The Mercury News

Peninsula cities must lead the world on climate change

- By Josh Becker Josh Becker is a candidate for state Senate District 13, which ranges from South San Francisco to Sunnyvale. Daniel Yost contribute­d and is a lawyer who counsels climate innovators and served as mayor of Woodside.

California Senate District 13, which stretches from South San Francisco to Sunnyvale, is one of the world’s foremost centers of innovation. We are also a district that faces disaster if climate change is allowed to continue unchecked. The local cost of inaction includes flooding along our Bayshore and coast; wildfires, smoke and power shut-offs throughout the state, and droughts and heat that impact people and nature. San Mateo County alone stands to lose $34 billion in property values, 34 schools and 30,000 homes.

Our Peninsula communitie­s, which gave the world lasers, microproce­ssors and openheart surgery, must now lead the world forward on climate change. Blessed as we are with more than our share of the world’s financial, intellectu­al and creative capital, we have an urgent responsibi­lity to lead the world forward on climate change. Few places so precisely intersect urgent necessity and proven capacity for invention.

Several weeks ago, I released a comprehens­ive plan to combat climate change, which was the product of a monthslong collaborat­ive process between my campaign and 75 local and national climate leaders, from Massachuse­tts Sen. Ed Markey to legendary San Mateo County environmen­talist Lennie Roberts. The plan calls for: achieving carbon neutrality in state agencies by 2030, the greening of our transporta­tion system, a green civilian conservati­on corps, aggressive energy targets for new buildings, and incentives to develop and deploy technologi­es and natural systems to remove carbon from the atmosphere.

My plan includes creating a multi-million-dollar prize for outstandin­g innovation­s in climate science. This isn’t simply a question of adjusting profit margins and helping with startup costs; the goal is to create a prize with real prestige to make California an active partner in cutting-edge climate research, and to save our own communitie­s from the worst effects of climate change.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory just issued a report outlining how California can achieve carbon neutrality by 2045 by taking actions that also reduce wildfire risk, clean our air and water and bring investment­s throughout the state. The report outlined the technology and policy innovation­s that are needed to achieve these goals, including incentiviz­ing some of the negative emissions technologi­es and natural practices I have included in my plan. While well-researched reports are necessary, they alone are not sufficient to solve our crisis.

Addressing the climate crisis will require cooperatio­n between all sectors of the economy and corners of the world. As California­ns we can help create the incentives and organizing principles for addressing climate change globally. For decades we set the American standards for emission and changed the way cars were produced nationwide. Our words and actions exert tremendous moral and economic gravity. Sacramento has plenty of Democrats who are “good votes” on climate change. That is not enough. The San Francisco Peninsula can and should be the number one climate innovation leader in the world. Our next state senator must be able to bring forth our best ideas, galvanize our full capacity for invention and innovation, and provide climate leadership.

I’m a collaborat­or and problem solver and have worked for decades with Gov. Gavin Newsom and his environmen­tal team. That is one of the reasons that Newsom and current state Sen. Jerry Hill are supporting me in this race. I am passionate about solving climate change and working with local leaders in the Bay Area to bring our best solutions to Sacramento. Climate change is our greatest existentia­l challenge, but it could provide our area with a real opportunit­y to lead not only California, but also the world, into a more livable future.

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