Los Angeles Times

In Biden, a climate ally

Democrat would propel the state’s energy goals

- By Evan Halper and Anna M. Phillips

WASHINGTON — Even as California aspires to a more sustainabl­e, climatefri­endly economy, the environmen­tal degradatio­n Bahram Fazeli witnesses daily is an unwelcome reminder of how much the state is held back by a federal government pushing in the other direction.

The oil wells, refineries, metal- f inishing businesses and hazardous waste facilities in Wilmington and

Huntington Park, where the environmen­tal activist works, leave residents of those primarily Latino communitie­s acutely exposed to health risks. Fazeli has lost patience with the pace of change.

“There needs to be a transforma­tive vision that essentiall­y commits to significan­t investment in phasing out fossil fuels and creating good- paying jobs — what we call a just transition,” said Fazeli, who works for a group called Communitie­s for a Better

Environmen­t.

The feeling is shared widely in California, where out- of- control wildfires this fall have added to a sense of urgency about combating global warming.

That urgency gives the state a particular­ly large stake in the outcome of an election that poses a drastic contrast on climate issues — a White House steeped in climate denial and closely allied with fossil fuel companies versus a Democratic candidate who has embraced a $ 2- trillion climate plan that would rely heavily on California innovation and ambition as a template for f ighting global warming across the country.

The Trump administra­tion has spent billions of dollars in an almost entirely unsuccessf­ul effort to prop up the nation’s coal industry and has given priority to coal and oil production over renewable sources. The administra­tion’s policies have put the economic interests of regions heavily dependent on coal and oil production ahead of states such as California.

Joe Biden would largely reverse that. California’s senior elected officials — all Democrats — believe Biden’s election would unleash a f lurry of initiative­s in the state designed to reshape the energy and transporta­tion sectors and shift money to low- income communitie­s suffering the most from pollution caused by fossil fuels.

“It would be going from pushing a rock up a mountain to running downhill with the wind at your back,” said Jody Freeman, who was President Obama’s advisor on climate change and now directs the environmen­tal law program at Harvard.

Under a Biden administra­tion, the unending environmen­tal litigation between California and Washington — more than 100 lawsuits to date — would give way to an infusion of federal cash to bring new technologi­es to scale.

Devices that suck greenhouse gases from the air, gigantic batteries that can store huge amounts of energy generated by wind and solar, and f leets of heavy- duty electric trucks are among the many innovation­s already in beta testing.

The biggest and most immediate impact would probably be felt in the auto industry — transporta­tion accounts for more greenhouse gas emissions than any other sector of the economy.

The ambitious blueprint California set for shifting Americans into cleanerbur­ning and zero- emission cars and trucks has been torn up by the Trump administra­tion, which is trying to revoke the long- standing legal authority for California to chart its own course on auto emissions.

Biden has pledged to reinstate those plans and make them more aggressive, expanding beyond passenger vehicles and SUVs into the most polluting trucks.

“It would be a big deal,” said Hannah Pitt, a senior analyst at the Rhodium Group, which tracks greenhouse gas emissions. “The fuel economy rollbacks are Trump’s biggest rollback to date.”

California has been trying to forge ahead with its fuel- economy regulation­s in the face of White House hostility. If the federal government were to again apply the California standards nationally — as it did during the Obama era — that would set the nation on a path toward new cars and SUVs averaging 45 mpg within six years, Pitts said.

“Think of us as guinea pigs,” said UCLA environmen­tal law professor Ann Carlson. “If we succeed in cutting emissions, then the rest of the country follows suit. If we don’t, the pattern has been that it’s been much, much slower and harder for others.”

The state’s electric- vehicle innovators would be in line for a significan­t boost under infrastruc­ture spending plans pushed by Biden and leading Democrats in Congress. Some of the subsidies could come immediatel­y, as Biden would probably end the freeze the Trump administra­tion has imposed on $ 18 billion in loans Congress already authorized for advanced technology vehicle developmen­t.

Such loans could jumpstart such projects as a “Lithium Valley” envisioned on the Salton Sea, said Matt Petersen, president of the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator, a public- private partnershi­p created to help the city meet its green transporta­tion goals.

The Salton Sea effort would leverage the unique geography of the area for constructi­on of geothermal electricit­y plants that would extract lithium from brine. The lithium would be used to manufactur­e batteries for electric cars.

