Los Angeles Times

State sets 2035 target to phase out gas vehicles

Gov. Newsom calls for a shift to sales of zero-emission cars and urges lawmakers to ban fracking.

- By Phil Willon and Tony Barboza

SACRAMENTO — Emphasizin­g that California must stay at the forefront of the fight against climate change, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday issued an executive order to require all new cars sold to be zeroemissi­on vehicles by 2035 and threw his support behind a ban on the controvers­ial use of hydraulic fracturing by oil companies.

Under Newsom’s order, the California Air Resources Board would implement the phaseout of new gas-powered cars and light trucks and also require medium and heavy-duty trucks to be zero-emission by 2045 where possible.

California would be the first state in the nation to mandate 100% zero-emission vehicles, though 15 countries already have committed to phasing out gaspowered cars.

Newsom did not take executive action to ban the controvers­ial oil extraction method known as fracking but called on the state Legislatur­e

to do so, setting up what could be a contentiou­s political fight when lawmakers reconvene in Sacramento next year.

Taken together, the two climate change efforts would accelerate the state’s already aggressive efforts to curtail carbon emissions and petroleum hazards and promise to exacerbate tensions with a Trump administra­tion intent on bridling California’s liberal environmen­tal agenda.

“In the next 15 years we

will eliminate in the state of California the sales of internal combustion engines,” Newsom said at a news conference in Sacramento before signing the order. “If you want to reduce asthma, if you want to mitigate the rise of sea level, if you want to mitigate the loss of ice sheets around the globe, then this is a policy for other states to follow.”

Newsom’s executive order calls ending the sale of new gasoline-powered cars by 2035 a “goal,” but it also orders the Air Resources Board to immediatel­y begin drafting regulation­s to achieve it by that year.

The governor acknowledg­ed that not everyone would embrace the 100% zero-emissions mandate but emphasized that nothing in his order would prevent California­ns from owning gas-powered cars or buying or selling them used.

“We’re not taking anything away,” Newsom said. “We’re providing an abundance of new choices and new technology, being agnostic about how we get to zero emissions, but being committed to getting to zero emissions by 2035.”

Newsom said that California’s action will help spur greater innovation for zeroemissi­on vehicles and, by creating a huge market, will drive down the cost of those cars and trucks. More than 1.63 million new cars and trucks are expected to be sold in the state in 2020, according to the California New Car Dealers Assn.

He noted that California is home to 34 manufactur­ers of electric vehicles and that just under 50% of all the electric vehicle purchases in the country are in this state. Phasing out gas-powered cars will not only reduce the hazards posed by carbon emissions but serve as a catalyst to bring more green jobs to California, he said.

Climate scientists and advocates say the world must stop production of gas-and diesel-powered vehicles by 2030 in order to keep global warming to tolerable levels. California and other government­s across the world are seeking to achieve carbon neutrality by 2045, and it will take years for vehicles to turn over and be replaced by zero-emission models.

Alliance for Automotive Innovation President and Chief Executive John Bozzellas said the electric car market is crucial to auto manufactur­ers, but “neither mandates nor bans build successful markets.”

State Senate Republican leader Shannon Grove of Bakersfiel­d, which is in the heart of California oil country, criticized Newsom’s order as “extremist,” saying the governor’s time would be better used protecting California­ns from wildfires rather than banning cars that most residents rely on to provide for their families.

“The fact is that California­ns cannot survive without oil and gas or petroleum byproducts,” Grove said. “These products are not just the gas in our cars, they are the asphalt on our roads, the plastic holding together electric vehicles, medical equipment vulnerable patients rely on, footballs our children play with, telephones, toothpaste, trash bags, and so much more.”

Cathy Reheis-Boyd, president of the Western States Petroleum Assn., noted that Newsom had lined up expensive zeroemissi­on cars as a backdrop to his news conference.

“It’s interestin­g that the governor was standing in front of nearly $200,000 worth of electric vehicles as he told California­ns that their reliable and affordable cars and trucks would soon be not welcome in our state,” she said. “Big and bold ideas only make sense if affordable for us all and backed by science, data and needed infrastruc­ture.”

Newsom sharply criticized the Trump administra­tion this month for ignoring the reality of climate change, saying that California’s deadly wildfires, some of the largest in state history, were grim reminders of what lies ahead for the nation if political leaders in Washington don’t take action.

“This is a climate damn emergency,” Newsom said during a tour of the charred landscape around the Northern California town of Oroville. “This is real, and it’s happening.”

While meeting with Newsom in Sacramento last week, Trump expressed skepticism about the scientific evidence of climate change, saying: “It’ll start getting cooler. You just watch.”

The state has sued the Trump administra­tion over efforts by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency to rescind a special federal waiver that permits California to set its own strict pollution controls to improve air quality, the foundation of the state’s aggressive efforts to combat climate change.

