G20 Scorecard of Fossil Fuel Funding: Turkey
Turkey ranks last, tied with Mexico and the United Kingdom, out of the G20 Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development [OECD] member countries. It lacks transparency and continues to provide high levels of support for coal production and consumers of fossil fuels, predominantly by foregoing tax revenue and providing state-owned enterprise [SOE] investments.
To learn more, see our full report Doubling Back and Doubling Down: G20 scorecard on fossil fuel funding.
You might also be interested in
Doubling Back and Doubling Down: G20 scorecard on fossil fuel funding
This study tracks, for the first time, each G20 country's progress on ending support for fossil fuels—ranking their transparency, commitments, and financial support to oil, gas, and coal.
Five Trends That Have Shaped Global Subsidies Over Decades
As we celebrate the Global Subsidies Initiative's 20th anniversary, we asked our experts how thinking on government support has shifted over time.
Harmful Subsidies Explained
Twenty years ago, IISD launched the Global Subsidies Initiative. At a WTO Public Forum panel, IISD and other experts reflected on achievements, challenges, and new opportunities.
At long last, Canada restricts oil and gas subsidies (except for all the loopholes)
Environment and Climate Minister Steven Guilbeault has unveiled detailed plans to phase out "inefficient" oil and gas subsidies, based on guidelines released yesterday morning that take effect immediately and are meant to fulfill a 14-year-old pledge by G20 countries.