For more than a decade, California has won high praise from environmentalists for its stringent greenhouse gas restrictions.
But a new report shows that despite the enormous costs of this effort, the state is doing a worse job at cutting CO2 emissions than the rest of the country, while badly hurting its working families.
Back in 2007, California became the first state to cap CO2 emissions when then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed AB32, which mandated the state cut greenhouse gas emissions back to 1990 levels by 2020. Schwarzenegger called it “a bold new era of environmental protection.”
Not to be outdone, Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill last year requiring the state to cut emissions 40% below 1990 levels by 2030.
So, what happened? From 2007 to 2015, California managed to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 9%.
But the rest of the country cut them by more than 10%, according to a new report from the Center for Demographics and Policy at Chapman University in Orange, California.
On a per capita basis, 41 states outperformed California on CO2 cuts over those same years.
Here’s another way to look at it. Ohio, Georgia, Indiana, and Pennsylvania have about the same combined population as California.
But these states saw emission reductions five times as great as California. (To be fair, California started from a lower base.)
Even that is exaggerating California’s achievement. The study notes that because the state has become so inhospitable to manufacturing and energy production, it now imports more energy than any other state in the nation and relies heavily on imported goods.
In fact, California imports 66% of its crude oil, 91% of its natural gas, and 88% of the ethanol is uses from other states and countries. California alone accounts for almost a quarter of U.S. oil imports from the Persian Gulf and from Saudi Arabia.
Meanwhile, in 2015, it imported about $408 billion in products from other nations or 16% of the state’s GDP.
In other words, California is exporting its energy production and manufacturing base to other, more carbon-intensive states and countries, while patting itself on the back for its own CO2 reductions.
Even if California were able to meet its ambitious CO2 cuts, it would have no impact on global temperatures — assuming the climate scientists are right in their predictions — because the state represents a tiny portion of global CO2 emissions.
And what have Californians received in return for their state’s “bold” effort? As the report notes, these environmentalist policies have “significantly distorted the California economy.” And not in a good way.
Outside Silicon Valley, this unilateral effort to cut CO2 emissions is hampering the states’ economy, eliminating opportunities for working families, and increasing poverty.
Housing and energy prices are climbing faster than the national average. Wages for Latinos, African Americans and the less educated have stagnated.
“In summary,” the report says, “the imposition by the state’s Democratic Party leaders of highly regressive climate schemes have engendered disparate financial hardships on middle and lower income workers and minority communities while providing direct economic subsidies to wealthier Californians in environmentalist strongholds like Marin County.”
“This represents a significant departure from more traditional Democratic Party values.”
No kidding.
This is the problem with environmentalist mandates generally. They make rich coastal elites feel better about themselves, do little to improve the environment, and load all the costs and burdens on the backs of those who can least afford it.
Tell us again which political party is the one that cares about working families?
Read more at IBD
There is a lot common between California and the nations of the European Union. Consider the impact of California’s climate change policies on low income citizens. Now consider the 330,000 homes in Germany that had their power cut off because they couldn’t pay the bills inflated by green energy. There is also the thousands of elderly in the UK who have died early from disease because they can’t afford to adequately heat their homes due to the impact of green energy.
The article talks about industry and energy production moving out of state. I have read articles written in Europe complaining that much of the emission reduction was just moving it, and the associated jobs, to other places like China.
California’s emission reductions were less than most other states despite reduction policies that harm families. Germany’s emission reductions were less than the United States.
Both California and Germany have impossible emission reduction goals.
Here we have repeatable results from similar climate change policies. As these policies are implemented else where, we can expect the same.
Thank God I left California in 1982.
No what’s worth less than useless is the dip shit in the picture . Pretending to set the earths thermostat while running California over a financial cliff . Can a move to Texas be far of before the people with pitch forks come looking for justice ?
The State of Insanity in California look at what the Eco-Nazis/Watermelons have done to the state and the Gullible voters to voted twice for Moonbeam