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CALIFORNIA’S CLIMATE ACTION: TRY EVERYTHING POSSIBLE ASHLEY CONRAD-SAYDAH DEPUTY SECRETARY FOR CLIMATE POLICY CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY.

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Presentation on theme: "CALIFORNIA’S CLIMATE ACTION: TRY EVERYTHING POSSIBLE ASHLEY CONRAD-SAYDAH DEPUTY SECRETARY FOR CLIMATE POLICY CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY."— Presentation transcript:

1 CALIFORNIA’S CLIMATE ACTION: TRY EVERYTHING POSSIBLE ASHLEY CONRAD-SAYDAH DEPUTY SECRETARY FOR CLIMATE POLICY CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY MAY 21, 2015

2 CALIFORNIA’S CHANGING CLIMATE Indicators of Climate Change, oehha.ca.gov 2

3 CLIMATE CHANGE SHORTHAND AB 32 – CA’s Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 Cap and Trade – one of the complementary policies employed by CA to meet climate goals GGRF – Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund – the home for auction proceeds & funding source for existing & innovative climate mitigation programs RPS, LCFS, SLCPs – Renewable Portfolio Standard, Low Carbon Fuel Standard, Short-lived Climate Pollutants – current and future policy mechanisms to decrease greenhouse gas emissions in state Co-benefits – benefits that accompany GGRF expenditures that complement emissions reductions 3

4 Achieve 1990 emissions level by 2020 Continue greenhouse gas reductions beyond 2020 Adopt GHG emission reporting regulation Adopt discrete early action measures Develop Scoping Plan and update it every five years Authority to adopt schedule of fees AB 32 4

5 Agriculture Electricity Water Transportation Refrigerants Industry Waste SOURCES OF GREENHOUSE GASES (GHG) 5

6 CAP AND TRADE GOALS Reduce statewide GHG emissions Cap and Trade covers 85% of California economy Balance environmental stringency and costs Price emissions; Utilize carbon offset credits Spur innovation to create a low-carbon economy Complement other air quality and GHG programs within AB 32 and other agencies Maintain a flexible mechanism with a strict cap Work with other jurisdictions, either through formalized information sharing (e.g. China) or linkage (e.g. Quebec) 6

7 Early Action Results: Pre-cap progress Expect more progress under the cap (pending) 7

8 CLIMATE ACTION: GGRF 8

9 9 http://www.ebudget.ca.gov/2015- 16/pdf/Revised/BudgetSummary/Capan dTradeExpenditurePlan.pdf REVISED 15-16 BUDGET

10 SENATE BILL 535 (DE LEÓN, 2012) At least 25 percent of Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund moneys shall be allocated to projects that benefit disadvantaged communities. At least 10 percent of these moneys shall be allocated to projects located in disadvantaged communities. CalEPA shall identify disadvantaged communities “based on geographic, socioeconomic, public health and environmental hazard criteria.” CalEnviroScreen used to assess census tracts: top 25 percent designated CA as disadvantaged (http://oehha.ca.gov/ej/ces2.html)http://oehha.ca.gov/ej/ces2.html 10

11 11 http://oehha.maps. arcgis.com/apps/Vi ewer/index.html?ap pid=dae2fb1e42674 c12a04a2b302a0805 98

12 NEW ORDERS 12 GOVERNOR BROWN ESTABLISHES MOST AMBITIOUS GREENHOUSE GAS REDUCTION TARGET IN NORTH AMERICA New California Goal Aims to Reduce Emissions 40 Percent Below 1990 Levels by 2030 Princeton University Professor Michael Oppenheimer: "Governor Brown's ground-breaking commitment not only shows that solving the climate problem goes hand-in-hand with economic growth and technology leadership, but points the way toward a climate solution for other states and the world." State of the State/Inaugural Address 2015 Executive Order B-30-15

13 PROGRESS 2030 and 2050 goals: Executive Orders Coordinated state, regional, local approach Progress at sub-national and national level National targets Sub-national agreements, Under2 MOU Federal action on existing and new power plants (111b and 111d) Iterative reductions result in cumulative, worldwide benefits 13

14 THANK YOU! Questions? Ashley Conrad-Saydah Ashley.Conrad-Saydah@calepa.ca.gov 14


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