The International Energy Agency reported 400 Billion USD in fossil fuel subsidies in 2018.
Renewable subsidies are just a fraction of this.
However, those subsidies are in third world countries. That table lists Iran and Saudi Arabia at the top. They subsidize oil. But only for their own consumption, by their own people. They do not subsidize the cost of oil they sell to other countries.
Renewable energy subsidies in the U.S. may be $7 billion, which is much less than the $400 billion these other countries give as subsidies for oil in their own countries, but they do not give U.S. customers any of that $400 billion. So that cannot be counted against the $7 billion. (I don't know if it really is $7 billion.)
The U.S. and other first world countries used to subsidize fossil fuel, but not so much anymore. The U.S. still subsidizes them by giving them depletion allowances, which is unfair because wind never depletes. And it subsidizes them indirectly by not charging them for the pollution and the people they kill.