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Center for Progressive Reform Comments to California: Adopt More Ambitious Carbon Neutrality Plan

The Center for Progressive Reform has joined close to 1,000 organizations and individuals in providing comments on California's long-awaited plan for achieving carbon neutrality, the Draft 2022 Scoping Plan Update (Draft Plan). Gov. Gavin Newsom gave the California Air Resources Board (CARB), the state agency tasked with coordinating the plan, a daunting challenge: achieving carbon neutrality by 2045 at the latest.

Our comments conclude that the state should (1) be more ambitious, (2) more explicitly achieve multiple objectives, including environmental justice, and (3) develop a supplemental plan that more specifically outlines the policy tools the state will employ to achieve its objectives.

Reduce Reliance on Fossil Fuels More Quickly

The Draft Plan's 2045 timeline — spanning more than two decades — will perpetuate fossil fuel use and associated pollution. The plan proposes deadlines for ending the sale of fossil-fuel based goods, like trucks, cars, and appliances, but assumes that, once sold, these products can continue to be used until the end of their useful lives. The plan also establishes a slow pace for electrifying industry, in many cases expecting zero transition by 2030.

Our comments argue that more aggressive measures to reduce reliance on fossil fuels would accelerate the timeline for achieving carbon neutrality and improve public health more quickly, particularly for communities of color that tend to experience disproportionate harm. For example, setting a deadline banning the continued use of diesel trucks would alleviate toxic diesel emissions, and intensive investment in appliance retrofits would reduce indoor natural gas emissions.

More concerted requirements for industry, coupled with financial support if needed to prevent companies from shifting production (and associated emissions) elsewhere, would likewise more quickly reduce fossil fuel use and improve air quality for the marginalized communities often co-located with industry.

By halting the use, not just the sale, of fossil-fuel dependent goods and by accelerating industrial reductions, the state could more quickly become carbon neutral and achieve the environmental and health benefits of a rapid transition.

Seek a Holistic Post-Carbon Vision

Although CARB's task is to detail a plan for achieving carbon neutrality, carbon reductions will not occur in a vacuum. The transition will touch many aspects of the economy, the environment, and people's lives. CARB acknowledges this reality, but, as our comments observe, the Draft Plan could do more to define an integrated vision for a carbon-neutral economy and could detail the cross-agency coordination that will be necessary to achieve multiple objectives.

For example, we note that, although the Draft Plan includes multiple references to environmental justice, the plan does not specify how the transition will lead to pollution reductions where they are most needed. In addition, we point out that the plan does little to address how phasing out fossil fuels will affect the fate of fossil-fuel-dependent workers and communities and how the state will develop new "high-road" opportunities for those at risk of being left behind.

Invest in the Future

Our comments highlight the massive investments that will be needed to accomplish an equitable clean energy transition and observe that the Draft Plan could more explicitly identify costs and explain the need for dedicated revenue.

The private sector alone will not accomplish a comprehensive clean energy transition. Low-income individuals, small businesses, and some industry and agricultural entities will require creative long-term financing mechanisms and subsidies. Without this public investment, the state cannot achieve carbon neutrality. Moreover, because past mechanisms for distributing government dollars may not be appropriate for the type and scale of needed public investment, the state should work with stakeholders to assess new models to equitably and efficiently invest in the future.

Develop a Supplemental Policy Plan

The Draft Plan sets sector-specific goals based on technological and economic parameters and lists existing laws and programs that will contribute to, but not achieve, the state's goals. Although the plan provides a laundry list of possible strategies for achieving reductions, it does not identify which mechanisms it will deploy, deferring such specification to the implementation process.

Recognizing that CARB is unable to provide a higher level of specificity in this plan, our comments stress the need for a supplemental plan that more concretely identifies proposed policy mechanisms, including the relative roles for further planning processes, regulations, incentives, investments, and cap-and-trade within and across sectors. A supplemental policy plan would provide a holistic assessment of policy options and their interrelationships, in contrast to CARB's current approach, which delays policy choices and risks piecemeal and fragmented policy initiatives.

A more detailed policy plan should integrate CARB's stated environmental justice goals and demonstrate specific standards for achieving environmental benefits. The Environmental Justice Advisory Committee, which is convened to advise CARB on each scoping plan update, should play a vital role in developing the plan and ensuring widespread public outreach and participation.

Sector-Specific Recommendations

In addition to its cross-cutting comments, we provided detailed sector-specific recommendations. They advocate for faster reductions in fossil-fuel uses, benefits for marginalized communities, and prioritizing pollution reductions in the transportation, buildings, and industrial sectors. Looking ahead to the mechanisms for reducing emissions, the comments call for direct emission reductions wherever possible, with limited reliance on carbon removal and on cap-and-trade.

California has started on its path to carbon neutrality. Our comments are intended to maximize the benefits and minimize the harms that could emerge from the state's ambitious undertaking.

