
Anyone who has paid a California electric bill lately knows how bad things have gotten. Costs are soaring, the grid is strained, and policymakers in Sacramento seem more focused on courtroom sound bites than keeping the lights on. [some emphasis, links added]
To that end, California’s latest climate lawsuit against American energy producers may grab headlines, but it will not lower emissions, modernize infrastructure, or make life more affordable for families already struggling to keep up.
Attorney General Rob Bonta’s 2023 lawsuit accuses energy producers of misleading the public about climate change.
But it conveniently ignores the fact that California’s energy policies have long relied on traditional fuels to fund state programs and meet consumer demand, even as leaders claimed to be phasing them out.
In fact, California’s Public Resources Code even explicitly directs state supervisors to “encourage the wise development of oil and gas resources to best meet oil and gas needs in this state.”
Yet instead of addressing these deep credibility issues and admitting the failures of their unrealistic green energy proposals, state officials now want the courts to rewrite history and send the bill to energy consumers.
The problems California faces are not due to a lack of ambition, but execution. California has set some of the most aggressive climate targets in the world, but the infrastructure needed to reach them is years behind schedule.
Transmission upgrades, renewable-energy projects, and grid storage remain mired in permitting delays and bureaucratic review.
Each new regulation or lawsuit adds yet another layer of uncertainty for investors and developers, driving up costs and pushing projects elsewhere.
Meanwhile, residents of the Golden State are paying the price.
California families face electricity rates nearly double the national average and some of the highest gasoline prices in the country. For low- and middle-income households, these monthly realities make it harder to live, work, and commute.
Suing American energy producers does nothing to solve these problems. If anything, it risks making them worse by discouraging investment in the systems that keep California running.
If our leaders truly wanted to bring relief to California families while working toward their climate targets, they would start by reforming the permitting and funding structures that delay new energy projects for years.
They would invest in grid modernization, advanced storage, and cleaner domestic production of oil and natural gas rather than depending on more carbon-intensive imported fuels and foreign supply chains.
They would also empower local communities to shape their own energy priorities instead of dictating one-size-fits-all mandates from Sacramento.
Read rest at California Globe
















