GOV/MIL Newsom calls for California ban on new gas-fueled cars by 2035 with Executive Order

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
I guess someone told him he needed to shore up his link with the "greens" since everythign is moving further left and he's already publicly admitted that a lot of things done by Jerry Brown in the past were wrong.....

Posted for fair use.....

Newsom calls for California ban on new gas-fueled cars by 2035

By COLBY BERMEL
09/23/2020 01:30 PM EDT
Updated 09/23/2020 02:25 PM EDT

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom is calling for California to ban new gasoline-fueled vehicles within 15 years in a bid to combat climate change and make the state the first in the nation to stop sales of cars with internal combustion engines.

The Democratic governor on Wednesday signed an executive order that directs the California Air Resources Board to establish regulations requiring that all new cars and passenger trucks sold in California in 2035 be zero-emission vehicles.

California has long been a leader on fuel economy, forcing automakers to build more efficient vehicles than required by federal standards. The Golden State is the world's fifth-largest economy, with more than half of its emissions stemming from the transportation sector, so the move is expected to significantly help reduce tailpipe pollution from vehicles with internal combustion engines.

The move comes as California experiences historic wildfires that have consumed more than 3.6 million acres this year already. Newsom has repeatedly emphasized the role of climate change in driving the fires, while Republicans have focused on a need to better manage forests in the state.

"We are marking a new course," Newsom said in a press conference in front of electric vehicles at the state fairgrounds in Sacramento. "We are setting a new marker. We're advancing the cause, with the support of the California Air Resources Board, to once again lead not only this nation but in many respects lead the world."

The ban on gas-powered vehicles is likely to face opposition from automakers and Republican leaders in Washington, who have already battled the state over its stricter fuel economy rules. The Trump administration is fighting the state in court over whether it can set stricter emissions standards than the nation as a whole.

California Business Roundtable President Rob Lapsley said in an interview that the "radical step" to ban internal combustion engines "makes no sense" and is a rushed decision, with no guarantee of affordability for many who live in an already-expensive state.

Edison International CEO Pedro Pizarro said that his electric utility wants more to be done on economy-wide electrification, saying that the state's recent approval of Edison's proposed 38,000 charge ports is just a "drop in the bucket" for what's needed to reduce emissions.

While environmentalists embraced his call to ban gas-powered vehicles, some questioned Tuesday why he wasn't doing more to stop fracking.

Newsom announced he was asking state lawmakers to implement a fracking ban by 2024, but stopped well short of directing his own oil and gas regulators to stop approving fracking permits. Environmentalists have increased their criticism of Newsom on fracking in recent days, especially as the governor has emphasized California's role in fighting climate change.

Kassie Siegel, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute, called it "rhetoric rather than real action."

“Newsom can’t claim climate leadership while handing out permits to oil companies to drill and frack," she said in a statement. "He has the power to protect Californians from oil industry pollution, and he needs to use it, not pass the buck.”

Newsom responded Wednesday that he doesn't have that authority, but did not elaborate.

The California Air Resources Board will be tasked with writing the vehicle rules, which the Newsom administration estimates would slash greenhouse gas emissions by 35 percent and nitrogen oxide emissions by 80 percent. Other agencies will be directed to support the development of zero-emission vehicle charging stations, and medium- and heavy-duty trucks will be mandated to be zero-emission by 2045 where feasible.

That goal will be 2035 for trucks conveying ship containers at ports, an important checkpoint because the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports are the busiest in the country.

Residents would still be able to own gas-fueled vehicles and sell them on the used market, but the governor's executive order is sure to give rise to questions surrounding the logistics and equity of the transition from internal combustion engines in car-dependent California. The state would join 15 other countries that are already phasing out gas-fueled vehicles.

CARB Chair Mary Nichols said Wednesday that California wants to phase out hybrid vehicles over the next 15 years and have Californians purchase fully electric cars.

"We're not taking anything away," Newsom said, emphasizing that used gas vehicles can still be sold in California after 2035. "We're providing an abundance of new choices and new technology."

California last year reached a vehicle emissions agreement with five automakers, a response to the Trump administration's rollback of tailpipe standards, splitting manufacturers between those aligned with the Golden State and the White House. Newsom's move Wednesday could shake up the auto market once again, but some companies have already signaled a desire to transition more toward zero-emission.

