by Grasshopper » Sun 14 Nov 2004, 02:32:48
Fair enough, foregone taxes might be considered subsidies.
It looks like Island Tides is anti-free trade (or at least anti-NAFTA), so maybe they mention subsidies in the hopes that the Americans have a knee-jerk reaction and stop importing Canadian oil and gas, like they try to do with softwood lumber, wheat and other agricultural products that they claim are subsidised. (ha-ha) I am sure the Island Tides folks wish the oil sands were still undisturbed under the forest.
Considering foregone taxes, it might be argued that the USA, by not having a fuel tax anywhere near the rates in most other developed countries, is subsidizing the transport sector, and by extension nearly every other sector of the economy, as regular readers of this forum would know. If one was implemented, demand would drop, hence oil imports to the USA would drop, and the government would have more resources to address the deficit, among other pressing needs, possibly even funding research on alternative fuels or renewable energy supply.
Regarding the natural gas used, I expect the oil sands consortium manages to negotiate a price break, due to the immense quantity used. I noticed on one of their websites that they were conducting research on obtaining hydrogen from other sources, I would guess water. Of course, many people are already concerned about the amount of water used in the process.