California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed six bills Friday that completed his enactment of a broad-ranging 40-bill collection of energy and environmental measures passed this legislative session, which he said established the state as a world leader in climate action.
The bills Newsom signed in an event with lawmakers included Assembly Bill 1279, codifying the state’s goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2045 and setting an 85% emissions reduction target. Another measure, Senate Bill 1020, established state goals of using 90% carbon-free electricity by 2035 and 95% by 2040 — steps on the way to supplying retail customers with 100% clean energy by 2045, as required by 2018’s Senate Bill 100.
Two bills, SB 905 and SB 1314, aim to advance carbon capture and sequestration as viable means of reducing greenhouse gasses, while AB 1757 tasks the state’s Natural Resources Agency with establishing ambitious carbon sequestration targets for “natural and working lands.”
Newsom asked lawmakers to introduce the six bills — part of his California Climate Commitment — toward the end of the 2021/22 legislative session in August. Democratic lawmakers cooperated and quickly passed the measures, including a bill to keep the state’s last nuclear plant operating at least five years beyond its planned retirement.
Newsom thanked lawmakers and touted such efforts as an engine of economic progress in a state that ranks as the world’s fifth largest economy with a gross domestic product last year of roughly $3.4 trillion, not far behind Germany.
“We often talk about electricity and electric power,” he said. “It’s not about electric power; it’s about economic power. Electricity is the architecture to transform and decarbonize … our economy. It allows us to leapfrog in low-carbon green growth. It allows us to dominate in the next big industry.”
The 40 new laws Newsom has signed will produce 4 million jobs and $23 billion in taxpayer savings while reducing air pollution by 60% and fossil fuel use in transportation and buildings by 92%, the governor’s office estimated. Overall, the state has directed nearly $54 billion toward fighting climate change and promoting a green energy economy in the coming decades.
The governor’s office issued a news release with a full list of climate-related measures he signed this past legislative season, half of them recently. Information on all the measures can be found at the state’s legislative website.