San Diego Union-Tribune

CALIFORNIA CLIMATE PLAN DRAWS CRITICISM

State seeks to achieve carbon neutrality by 2045

- BY KATHLEEN RONAYNE Ronayne writes for The Associated Press.

Heat waves and drought gripping California highlight the urgency to slash fossil fuel use and remove planet-warming emissions from the air, a top state official said Thursday during discussion­s of a new plan for the state to reach its climate goals.

“I think every single California­n today knows that we’re living through a climate emergency,” said Jared Blumenfeld, secretary of the California Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

He spoke as the California Air Resources Board opened a hearing on a plan for the nation’s most populous state to achieve carbon neutrality by 2045. That means the state would remove as much carbon from the air as it emits. The timeline is among the most ambitious in the nation and in the world, but few who offered public comment were happy with the state’s plan for reaching that milestone.

Environmen­tal groups, academics, and people who live in heavily polluted neighborho­ods said the plan doesn’t do enough to reduce the production or use of fossil fuels. Some business, industry and labor groups, meanwhile, said the transition could raise prices and hurt workers.

“How we achieve our climate goals matters as much as when we achieve them, and

we need a plan for real zero, not net zero,” said Catherine Garoupa White, a member of the plan’s Environmen­tal Justice Advisory Committee and executive director of the Central Valley Air Quality Coalition.

The air board members will hold their own discussion of the plan today. The 14member board is made up of political appointees with background­s on local air boards, the transporta­tion sector, environmen­tal justice communitie­s and agricultur­e.

California is often touted as a leader on U.S. climate policy and it has set some of the most aggressive rules for regulating vehicle emissions. The size of California’s economy — it’s bigger than those of most nations — means the state’s climate policies can often drive major business changes. Its 2045 carbon neutrality goal is matched only by Hawaii among states, and tracks with goals set by other major economies like Germany.

The state would reach its goal through a combinatio­n of lowering fossil fuel use and using technology to remove any remaining emissions from the air. Board staff estimates it would reduce petroleum demand across the economy and the use of fossil natural gas in buildings by 91 percent by 2045.

Doing so would require 30 times as many electric vehicles on the road compared to today, six times more electric appliances in homes, four times more wind and solar generation and 60 times more hydrogen.

Such a sweeping transition would lower the state’s emissions about 78 percent come 2045. Some observers note that Washington and New York, both Democratic­led states, have more ambitious targets for direct emissions reductions, 95 percent and 85 percent, respective­ly, though the proposals don’t offer perfect comparison­s.

Critics from environmen­tal groups say California’s plan doesn’t call for deep enough emissions cuts and relies too heavily on unproven and energy intensive carbon capture and removal. The concerns about such technology track with global concerns about the best way to tackle emissions goals.

The meeting grew tense in the afternoon as environmen­tal justice advocates who had been rallying outside walked into the hearing room and began singing and chanting over a speaker representi­ng business interests. The air board briefly paused the meeting as chants protesting the use of fossil fuels continued.

The environmen­tal advocates said they felt business and fossil fuel representa­tives were given more favorable speaking slots.

“There are not two sides to this issue,” said Ari Eisenstadt, campaign manager for Regenerate California, an effort to transition away from fossil fuels.

George Peppas, president of a chamber of commerce group south of Los Angeles, criticized the board for allowing the interrupti­on. He said the plan’s shift away from gaspowered cars will lower gas tax revenue that’s critical to maintainin­g roads and that electric cars will be too expensive for many people to afford.

The plan expects electricit­y demand to shoot up by 68 percent as more people drive electric cars and get rid of gaspowered stoves and other home appliances.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP ?? Electric cars are parked at a charging station in Sacramento. State regulators began taking public comment Thursday on a plan to slash fossil fuel use.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP Electric cars are parked at a charging station in Sacramento. State regulators began taking public comment Thursday on a plan to slash fossil fuel use.

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