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Alice Kaswan | July 7, 2022

Center for Progressive Reform Comments to California: Adopt More Ambitious Carbon Neutrality Plan

The Center for Progressive Reform has joined close to 1,000 organizations and individuals in providing comments on California's long-awaited plan for achieving carbon neutrality, the Draft 2022 Scoping Plan Update (Draft Plan). Gov. Gavin Newsom gave the California Air Resources Board (CARB), the state agency tasked with coordinating the plan, a daunting challenge: achieving carbon neutrality by 2045 at the latest. Our comments conclude that the state should (1) be more ambitious, (2) more explicitly achieve multiple objectives, including environmental justice, and (3) develop a supplemental plan that more specifically outlines the policy tools the state will employ to achieve its objectives.

Alexandra Rogan | July 7, 2022

Prestigious Law and Policy Journal Features Article by Member Scholar David Adelman

An article co-written by Center for Progressive Reform Member Scholar David Adelman and Attorney Advisor at the U.S. Environmental Protection (EPA) Jori Reilly-Diakun was selected for inclusion in this year’s Environmental Law and Policy Annual Review (ELPAR). ELPAR is a student-edited volume published annually in the August issue of the Environmental Law Reporter. It features abridged versions of selected articles with commentary from environmental experts.

Grace DuBois | July 5, 2022

It’s Time for an Enforceable Timeline for Addressing Toxic PFAS Chemicals

Throughout the first half of 2022, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced several actions in pursuit of the goals it laid out in its PFAS Strategic Roadmap -- the blueprint it released last October outlining plans for addressing widespread PFAS contamination in the United States. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are a group of more than 9,000 synthetic chemicals that pose serious risks to human health, including increased blood pressure and cholesterol levels, abnormal liver function, decreased birth weights, and certain cancers. Exposure to even extremely low levels of certain PFAS are unsafe for humans.

Robert Fischman | June 30, 2022

Supreme Court Swings at Phantoms in West Virginia v. EPA

In West Virginia v. EPA, the U.S. Supreme Court slayed a phantom, a regulation that does not exist. Why? The justices in the majority could not contain their zeal to hollow out the EPA’s ability to lessen suffering from climate change in ways that impinge the profits of entrenched fossil fuel interests.

James Goodwin, Shelley Welton | June 29, 2022

The Revelator Op-Ed: Regulators Have a Big Chance to Advance Energy Equity

These days, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission can no longer be described as a technocratic, under-the-radar agency that sets policies on energy infrastructure and market rules, rates, and standards. As energy policy has become front-page news, FERC has begun updating its regulations to meet new exigencies. The agency has taken big steps to support affordability and a transition to cleaner energy, including proposing updates to the way it permits natural gas pipelines and beginning to overhaul how regions plan and pay for the expansion of electricity transmission infrastructure. These moves have provoked controversy because their stakes are high: Billions of dollars of infrastructure expenditures are on the table. What gets built, who pays, who hosts this infrastructure, and who makes those decisions also have major implications for equity and racial justice.

Katrina Fischer Kuh, Rebecca Bratspies | June 28, 2022

New Yorkers’ Environmental Rights Are Under Attack

In November 2021, over 70% of New Yorkers voted to amend the state's constitution to explicitly protect New Yorkers' fundamental right to clean air, clean water, and a healthful environment. New York thus joins Montana and Pennsylvania in enshrining robust constitutional environmental rights in the state constitution. Unsurprisingly, corporate defendants argue that the new right doesn't change anything.

Daniel Farber | June 27, 2022

Two FERC Cases and Why They Matter

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has been called the most important environmental agency that no one has heard of. Recently, the D.C. Circuit decided two undramatic FERC cases that illustrate the agency's environmental significance. One involved a bailout to coal and nuclear plants, the other involved water quality.

Michael C. Duff | June 23, 2022

Justices Overturn Washington Workers’ Compensation Law on a Strict Reading of Intergovernmental Immunity

The Supreme Court on Tuesday unanimously struck down a Washington state law that was aimed at helping federal contract employees get workers' compensation for diseases arising from cleaning up nuclear waste. The case, United States v. Washington, concerned the federally controlled Hanford nuclear reservation, a decommissioned facility that spans 586 square miles near the Columbia River. The reservation, formerly used by the federal government in the production of nuclear weapons, presents unique hazards to cleanup workers.

James Goodwin | June 23, 2022

Member Scholar Buzbee Leads Congressional Amicus in Crucial Supreme Court Clean Water Act Case

Any high school student can tell you that water follows the path of least resistance. A similar rule might be said to apply to corporate polluters and small government ideologues who now see the federal judiciary -- especially a U.S. Supreme Court stocked with Trump-era judicial activists -- as the path of least resistance in pursuing their agenda of the "deconstruction of the administrative state." The first case they have teed up for the October session of oral arguments is Sackett v. EPA, which the Court could use to gut the Clean Water Act.