NEWS California can do better than carbon neutrality by 2045

Opin­ion piece in the Los Ange­les Times, May 17, 2022

To jump to the news­pa­per, click here.

 

      California can do better than carbon neutrality by 2045

DANIEL KAMMEN

Ten years ago, many Cal­i­for­ni­ans could not have imag­ined the cli­mate night­mare we are liv­ing today — dark orange skies dur­ing wild­fire sea­son, heat waves in the dead of win­ter, manda­to­ry water restric­tions amid crip­pling drought.

With­out urgent action, we may well look back on this moment as the calm before the storm. Over the course of the next decade, California’s biggest cli­mate chal­lenges — hot­ter sum­mers, a short­er rainy sea­son and more destruc­tive wild­fires — could dou­ble in intensity.

It’s against this back­drop that the Cal­i­for­nia Air Resources Board (CARB) last week released a draft of our state’s scop­ing plan, a blue­print for com­bat­ing cli­mate change that will guide California’s pol­i­cy for years. Despite the stakes for Cal­i­for­ni­ans, and although my research indi­cates the state could actu­al­ly become car­bon neg­a­tive by 2030, the draft pro­pos­al would delay reach­ing car­bon neu­tral until 2045. The bar­ri­ers to a tar­get of 2030 are polit­i­cal, not technical.

The draft plan calls for invest­ment in new fos­sil fuel elec­tric­i­ty resources, and it relies on unproven and cost­ly car­bon cap­ture tech­nolo­gies that would lock in fos­sil fuel pol­lu­tion. Adopt­ing this approach would be lazy, non­sen­si­cal and racial­ly unjust. Dur­ing the cur­rent 45-day peri­od for pub­lic review of the plan, Cal­i­for­nia has the chance to choose a smarter path.

An aerial view of wetlands next to a power station

The Hunt­ing­ton Beach Gen­er­at­ing Sta­tion includes a nat­ur­al gas gen­er­a­tor that began oper­a­tion in 2020.

                                                                     (Allen J. Sch­aben /​ Los Ange­les Times)

Renew­able ener­gy, even when cou­pled with ener­gy stor­age, is cheap­er than fos­sil fuels. California’s own state laws say that renew­able ener­gy must be pri­or­i­tized before build­ing out expen­sive and pol­lut­ing gas pow­er plants. Instead, Cal­i­for­nia must set ambi­tious tar­gets that imme­di­ate­ly cut pol­lu­tion through no-regrets strategies.

If we fall short of the cli­mate action that sci­ence demands, Cal­i­for­ni­ans, and espe­cial­ly low­er-income Cal­i­for­ni­ans and com­mu­ni­ties of col­or, will pay the price. What’s more, we could see this failed mod­el repli­cat­ed across oth­er states and nations. It’s not hyper­bole to say bil­lions of peo­ple could be worse off if Cal­i­for­nia fails to lead.

By the same token, if our state sets an ambi­tious but achiev­able goal — like car­bon neu­tral­i­ty by 2030 or 2035 — the ben­e­fits rip­ple wide­ly. Oth­er states and nations are look­ing to Cal­i­for­nia. If we set an ambi­tious tar­get and focus future pol­i­cy toward meet­ing it, oth­ers are more like­ly to adapt as well. Even when cli­mate goals are not reached, they keep poli­cies and invest­ments mov­ing in the right direction.

Last sum­mer, when he direct­ed CARB to exam­ine accel­er­at­ing California’s cli­mate tar­gets to 2035 or soon­er, Gov. Gavin New­som said “sci­ence demands we do more.” Hav­ing just announced a his­toric $32-bil­lion invest­ment in cli­mate pro­grams over the next five years, he must now step in and ensure that reg­u­la­tors live up to his call to increase cli­mate ambi­tion across the board.

To get this plan­ning process back on track, reg­u­la­tors must start by cor­rect­ing the flawed method­ol­o­gy that is the under­pin­ning of their cur­rent pro­pos­al. CARB’s eco­nom­ic and jobs mod­el­ing fails to incor­po­rate both the true cost of delay­ing emis­sions reduc­tions and the full health and soci­etal ben­e­fits from more ambi­tious emis­sions reduc­tions. Put sim­ply, Cal­i­for­nia can cre­ate more jobs and more pros­per­i­ty with renew­ables than we can with fos­sil fuels.

In devel­op­ing the scop­ing plan, CARB staff used a mea­sure called the social cost of car­bon, which puts a dol­lar val­ue on the dam­ages cre­at­ed by addi­tion­al green­house gas emis­sions. The prob­lem is, these esti­mates vast­ly under­es­ti­mat­ed the costs of delay­ing cli­mate action.

If we don’t begin to rapid­ly reduce fos­sil fuel pol­lu­tion, the impacts on California’s health­care sys­tem, our econ­o­my, our food sup­ply and our com­mu­ni­ties will be orders of mag­ni­tude greater than what CARB has account­ed for. Reg­u­la­tors can cor­rect this by align­ing with experts’ lat­est analy­sis, which cal­cu­lates the true social cost of car­bon at $50 per ton of pol­lu­tion emit­ted.

As a next step, reg­u­la­tors need to acknowl­edge it is far too late in the game to gam­ble our state’s future on unproven car­bon cap­ture tech­nolo­gies that may nev­er mate­ri­al­ize. CARB’s draft scop­ing plan projects that Cal­i­for­nia will use 100 mil­lion met­ric tons (MMT) of direct air cap­ture in 2045. Glob­al­ly, only 0.01 MMT of annu­al direct air cap­ture is hap­pen­ing today. It is unre­al­is­tic to assume we can scale up this tech­nol­o­gy so much overnight, and fool­ish to direct invest­ment to unproven exper­i­ments when afford­able nat­ur­al car­bon removal solu­tions like com­post­ing and tree-plant­i­ng are read­i­ly avail­able now.

We have afford­able renew­able ener­gy tech­nolo­gies avail­able today that not only cut car­bon emis­sions but also tack­le our state’s air pol­lu­tion cri­sis. California’s scop­ing plan should mobi­lize a vast expan­sion of renew­able ener­gy tech­nolo­gies. Instead, the cur­rent pro­pos­al calls for 10 gigawatts of new nat­ur­al gas gen­er­at­ing capac­i­ty — the equiv­a­lent of 33 large new gas plants.

There is still time for CARB and New­som to deliv­er a bold cli­mate blue­print that cen­ters equi­ty and pub­lic health and focus­es on a no-regrets approach of renew­able ener­gy invest­ment. It’s California’s lega­cy and lives around the world that are at stake. We can­not afford to fall short.

Daniel Kam­men is a pro­fes­sor of sus­tain­abil­i­ty at UC Berke­ley. He is a for­mer coor­di­nat­ing author of the Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Pan­el on Cli­mate Change (IPCC),  Kam­men in cur­rent­ly serv­ing in the Biden-Har­ris Admin­is­tra­tion as Senior Advi­sor for Ener­gy & Inno­va­tion at the U.S. Agency for Inter­na­tion­al Devel­op­ment (USAID) 

@dan_kammen

Browse News

Main Menu
RAEL Info

Energy & Resources Group
310 Barrows Hall
University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720-3050
Phone: (510) 642-1640
Fax: (510) 642-1085
Email: ergdeskb@berkeley.edu


Projects

  • Open the Main Menu
  • People at RAEL

  • Open the Main Menu