The Mercury News Weekend

Bay Area, nation must prepare for clean-energy transition

- By Mark DeSaulnier Rep. Mark DeSaulnier represents most of Contra Costa County. He is a member of the Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee and the Education and Labor Committee.

Although policymake­rs have been attempting to shift the economy from fossil fuels to renewable sources of energy for years now, the coronaviru­s pandemic jump-started that process.

COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns and far fewer commuters during the pandemic have caused a major decrease in fossil fuel consumptio­n. But the pandemic is not a blip on the radar. The energy transition is upon us, whether we’re ready or not.

Electricit­y generation from renewable energy in the United States is forecast to double over the next 30 years. By 2030, renewables will collective­ly surpass natural gas as the predominan­t source of generation. Meanwhile, demand for coal, oil and natural gas is expected to slow dramatical­ly due to climate-change concerns, the cheaper cost of renewable energy and the burgeoning remote-working culture.

We have seen the real-life impacts of this shift here in the Bay Area over the last year. In August, Phillips 66 announced it would close two California plants, one in Contra Costa County, and repurpose its Rodeo refinery into a renewable fuel site. In July, Marathon announced plans to begin producing renewable diesel at its Martinez refinery, making most jobs there obsolete.

The inevitable evolution away from fossil fuels to renewable energy will benefit our society. But it must be coupled with smart policies to ensure fossil-fuel workers, communitie­s with legacy plants and local government­s are not left behind. The expedited transition away from fossil fuels increases the urgency of a planned effort to ensure that the transition works for everyone.

President Joe Biden recently unveiled the American Jobs Plan, which calls for clean-energy manufactur­ing and jobs; a safe, equitable and sustainabl­e transporta­tion system; and a world-class transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, including 500,000 electric vehicle chargers by 2030. My energy-transition initiative would help advance that plan.

The initiative is divided into three bills. The first, the Protecting Workers for a Clean Future Act, addresses the imminent market evolution to renewable energy by providing direct support to local communitie­s, the fossil fuel workforce, environmen­tal justice advocates and environmen­tal groups to develop a plan for transition­ing workers to meaningful, sustainabl­e work. Refinery workers across America, and especially in the Bay Area, will fall victim to joblessnes­s if we do not act now.

The second bill, the Jobs for a Carbon Free Transporta­tion System

Act, addresses the intersecti­on of three of the biggest challenges our nation faces: climate change, outdated infrastruc­ture and job insecurity. The bill invests in state-of-the-art transporta­tion reforms that would improve mobility and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by developing low-carbon, efficient, interconne­cted and smart transporta­tion corridors — all while creating good-paying union jobs. It also supports workers to transition out of the fossil fuel industry and into meaningful, more secure work.

The third bill, the Clean Corridors Act, would launch a federal program to accelerate expansion of electric vehicle charging stations. It would direct $3 billion over the coming decade to construct and install infrastruc­ture to support technologi­es such as hydrogen fuel cell and electric battery-powered vehicles. With this legislatio­n, we can help sustain the growth of the EV market, which means more jobs, a healthier Earth and a strong economy.

This initiative is the result of dozens of meetings with Contra Costa stakeholde­rs over the past several years, including fellow Rep. Mike Thompson, whose district includes refineries, local mayors, county officials, environmen­tal activists, labor leaders, industry and university researcher­s.

With a calculated, thoughtful and proactive approach to the energy transition, we can ensure that no worker is left behind, our environmen­t is protected, and our economy grows.

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