Newsom directed agencies to develop a zero-emission vehicle market development strategy by the end of January and update it every three years. He also asked them to accelerate existing efforts on charge ports.

The governor's order also called for agencies to craft "an integrated, statewide rail and transit network," a pronouncement that came over a year after Newsom shrunk the scope of the state's high speed rail project. He also outlined plans to support more bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure, especially in low-income and disadvantaged communities.

While Newsom did not order an end to fracking permits, he asked agencies to accelerate their existing work on repurposing extraction facilities during the climate transition, with a report on necessary changes due in July 2021. That month will also see another report on what it will take to "manage and expedite" the closure and cleanup of old wells.

He directed the California Geologic Energy Management Division to "strictly enforce" operators' insurance requirements known as bonding tied to their facilities, in addition to proposing by the end of 2020 a rule that "protects communities and workers from the impacts of oil extraction activities."

And CARB will strategize on how to reduce the intensity of fossil fuels beyond 2020, which Newsom emphasized will include "consideration of the full life cycle of carbon" — suggesting that carbon capture and sequestration will see greater deployment throughout the state.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

California moves to end sales of new gas-powered cars


785 Shares


AP

Updated: 12:21 PM PDT Sep 23, 2020


SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
California will halt sales of new gasoline-powered passenger cars and trucks by 2035, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Wednesday, a move he says will cut greenhouse gas emissions by 35% in the nation’s most populous state.

The proposed rule would not ban people from owning gas-powered cars or selling them on the used car market. But it would end the sales of all new gasoline-powered passenger cars and trucks in the state of nearly 40 million people.

“Pull away from the gas pumps,” Newsom said. “Let us no longer be victims of geopolitical dictators that manipulate global supply chains and global markets.”

California and the roughly dozen states that follow its lead on auto emissions standards make up a significant part of the U.S. auto market, giving the day’s move huge potential impact for the U.S. automobile industry as well as for long-term efforts against pollution and climate change, which is driven by fossil-fuel emissions. It also is likely to meet opposition from President Donald Trump, who wants to roll back tougher Obama-era auto emissions standards and is battling California to force it to comply.

California already has rules mandating a certain percentage of new car sales must be electric or zero-emission vehicles. This rule, if implemented, would make California the first U.S. state with a plan to phase them out completely.

At least 15 other countries have already made similar commitments, including Germany, France and Norway.

Newsom’s order directs the California Air Resources Board to develop and approve regulations to meet the 2035 deadline. He also ordered them to make a rule requiring all medium and heavy-duty trucks be 100% zero-emission vehicles by 2045 “where feasible.”

Newsom also directed state agencies to speed up development of charging stations across the state and called on the Legislature to eliminate new fracking licenses by 2024.

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Fracking is a technique that allows energy companies to extract huge volumes of oil and gas from shale rock deep underground. It involves injecting high-pressure mixtures of water, sand or gravel and chemicals into rock. Fracking opponents say the chemicals involved threaten water supplies and public health.

Kassie Siegel, director of the Center for Biological Diversity's Climate Law Institute, called Newsom's order “a big step” but said it “provided rhetoric rather than real action on the other critical half of the climate problem - California's dirty oil production.”

“Newsom can't claim climate leadership while handing out permits to oil companies to drill and frack,” she said. “He has the power to protect Californians from oil industry pollution, and he needs to use it, not pass the buck.”

California has a goal of relying 100% on clean, renewable energy by 2045. Gasoline and diesel-powered cars and trucks are the biggest impediment to reaching that goal as they account for more than half of the state's carbon pollution.

The order comes as massive wildfires have burned a record 5,600 square miles (14,500 square kilometers) in California this year. Experts say the size and intensity of the fires are aided by warmer temperatures and years of drought brought on by climate change.
 

Grouchy Granny

Deceased
This is pretty much WTF? Your whole problem with fires is lack of forest maintenance.... And the fact you're over run with tree huggers..... Not Climate Change idiot.

And, given the unreliability of your grid system, you're going to force people to electric vehicles? Again, WTF?
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
This is pretty much WTF? Your whole problem with fires is lack of forest maintenance.... And the fact you're over run with tree huggers..... Not Climate Change idiot.

