Furthermore why isn't there outrage about the wollastonite subsidies ?
From the forbes.com
Short, fiber-like minerals include wollastonite and attapulgite.
From the en.wikipedia.org
So pertoleum makes cars go and wollastonite makes them stop.
From the forbes.com
Other mineral products are graphite, garnet used as an abrasive, pyrite, wollastonite, and zinc ore.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Maybe we'd better keep the subsidy on wollastonite.
From the forbes.com
On one 25-acre site, a calcium-rich mineral called wollastonite was spread in pellet form by helicopter in October 1999.
From the sciencedaily.com
I wonder what wollastonite is.
From the forbes.com
Which raises the question, why are you ending percentage depletion just for oil and gas and not for all the other things it applies to like gold and wollastonite, whatever that is.
From the forbes.com
A related mineral wollastonite has the formula of the hypothetical calcium end member but important structural differences mean that it is not grouped with the pyroxenes.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
A white or greyish mineral typically found in metamorphic limestone; a silicate of calcium
Wollastonite is a calcium inosilicate mineral (CaSiO3) that may contain small amounts of iron, magnesium, and manganese substituting for calcium. It is usually white. ...
CaSiO3. A metamorphic mineral associated with marble that forms under moderate temperatures and pressures.
A mineral containing calcium silicate. In 1999 a new experiment was started at the HBEF in which scientists are looking at how an addition of calcium affects a watershed that has had its calcium soil pools depleted by acid rain over several decades. ...
Syn. Tabular spar (mineralogy) Wollastonite (native Ca silicate)
CaSiO3; represents calcic endmember of pyroxene system [see also enstatite, ferrosilite; diopside, hedenbergite], not usually shown in diagram, but used in Wo#En#Fs#; not technically a pyroxene (different structure)