ENVIRONMENTALLY HARMFUL AND ENVIRONMENTALLY BENEFICIAL SUBSIDIES

    Descrizione 1
    Update date
    Authors

    Antonio Caputo

    Abstract
    Immagine
    Abstract

    In 2021, the fifth edition of the Catalogue of Environmentally Relevant Subsidies identified a total of 168 measures, resulting in €22.4 billion in environmentally harmful subsidies and €18.6 billion in environmentally beneficial subsidies (an increase of +16.3% and a decrease of -1.7%, respectively, compared to the previous year). Subsidies totaling €11.5 billion are classified as of uncertain attribution (down by -15.8% from 2020). Among the environmentally harmful subsidies, those related to fossil fuels amounted to €14.5 billion in 2021 (Figure 1 and Table 1).

    Description

    The indicator classifies subsidies based on their environmental impact as beneficial, harmful, or uncertain. These subsidies include incentives, tax breaks, soft loans, and tax exemptions aimed directly at environmental protection. They are divided into two main categories: direct subsidies (e.g., grants, concessions) and indirect subsidies (e.g., tax expenditures, exemptions). Indirect subsidies also include implicit subsidies, which can arise from the regular tax system and may promote or encourage behaviors and consumption (or production) choices that are either beneficial or harmful to the environment. The indicator provides information on direct and indirect incentives for energy resources, supporting tax system reform aimed at decarbonizing the economy and promoting environmentally sustainable activities.

    Purpose

    Summarizing subsidies with beneficial and harmful environmental impacts is intended to provide policymakers with the information needed to phase out harmful subsidies and adopt, strengthen, and optimize environmentally beneficial ones.

    Policy relevance and utility for users
    It is of national scope or it is applicable to environmental issues at the regional level but of national relevance.
    It can describe the trend without necessarily evaluating it.
    It is simple and easy to interpret.
    It provides a basis for international comparisons.
    Analytical soundness
    Be based on international standards and international consensus about its validity;
    Be theoretically well founded in technical and scientific terms
    Presents reliability and validity of measurement and data collection methods
    Temporal comparability
    Spatial comparability
    Measurability (data)
    Adequately documented and of known quality
    Updated at regular intervals in accordance with reliable procedures
    Readily available or made available at a reasonable cost/benefit ratio
    An “adequate” spatial coverage
    An “appropriate” temporal coverage
    Main regulatory references and objectives

    Article 68 of Law No. 221 of December 28, 2015 established the “Catalogue of Environmentally Harmful and Environmentally Beneficial Subsidies” under the Ministry for the Environment and Protection of Land and Sea (now MASE), to be managed using existing human, financial, and technical resources without additional public expenditure. The same article mandates the catalogue to be updated annually by June 30.

    The main objectives of the catalogue are:
    a) to identify interventions for tax reform in accordance with the “polluter pays” principle;
    b) to reduce taxes on labor and businesses while recovering tax revenue through environmental taxation targeting harmful consumption and production;
    c) to reduce overall tax expenditures.

    DPSIR
    Response
    Indicator type
    Policy effectiveness (D)
    References

    MASE, Catalogue of Environmentally Harmful and Environmentally Beneficial Subsidies

    Frequenza di rilevazione dei dati
    Annuale
    Fonte dei dati
    MASE (Ministero dell'ambiente e della Sicurezza Energetica)
    Data availabilty

    MASE, Catalogue of Environmentally Harmful and Environmentally Beneficial Subsidies https://www.mase.gov.it/pagina/catalogo-dei-sussidi-ambientalmente-dannosi-e-dei-sussidi-ambientalmente-favorevoli

    Spatial coverage

    National

    Time coverage

    2016-2021

    Processing methodology

    The definition of "subsidy" used in the catalogue aligns with the OECD definition and includes, among other things, incentives, tax breaks, soft loans, and tax exemptions directly aimed at environmental protection. Both direct subsidies and tax expenditures are included. Various methodologies (e.g., quick scans, checklists) are analyzed to identify subsidies, and different approaches are used for their quantification (e.g., price gap, marginal social cost, external costs), aiming to provide policymakers with solid data to eliminate harmful subsidies and enhance beneficial ones.

    Update frequency
    Year
    Qualità dell'informazione

    The information is compiled by MASE and is relevant for efforts to decarbonize the economy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The indicator offers a summary of the country’s financial commitment toward supporting renewable energy and discouraging fossil fuel use.

    State
    Poor
    Trend
    Steady
    State assessment/description

    In 2021, environmentally harmful subsidies amounted to €22.4 billion, while environmentally beneficial subsidies totaled €18.6 billion and subsidies of uncertain classification reached €11.5 billion

    Given the high share of environmentally harmful subsidies (42.7%), the country can be assessed as performing poorly in this regard.

    Trend assessment/description

    Compared to 2016, all categories of environmental subsidies have increased. Environmentally harmful subsidies grew by +10.1%, while environmentally beneficial subsidies increased more significantly (+15.0%), and those of uncertain attribution saw the largest rise (+35.7%), indicating a slightly improving trend.

    Comments

    In 2021, compared to the previous year, environmentally harmful subsidies rose by +16.3%; environmentally beneficial subsidies declined by -1.7%, while uncertain subsidies decreased by -15.8%. Subsidies are categorized into "Agriculture and fisheries", "Energy", "Transport", "Other subsidies", "Reduced VAT". These categories follow international classifications and reflect each sector’s environmental impact. In 2021 the "energy" and "reduced VAT" categories absorbed nearly 90% of environmentally harmful subsidies; the "energy" and "agriculture and fisheries" categories accounted for over 80% of environmentally beneficial subsidies; the "reduced VAT" and "agriculture and fisheries" categories covered nearly 90% of subsidies with uncertain classification (Table 1). Analysis by category also shows year-over-year increases in environmentally harmful subsidies in "other subsidies" (+30.8%), "energy" (+19.0%) and "reduced VAT" (+13.2%). Meanwhile, "agriculture and fisheries" and "transport" categories remained stable.

    Data
    Headline

    Table 1: Estimated total annual subsidies by sector and type (million euros)

    Data source

    MASE: Ministry of the Environment and Energy Security

    Data legend

    SAD: Environmentally Harmful Subsidy; SAF: Environmentally Beneficial Subsidy; U: Uncertain (to be quantified)

    Thumbnail
    Headline

    Figure 1: Total annual subsidies by environmental impact category

    Data source

    ISPRA elaborations based on MASE data

    English