And, given the unreliability of your grid system, you're going to force people to electric vehicles? Again, WTF?

Exactly......
 

To-late

Membership Revoked
"We're not taking anything away," Newsom said, emphasizing that used gas vehicles can still be sold in California after 2035. "We're providing an abundance of new choices and new technology.""

Yeah he said the same thing about guns too.
Basically he said, You can still have guns. As long as we approve them. Single shot anyone?
Oh yeah, you dont have ammo. So sorry.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
"We're not taking anything away," Newsom said, emphasizing that used gas vehicles can still be sold in California after 2035. "We're providing an abundance of new choices and new technology.""

Yeah he said the same thing about guns too.
Basically he said, You can still have guns. As long as we approve them. Single shot anyone?
Oh yeah, you dont have ammo. So sorry.

Yup.
 

Josie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
If it's an executive order, can't the next sane governor of Cali just overturn it?
 

Hawkgirl_70

Veteran Member
Honestly, 2035? Not in the least worried about this.
I DONT think our existing country and maybe even most of us will be around in 2035.
There’s a storm coming in.... and I believe Civil War II is fast approaching.
 

MetalMan

Veteran Member
The electric cars don't have the range to get you out of California and even if you do there is no refueling pods.

Lockdown complete. New York, Why didn't we think of that?
 

MountainBiker

Veteran Member
The state probably will not let anyone register a new gas powered car after this date.
I wonder what they would do with people moving into the State who have 2035 or newer gas powered vehicles bought wherever they used to live?

My issue with electric vehicles is the incredibly short range they have. That might not be a big deal for city folks that don't drive much but I'm thinking of my 850 mile drives to my daughter's home. My truck has a 36 gallon tank and I only need to stop once for gas on the way, and of course filling the tank only takes a few minutes. If I have to find a recharging station every 150 - 200 miles and it takes hours to recharge, doing the trip would be untenable.
 
I wonder what they would do with people moving into the State who have 2035 or newer gas powered vehicles bought wherever they used to live?

My issue with electric vehicles is the incredibly short range they have. That might not be a big deal for city folks that don't drive much but I'm thinking of my 850 mile drives to my daughter's home. My truck has a 36 gallon tank and I only need to stop once for gas on the way, and of course filling the tank only takes a few minutes. If I have to find a recharging station every 150 - 200 miles and it takes hours to recharge, doing the trip would be untenable.
Some Teslas supposedly can swap batteries in a couple of minutes.
 

Esto Perpetua

Veteran Member
The electric cars don't have the range to get you out of California and even if you do there is no refueling pods.

Lockdown complete. New York, Why didn't we think of that?
Thats what I was thinking. This move to ban combustion engines IMO is really about limiting our mobility. They are trying to keep us in one place and enslave us even further. The soft tyranny we've endured for decades is getting harder and harder.
 

ghost

Veteran Member
I guess someone told him he needed to shore up his link with the "greens" since everythign is moving further left and he's already publicly admitted that a lot of things done by Jerry Brown in the past were wrong.....

Posted for fair use.....

Newsom calls for California ban on new gas-fueled cars by 2035

By COLBY BERMEL
09/23/2020 01:30 PM EDT
Updated 09/23/2020 02:25 PM EDT

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom is calling for California to ban new gasoline-fueled vehicles within 15 years in a bid to combat climate change and make the state the first in the nation to stop sales of cars with internal combustion engines.

The Democratic governor on Wednesday signed an executive order that directs the California Air Resources Board to establish regulations requiring that all new cars and passenger trucks sold in California in 2035 be zero-emission vehicles.

California has long been a leader on fuel economy, forcing automakers to build more efficient vehicles than required by federal standards. The Golden State is the world's fifth-largest economy, with more than half of its emissions stemming from the transportation sector, so the move is expected to significantly help reduce tailpipe pollution from vehicles with internal combustion engines.

The move comes as California experiences historic wildfires that have consumed more than 3.6 million acres this year already. Newsom has repeatedly emphasized the role of climate change in driving the fires, while Republicans have focused on a need to better manage forests in the state.

