California regulators approve plan to slash emissions 85% by 2045

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Petroleum usage would have to come down by 90 per cent.

Petroleum usage would have to come down by 90 per cent.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LOS ANGELES - Californian regulators voted on Thursday to approve a plan to reduce the state’s carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions by 85 per cent by 2045, reaching carbon neutrality then, including by cutting petroleum usage to one-tenth of the current level.

California’s environmental policies have

led to drastic shifts away from petroleum fuels

as state regulators have sought to improve public health and reduce environmental impacts of fossil fuel production. The state has also angered its fuelmakers, which argue its policies hurt fuel consumers.

Policy updates approved on Thursday were in the 2022 edition of a document called the Scoping Plan, which is revised every five years.

To achieve the 85 per cent reduction in emissions, it requires the state to consider electrifying much of its energy usage, installing millions of heat pumps and deploying technology for carbon capture, utilisation and sequestration, among other things.

Petroleum usage would have to come down by 90 per cent, it said.

The regulator, the California Air Resources Board (CARB), said in the document that the plan would create 4 million jobs and allow the state to avoid US$200 billion (S$271 billion) in pollution-related health expenditure.

The plan was needed to deal with the climate crisis that had manifested in the form of wildfires, drought and collapsing coastlines, it added.

“This plan doesn’t exist in a vacuum – its successes will really rely on implementation and rulemaking,” said CARB member Diane Takvorian ahead of the vote.

Many California residents and lobbyists from oil and transportation companies said in public comments on Thursday that they welcomed the changes in the plan. Some argued that the proposed policies were imperfect, however.

These included what critics said was over-reliance on nascent carbon-capture technology, slow permitting processes, reliance on bioenergy, and a structure for a market in credits that assigned high value to methane captured from cow manure and therefore promoted factory farming.

In January, California legislators are set to take up a proposal that would penalise refiners’ excess profits.

CARB will continue evaluating how refiners can continue to operate to export fuel, said CARB spokesman Dave Cleghern.

Since 1990, a total of 13 Californian refineries with a combined capacity of 3 million barrels per day (bpd) have closed. Current refining capacity in California is 1.7 million bpd.

The loss of more refining capacity could come in this decade, said David Hackett, chairman of the board of Stillwater Associates, a California energy consultancy. REUTERS

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