“Access to lithium domestical­ly is critical for the electric- vehicle sector,” Petersen said. “This loan program could help f inance facilities that create a supply chain for the region.”

Renewal of a climate alliance between California and the White House would also enable the state to make strides building another key component for electric vehicles: charging stations. The state has 62,000, far short of the goal of 250,000 by 2025. It needs federal subsidies to get there.

The changes in the electricit­y sector could be even more dramatic.

“A Biden administra­tion would mean everywhere would start to look like California in terms of investment in renewables,” said Michael Wara, director of the climate and energy policy program at Stanford Law School. “That would allow California to go even further. There would be a huge push in research and developmen­t perspectiv­e, and deployment.”

During the Obama era, the state, in partnershi­p with the federal government, made plans to build solar mega- facilities for power companies that initially seemed a pipe dream. The state brought nine of them online.

“We were able to launch the utility- scale solar industry,” said Robert Weisenmill­er, former chairman of the California Energy Commission. “Not just in California, but globally.

“If we had the state and federal government working together again, rather than California trying to push and the federal government saying ‘ no’ — if Washington put its foot on the accelerato­r and not the brake — it would be marvelous,” Weisenmill­er said.

Advances would go beyond electricit­y production, he said, moving into the kind of efficienci­es of lighting and home appliances that California pioneered during the Obama era, leading to major reductions in energy use. By contrast, the Trump administra­tion has blocked new eff iciency standards for lightbulbs and pushed for increased water usage from shower heads.

At a National Academies of Sciences workshop Weisenmill­er recently attended, scientists repeatedly spoke about new technologi­es being developed in California labs. Discussion turned to resilient “micro” power grids that could more nimbly deploy wind and solar energy, fuels made from seaweed and other renewable resources, and the constructi­on of buildings with materials designed to absorb carbon.

The scientists emphasized the need to bring to scale carbon- capture technologi­es that suck greenhouse gases from the atmosphere and talked of breakthrou­ghs that could make hydrogen- powered vehicles affordable.

Experts on clean energy believe at least some of those technologi­es are within reach after experienci­ng, during the Obama administra­tion, the scale of progress that can happen when the federal government is invested.

One area where Democrats have grown considerab­ly more ambitious than they were during Obama’s tenure is in spreading the benefits of these changes to the low- income and minority communitie­s that have suffered most from fossil fuel pollution.

“This is the f irst time there’s ever been any real substance in a candidate’s plan” for addressing the damage pollution has caused marginaliz­ed communitie­s, said Mustafa Santiago Ali, a former associate administra­tor in the Obama administra­tion’s Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s environmen­tal justice office.

Under Biden’s plan, such communitie­s would receive 40% of “overall benefits of spending” by the federal government in areas such as clean energy and energy efficiency, green transporta­tion and sustainabl­e housing.

For California­ns who live near freeways, oil refineries, rail yards and the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, a change in administra­tion could change lifespans, Ali said.

“We know that about 100,000 people are dying prematurel­y every year from air pollution in our country, and that’s the low number,” he said. “The basic protection­s have not completed the mission — not even close.”

Environmen­tal justice advocates remain wary, though, of indulging in too much optimism. Without steady pressure from activists, they said, the new economy Biden’s campaign is promising could benefit major corporatio­ns and CEOs far more than ordinary Americans.

But a bigger threat, they say, is four more years of Trump, who has made clear he will work to stop any policies that threaten the fossil fuel industry.

The president’s antipathy for the state and its clean- energy agenda, Carlson suspects, would be even more pronounced in a second term.

“California leads the way in opposing his presidency,” she said. “I think he’ll take it out on us in ways we can’t imagine.”

 ?? Douglas R. Clifford Tampa Bay Times ?? JENNY AND JAMES HART line up for early voting Monday in Clearwater, Fla. Winning the Sunshine State would all but seal victory for Democrat Joe Biden.
Douglas R. Clifford Tampa Bay Times JENNY AND JAMES HART line up for early voting Monday in Clearwater, Fla. Winning the Sunshine State would all but seal victory for Democrat Joe Biden.
 ?? Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ?? THE PHILLIPS 66 ref inery looms over a Wilmington neighborho­od. California off icials believe a Biden administra­tion would shift money to low- income communitie­s suffering the most from fossil fuel pollution.
Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times THE PHILLIPS 66 ref inery looms over a Wilmington neighborho­od. California off icials believe a Biden administra­tion would shift money to low- income communitie­s suffering the most from fossil fuel pollution.

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