Los Angeles Times

At climate summit, a cast of stars

Gov. Brown is pulling together high-profile California­ns to attend the UN event in Paris.

- CHRIS MEGERIAN

SACRAMENTO — In the wonky world of climate change, California’s presence at the United Nations summit in Paris next month is expected to be a starstudde­d affair.

There will be an actual movie star, former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, who jump-started some of the state’s most ambitious efforts to slow global warming. Also in the mix is Tom Steyer, the billionair­e Bay Area environmen­tal activist who has bankrolled political campaigns around the country.

And there is an official state delegation led by Gov. Jerry Brown, who has sought to make the battle against climate change a central part of his legacy. Accompanyi­ng the governor will be other administra­tion officials and eight Democratic lawmakers.

Much of the summit will concern a new internatio­nal agreement to combat climate change. California — a state, not a nation — is not a part of those negotiatio­ns. But there will be opportunit­ies to swap ideas and form partnershi­ps with politician­s, businesses and activists from all over the world, and to tout proposals for stopping global warming.

“It’s kind of a candy shop for science and policy wonks,” said Gary Gero, president of the Climate Action Reserve, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit that is helping to organize California’s delegation and pay for the trip.

Many details have not been finalized, but Brown and Steyer have been circulatin­g a letter on the governor’s stationery asking people to join them in Paris, to “share California’s success stories with world leaders and to urge other business leaders to support similar efforts.”

“Government and business can come together to confront the singular challenge of our time — combating climate change,” the letter says.

Neither Steyer nor Brown’s office would disclose any addressees. Deborah Hoffman, a spokeswoma­n for the governor, said most of the invited businesses are involved in energy and technology, but others are in the healthcare, banking and consumer product sectors.

Brown has been working to widen an internatio­nal pact among cities, states and provinces pledging strict limits on greenhouse gas emissions. The agreement, initiated by California and the German state of Baden-Württember­g earlier this year, now has more than 50 participan­ts representi­ng more than 500 million people.

“There’s a lot of things we can do if we put our mind to it,” Brown said Monday at a San Francisco forum on global business. “Paris is getting people mobilized in a very serious way.”

The Climate Action Reserve has been raising money to fund the trip from donors “who want to help the California delegation tell its story,” Gero said.

He declined to say how much money each donor provided.

Asked why public money would not be used to fund travel by the official delegation, Hoffman said, “We try to limit the use of tax dollars on these trips.”

Gero expects state officials to be in demand during the Paris conference.

“People are very interested in what California is doing,” he said. “They know it’s been a success story.”

State Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) plans to attend and said he hopes to bring back new ideas. “It’s an opportunit­y for us to listen and see what works and doesn’t work.”

chris.megerian @latimes.com Twitter: @chrismeger­ian For full coverage leading up to, and during, the conference go to www.latimes.com/politics.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben
Los Angeles Times ?? DROUGHT HAS taken a toll on California’s Joshua trees. The state’s climate change delegation hopes “to swap ideas and form partnershi­ps” in Paris.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times DROUGHT HAS taken a toll on California’s Joshua trees. The state’s climate change delegation hopes “to swap ideas and form partnershi­ps” in Paris.

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