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This is the third post in a three-part series on recent efforts to place justice and equity at the center of California’s climate plans. Read the first  and second  posts.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and champions of environmental justice in the state legislature and advocacy community are cheering the recent passage of a series of new laws that increase the state’s efforts to curb climate change in an equitable and just way. 

The legislative package, signed on September 16, amid a heat wave that broke temperature and energy demand records, comes as regulators are working to finalize the 2022 Scoping Plan that aims to reduce the state’s carbon emissions by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2045. The new laws add ambition to California’s climate goals and add environmental justice protections for communities most impacted by fossil fuel pollution. 

To secure passage, Newsom worked with legislative leaders to advance key climate proposals aimed at protecting communities most affected by fossil fuel pollution and accelerating the statewide transition to clean energy.  

Legislators also approved the governor’s five-year $54 billion climate spending package, with funds for both climate mitigation and adaptation programs. The package includes $6 billion for electric vehicle subsidies; $15 billion for transit, rail, and projects for ports; $8 billion to increase the renewable capacity and reliability of the electric grid; $3 billion for wildfire management; and another $3 billion for water programs in response to the ongoing drought. 

The spending package also includes a provision to extend the life of the Diablo Canyon Power Plant, which provides nearly 10 percent of California’s electricity, by five years to 2030. 

Wave of New Climate Laws

State lawmakers sent a raft of other climate-related laws to the governor’s desk with last minute amendments before the end of the legislative session on August 31. In September, the governor signed more than 30 climate-related bills including legislation that will:

Others require: crude oil refineries to report the details of oil refining activities on a monthly basis to state agencies; California cities to provide instant online access to solar permits; and a state commission to determine whether renewable energy subscription programs benefit ratepayers and establish a program to increase access to clean energy to low-income households and renters. 

The governor’s support gave a final push to key climate bills that influenced regulators to increase the ambition of the state’s climate strategy in the draft scoping plan, and secure basic protections for overburdened communities that environmental justice advocates have long called for. 

Before the September 30 deadline, Newsom signed a total of 997 bills, including new laws ensuring access to reproductive healthcare, advancing transparency for pay-equity, expanding the union rights of fast-food workers and farmworkers, increasing access to lawn placement rebates, and more

The governor also vetoed bills supported by environmental and climate advocates that would have provided free public transit for K-12 and college students and required CA transportation agencies to align funding programs, including federal highway funding, with state climate goals.     

To learn more, read the first  and second  posts in this series, subscribe to our email list, and follow us onTwitter, Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn.