waterways like anyone else.
The word ‘hijacking’, theft, and act-of-war comes to mind here.
Amerikans and their rogue government\corporate oligarchy, are little better than mafioso criminals, and need to regarded and treated as such.
Right prick face?
Davy on Thu, 9th May 2019 6:17 pm
I agree annoy what’s the big deal? Grow up to the facts of life.
Kevin Cobley on Sat, 11th May 2019 7:16 pm
Revolution, revolution, revolution, the corporate criminals/fascists running the US to face the French Solution, death to Murdochracy.