The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) figures on export credits are central to a debate on targeting funding ahead of UN climate talks in Paris at the end of the year.
Just when the European Union is leading the push for a new global deal on curbing emissions and is phasing out domestic coal subsidies, the documents underline the scale of the developed world's investment in exporting technology for the most polluting fossil fuel.
Earlier this year, a document seen by Reuters provided the closest yet to official figures on coal export credits.
Further documents give the context of all energy export subsidies.
One, dated 4 March, when the OECD held closed-door talks on the issue, shows OECD governments provided preferential loans and state-backed guarantees worth 36.8 billion between 2003 and 2013 for exporting fossil fuel power-generation technology, including almost 14 billion for coal.
A document from October 2014 shows another 52.6 billion in export credits was allocated for the extraction of fossil fuels, including coal, taking the fossil fuel total to 89.4 billion.
Export credits for technology for renewable energy, which has no extraction costs, were 16.7 billion.
An OECD spokesman said he could not comment on documents marked confidential. But the documents themselves say the data should be public.
"There would seem to be a pressing need to issue coherent, complete and accurate figures on official export credit support that is relevant to climate change issues," the 4 March document says.
EU officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the March talks made little progress and the issue would be raised again at OECD level in June.
The OECD has said it wants a decision on how export credits can help tackle climate change in time for the UN summit that begins on 30 November in Paris.
A debate within the EU, which accounts for two thirds of OECD nations, is deadlocked because Poland has blocked as too ambitious a compromise to allow export funding for only the most efficient coal technology, the EU officials said. Britain and France objected, saying the compromise was not ambitious enough.
Germany, the biggest EU user of export credits both for coal and renewables, the data shows, is planning measures to make operators of coal plants, such as RWE, curb production at their oldest and most-polluting power stations as part of efforts to achieve climate targets.
A letter to the European Commission from industry associations, the European Power Plant Suppliers Association, EU Turbines and Germany's VDMA, said halting coal export credits would lock developing nations into less-efficient technology and curtail European industry's competitiveness.
Environment campaigners dismiss those arguments.
Sebastien Godinot, an economist at WWF, said the industry had "failed to bring any concrete evidence that the OECD export finance policy drives more efficient technology".