Thus far, California’s landmark law to cut greenhouse gases from its factories and businesses—a law that has given Gov. Schwarzenegger an international image of environmental activist—has been mostly talk and little action.
Rules covering perhaps 60 percent of the
reductions needed to meet the targets are already in
place or soon will be, the result of other laws,
covering such things as renewable energy standards,
energy efficiency, clean-car rules, low-carbon fuel
standards and others. One key component, to cut
greenhouse gases from car tailpipes, is stalled pending
a federal waiver, although that permission is all but
certain after President Bush leaves office, experts say.
But at the end of next month, the state Air
Resources Board will release its draft plan on putting
key provisions of the law, AB32 which Schwarzenegger
signed in 2006, into effect. The law is supposed to
reduce greenhouse gas emission to 1990 levels by 2020.
The report will kick off months of hearings leading up
to a final approval in October. The provisions take
effect in January—and then begins the drafting of
regulations.
“The scoping plan will lay out the policy
framework of how we’re going to achieve the reductions.
It will lay out a core set of regulatory measures that
account for about 60 percent (of the reductions),” said
ARB spokesman Stanley Young.
But it is the other 40 percent that are drawing
exceptionally close scrutiny from environmentalists and
business interests. That’s because the debate over
meeting the 40 percent portion focuses on options over
emission enforcement, market systems, including
auctions; pay-to-pollute fees, environmental justice and
offsets, which allow companies to pollute if they do
other things to help the environment. These are
pocketbook issues.
“The big question is, where do you get that 40
percent of the emissions? The core measures are mostly
in effect, but not all of them,” said the Sierra Club’s
Bill Magavern. “So they (the ARB) are going to be
looking at a mix of performance standards, incentives
and so-called market-based compliance.”
The options reflect questions posed by the ARB:
Should the state have a classic regulatory scheme over
carbon emissions, the “ pure” or “command and control”
regulations? Should there be across-the-board fees?
Should emission credits be auctioned off? Should
California join a western regional emissions
marketplace?
The ARB also is a considering a cap-and-trade
system proposed by the state Public Utilities Commission
and PUC President Michael Peevey—a proposal that has
drawn mixed reviews within the ARB. “That’s a drama
that’s going on behind the scenes there,” a Capitol
source said.
Schwarzenegger wants some form of market
structure in which emission credits can be sold, traded
or auctioned, and an ARB advisory board—Schwarzeengger
created the board by executive order a month after AB32
was approved. That panel, as expected, recommended that
a market system be adopted. That is understood to mean a
“cap-and-trade” system in which overall limits are
imposed on emissions but companies are allowed to trade
credits that allow them to operate.
The idea is that emissions can be reduced by
competition within the private marketplace.
“The devil is in the details, the specifics are
what will make the program,” said Amisha Patel, a policy
advocate with the California Chamber of Commerce. “We
would like to see a basket of options, and from our
perspective that basket should include cap-and-trade and
offsets.”
Environmentalists, who don’t acknowledge the need
for any market-based program at all, are leary of
allowing emitters to barter credits. They also don’t
like offsets. “We are very skeptical of the use of
offsets and would like to see them limited very
strictly. We would certainly limit them”
Business and industry like them, however. “I
think offsets will be significant. From our standpoint,
we think offsets will be a very important tool,” Patel
said.
A glimpse of a system in which fees are used to
enforce emission compliance came last week from Bay Area
Air Quality Management District, which voted 15-1 to
impose fees on companies that emit carbon emissions –
4.4 cents per ton, beginning on July 1. The fee will
generate about $1.1 million annually; the biggest
emitters will pay about $50,000 annually, experts said.
It is the first time in the nation that such a fee has
been imposed.
The fee will not supplant fees, if any, that the
ARB decides should be imposed statewide, said Jerry
Hill, chairman of the air quality board and a member of
the ARB.
“There is a difference here. What the Bay Area
board did was to establish a very minimal fee for
already-regulated industries and businesses on their
carbon emissions. The fee will be used for
supporting climate- change and climate-protection
programs. The ARB’s mandate is actually regulating and
reducing carbon emissions,” he said.
The San Francisco-area fee, he added, will be
folded into the structure that the ARB ultimately
chooses.
Ultimately whatever the ARB decides is likely to
be a mix of options, as the high-profile board balances
policy and politics.
“It is my expectation that there
will be a hybrid. There will be a market mechanism,
there will be a little bit of “command and control.”
There will be a blending of both,” Patel said.


