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Home The News California Unveils Latest Plan to Curb Emissions

California Unveils Latest Plan to Curb Emissions

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SUNNYVALE, Calif. -- The California Air Resources Board (CARB) released a climate change plan Wednesday that will touch nearly every sector of the state's economy -- from the cars we buy to the places we live and the energy used power them.

The proposed scoping plan, which must be approved in December, aims to meet an overarching goal embodied in the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006: reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the country's most populous state to 1990 levels by 2020.

"In a sense, this is just the beginning ... It's going to take the efforts of everybody in this room, and people beyond this room, to make it a reality because this is a plan that will take a lot of work and money to implement," Mary Nichols, CARB chairperson, told business leaders Wednesday at an event to launch The Climate Group's "Business Guide to the Low Carbon Economy: California."

In the absence of federal leadership, Nichols said, California recognizes that opportunities for leadership to fight climate change exist at the state level. "There was simply no excuse for us to stay on the sidelines," she said. "We had to work."

In June, the agency released a draft of Wednesday's plan that received more 40,000 comments and was downloaded more than 90,000 times. The cornerstone of the proposal is a greenhouse gas cap-and-trade program that will begin in 2012 by putting a price on carbon and making the biggest polluters pay for it.

The cap-and-trade will cover roughly 85 percent of the state's emissions, including transportation, electricity generation, refineries and other energy-intensive industries. It is being developed in step with the Western Climate Initiative, the regional coalition of six states and four Canadian provinces now drawing up a regional carbon market.

The state's plan also calls for boosting its renewable energy mix to 33 percent, bringing small and medium-sized business into the fold to reduce emissions, implementing a Low Carbon Fuel Standard, and changing land-use policies to discourage urban sprawl.

The plan is not without its critics. Environmental groups like the Union of Concerned Scientists praised the plan as a solid first step but warned it relies too much on offsets -- rather than direct emissions -- and lacks a commitment to force polluters to buy 100 percent of future carbon permits.

Business groups also assailed the plan for the cost of implementation. Despite research from CARB showing the economic benefits of implementing AB 32 outweigh the costs, the American Council of Capital Formation claims the law will cost the state jobs and revenue.

VIA: GreenBiz

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 October 2008 20:44  

Newsflash

One of the many top issues with voters is renewable energy. Its actually right up there with the failing economy and high gas prices. California, Colorado and Missouri all  have measures on their ballots that deal with alternative energy sources, which include wind and solar power.  An initiative in California  would require utilities to obtain up to  half their power from renewable resources by 2025, setting the toughest standard in the United States. This is typical of California. California has always been the leader in reducing greenhouse emissions. Although this is a progressive move, it has also  drawn much opposition. Environmental groups which include  the Sierra Club, along with the Democrats and Republican parties both agree that the initiative has too many loopholes as it stands. This initiative would require the utilities to add two-percentage points to their renewable portfolio each year. As it stands these companies are not doing it now. The new law would seek to  fine the companies if they didn't add renewables to their portfolio. The new law, if passed,  would reign in municipal utilities that are  not even covered by the law. These municipal utilities are guilty of using some of the dirtiest fuel out there: Coal.  The state of California's public utilities commission projects  that California utilities will miss their target by at least three years as they are having trouble reaching these goals already. Another California proposal would allow for $5 billion in bonds to give rebates for alternative-fuel vehicles and to promote renewable energy.