"We are marking a new course," Newsom said in a press conference in front of electric vehicles at the state fairgrounds in Sacramento. "We are setting a new marker. We're advancing the cause, with the support of the California Air Resources Board, to once again lead not only this nation but in many respects lead the world."

The ban on gas-powered vehicles is likely to face opposition from automakers and Republican leaders in Washington, who have already battled the state over its stricter fuel economy rules. The Trump administration is fighting the state in court over whether it can set stricter emissions standards than the nation as a whole.

California Business Roundtable President Rob Lapsley said in an interview that the "radical step" to ban internal combustion engines "makes no sense" and is a rushed decision, with no guarantee of affordability for many who live in an already-expensive state.

Edison International CEO Pedro Pizarro said that his electric utility wants more to be done on economy-wide electrification, saying that the state's recent approval of Edison's proposed 38,000 charge ports is just a "drop in the bucket" for what's needed to reduce emissions.

While environmentalists embraced his call to ban gas-powered vehicles, some questioned Tuesday why he wasn't doing more to stop fracking.

Newsom announced he was asking state lawmakers to implement a fracking ban by 2024, but stopped well short of directing his own oil and gas regulators to stop approving fracking permits. Environmentalists have increased their criticism of Newsom on fracking in recent days, especially as the governor has emphasized California's role in fighting climate change.

Kassie Siegel, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute, called it "rhetoric rather than real action."

“Newsom can’t claim climate leadership while handing out permits to oil companies to drill and frack," she said in a statement. "He has the power to protect Californians from oil industry pollution, and he needs to use it, not pass the buck.”

Newsom responded Wednesday that he doesn't have that authority, but did not elaborate.

The California Air Resources Board will be tasked with writing the vehicle rules, which the Newsom administration estimates would slash greenhouse gas emissions by 35 percent and nitrogen oxide emissions by 80 percent. Other agencies will be directed to support the development of zero-emission vehicle charging stations, and medium- and heavy-duty trucks will be mandated to be zero-emission by 2045 where feasible.

That goal will be 2035 for trucks conveying ship containers at ports, an important checkpoint because the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports are the busiest in the country.

Residents would still be able to own gas-fueled vehicles and sell them on the used market, but the governor's executive order is sure to give rise to questions surrounding the logistics and equity of the transition from internal combustion engines in car-dependent California. The state would join 15 other countries that are already phasing out gas-fueled vehicles.

CARB Chair Mary Nichols said Wednesday that California wants to phase out hybrid vehicles over the next 15 years and have Californians purchase fully electric cars.

"We're not taking anything away," Newsom said, emphasizing that used gas vehicles can still be sold in California after 2035. "We're providing an abundance of new choices and new technology."

California last year reached a vehicle emissions agreement with five automakers, a response to the Trump administration's rollback of tailpipe standards, splitting manufacturers between those aligned with the Golden State and the White House. Newsom's move Wednesday could shake up the auto market once again, but some companies have already signaled a desire to transition more toward zero-emission.

Newsom directed agencies to develop a zero-emission vehicle market development strategy by the end of January and update it every three years. He also asked them to accelerate existing efforts on charge ports.

The governor's order also called for agencies to craft "an integrated, statewide rail and transit network," a pronouncement that came over a year after Newsom shrunk the scope of the state's high speed rail project. He also outlined plans to support more bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure, especially in low-income and disadvantaged communities.

While Newsom did not order an end to fracking permits, he asked agencies to accelerate their existing work on repurposing extraction facilities during the climate transition, with a report on necessary changes due in July 2021. That month will also see another report on what it will take to "manage and expedite" the closure and cleanup of old wells.

He directed the California Geologic Energy Management Division to "strictly enforce" operators' insurance requirements known as bonding tied to their facilities, in addition to proposing by the end of 2020 a rule that "protects communities and workers from the impacts of oil extraction activities."

And CARB will strategize on how to reduce the intensity of fossil fuels beyond 2020, which Newsom emphasized will include "consideration of the full life cycle of carbon" — suggesting that carbon capture and sequestration will see greater deployment throughout the state.

This article tagged under:
What will Gov. Gavin Newsom be driving, a golf cart, ( Putt, Putt )
 

jward

passin' thru
Hmm. Been a bit of push back against Nancy lately
Hopefully it will continue, with a brush so broad he gets his fair share too.
 
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