Oroville Mercury-Register

California OKs roadmap for carbon neutrality by 2045

- By Sophie Austin

SACRAMENTO >> California air regulators voted Thursday to approve an ambitious plan to drasticall­y reduce reliance on fossil fuels by changing practices in the energy, transporta­tion and agricultur­e sectors, but critics say it doesn’t go far enough to combat climate change.

The plan sets out to achieve so-called carbon neutrality by 2045, meaning the state will remove as many carbon emissions from the atmosphere as it emits. It aims to do so in part by reducing fossil fuel demand by 86% within that time frame.

California previously set that carbon neutrality target as a goal, but Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislatio­n making it a mandate earlier this year. He has said drastic changes are needed to position California as a global climate leader.

Capturing large amounts of carbon and storing it undergroun­d is one of the most controvers­ial elements of the proposal. Critics say it gives the state’s biggest emitters reason to not do enough on their part to mitigate climate change.

At the beginning of Thursday’s meeting, California Air Resources Board Chair Liane Randolph touted the latest version of the plan as the most ambitious to date. It underwent changes after public comments earlier this year.

“Ultimately, achieving carbon neutrality requires deploying all tools available to us to reduce emissions and store carbon,” Randolph said.

The plan does not commit the state to taking any particular actions but sets out a broad roadmap for how California can achieve its goals. Here are the highlights:

Renewable power

The implementa­tion of the plan hinges on the state’s ability to transition away from fossil fuels and rely more on renewable resources for energy. It calls for the state to cut liquid

petroleum fuel demand by 94% by 2045, and quadruple solar and wind capacity along that same timeframe.

Another goal would mean new residentia­l and commercial buildings will be powered by electric appliances before the next decade.

The calls to dramatical­ly lower reliance on oil and gas comes as public officials continue to grapple with how to avoid blackouts when record-breaking heat waves lead California­ns to crank up their air conditioni­ng.

Transporta­tion

Officials hope a move away from gas-powered cars and trucks reduces greenhouse gas emissions while limiting the public health impact of chemicals these vehicles release.

In a July letter to the air board, Newsom requested that the agency approve aggressive cuts to emissions from planes, a move that would accompany other reductions in the transporta­tion sector as the state transition­s to all zero-emission vehicle sales by 2035.

The plan’s targets include having 10% of aviation fuel demand come from electric or hydrogen sources by 2045 and ensuring all medium-duty vehicles sold are zero-emission by 2040. The board has already passed a policy to ban the sale of new cars powered solely by gasoline in the state starting in 2035.

Carbon capture

The plan refers to carbon capture as a “necessary tool” to implement in the state alongside other strategies to mitigate climate change. It calls for the state to capture 100 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent and store it undergroun­d by 2045.

Connie Cho, an attorney for environmen­tal justice group Communitie­s for a Better Environmen­t, called the plan “a huge step forward” to mitigate climate change and protect public health.

“Our communitie­s have been suffering from chronic disease and dying at disproport­ionate rates for far too long because of the legacy of environmen­tal racism in this country,” Cho said.

But Cho criticized its carbon capture targets, arguing they give a pathway for refineries to continue polluting as the state cuts emissions in other areas.

Agricultur­e

One of the goals is to achieve a 66% reduction in methane emissions from the agricultur­e sector by 2045. Cattle are a significan­t source for releasing methane, a potent, planetwarm­ing gas.

The plan’s implementa­tion would also mean less reliance by the agricultur­e sector on fossil fuels as an energy source.

 ?? REED SAXON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? This aerial photo shows the Standard Oil Refinery in El Segundo with Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport in the background and the El Porto neighborho­od of Manhattan Beach in the foreground on May 25, 2017.
REED SAXON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE This aerial photo shows the Standard Oil Refinery in El Segundo with Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport in the background and the El Porto neighborho­od of Manhattan Beach in the foreground on May 25, 2017.
 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom, center, is flanked by state lawmakers at Mare Island in Vallejo on Sept. 16while discussing the package of legislatio­n he signed that accelerate­s state climate goals.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Gov. Gavin Newsom, center, is flanked by state lawmakers at Mare Island in Vallejo on Sept. 16while discussing the package of legislatio­n he signed that accelerate­s state climate goals.

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