Environmen­talists who had urged Newsom to accelerate California’s climate action praised his order to transition to zero-emission vehicles.

Newsom’s order “will not only address the single largest source of climate and air pollution in California but is a major step toward boosting his state’s economic competitiv­eness and helping California­ns who are suffering extraordin­ary harms from air pollution,” said Fred Krupp, president of the Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

At the same time, many other environmen­tal groups faulted him for not doing more to restrict fossil fuel production and to protect the health of people living nearby.

“If your climate leadership does not include relief for hundreds of thousands of California­ns — the majority people of color — living with oil drilling in their neighborho­od, then you are not serious about climate justice,” said Martha Arguëllo, executive director of Physicians for Social Responsibi­lity Los Angeles.

In November, Newsom imposed a temporary moratorium on new hydraulic fracking permits, saying that he wanted them to undergo independen­t scientific review. Since April, however, his administra­tion has issued close to 50 new permits to Chevron and Aera Energy, frustratin­g environmen­talists.

“Newsom is really good at making announceme­nts that sound big, but they actually aren’t. We can’t let the fact that he’s acting on cars eclipse the fact that he’s still protecting the oil industry,” said Kassie Siegel, director of the Climate Law Institute at the Center for Biological Diversity.

California oil industry representa­tives have argued that phasing out oil production in the state, which has some of the strictest environmen­tal regulation­s in the world, would force more oil to be imported by train and tanker ship from countries that do not have the same environmen­tal safeguards. According to the Western States Petroleum Assn., there are more than 26 million vehicles with internal-combustion engines in California.

Newsom’s order directs the state Air Resources Board to develop and propose regulation­s that require increasing volumes of new zero-emission passenger vehicles sold, “towards the target of 100% of in-state sales by 2035.”

The order also tasks air quality officials with crafting rules to ensure all trucks moving freight through the state’s seaports are zeroemissi­on by 2035. That mirrors targets set three years ago by the mayors of Los Angeles and Long Beach aimed at slashing emissions from the San Pedro Bay port complex, which remains Southern California’s biggest single source of smog-forming pollution.

Across California, cars, trucks and other vehicles are the largest emitters of greenhouse gases, accounting for about 40% of the statewide total, and their emissions have been stubbornly creeping upward in recent years. Driving down transporta­tion pollution remains the state’s biggest challenge in achieving its goal of slashing planet-warming emissions to 40% below 1990 levels by 2030.

Under current regulation­s, California’s Air Resources Board requires automakers to sell electric, fuel cell and other zero-emission vehicles in increasing percentage­s through 2025. Electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles accounted for 7.6% of new car registrati­ons in California in 2019.

In 2018, under then-Gov. Jerry Brown, the state set a goal to put 5 million zeroemissi­on cars on the road by 2025. There were 670,000 zero-emission vehicles sold in California through the end of 2019, according to auto industry sales data.

In June, the Air Resources Board adopted the nation’s first sales mandate requiring heavy-duty truck manufactur­ers to sell increasing percentage­s of electric or fuel cell models until all new trucks sold in California are zero-emission by 2045.

But efforts to completely phase out gas-powered cars have not gained traction. Three years ago, Brown directed the state’s chief air quality regulator, Mary Nichols, to look into stepping up the state’s timetable. Prior to Wednesday, her agency had only floated the idea of banning gas-powered vehicles in congested areas of the state. And legislatio­n introduced in 2018 that would have banned the sale of new, gas-powered vehicles by 2040 didn’t move forward.

State Assemblyma­n Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), who wrote that legislatio­n, said “the fastest way to make the biggest dent in slowing the effects of global warming is to embrace cleaner cars” and applauded Newsom “for putting us on a path that’s not only crucial for our planet, but also helpful in spurring green jobs as we recover from COVID-19.”

Nichols said Wednesday that the Air Resources Board is ready to move forward with the governor’s zero-emissions order and that its scientists, engineers and lawyers “are working to try to figure out how we can deal with the persistenc­e of smog that makes people sick and also at the same time try to get ahead of this escalating climate problem.”

She expressed confidence that the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to remove California’s authority to set stricter emissions standards, which the state is currently fighting in court, would not pose an obstacle to the governor’s mandate.

“We believe the Clean Air Act gives us the authority to set exactly the kinds of standards that we have set since the late ’60s,” Nichols said, “and therefore we look forward to being able to do that in the future.”

 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times ?? BY 2035, all new cars and light trucks sold in California must be zero-emission vehicles, under an executive order signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. Above, new cars at a Toyota service yard at the Long Beach port.
ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times BY 2035, all new cars and light trucks sold in California must be zero-emission vehicles, under an executive order signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. Above, new cars at a Toyota service yard at the Long Beach port.

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