California Poised to Lead Trillion Dollar Clean Energy Market
Earlier this week, the San Jose Mercury News ran an editorial with the headline “Repealing AB 32 Would Be a Disaster for California.”
AB 32 is California’s groundbreaking global warming and clean energy law, and repealing the law is exactly what a cadre of polluters and opportunistic politicians are trying to do. And what a disaster it would be.
California has long been the cradle of innovation, a place where the best ideas take shape and where cutting-edge solutions to our most vexing problems are unleashed. Our state is also where people go to build a better future for themselves and their children, to find a world-class quality of life and a healthy environment where they can prosper.
That’s why AB 32 is a quintessentially “California” idea, a ‘triple win’ policy that is putting California at the forefront of the largest economic opportunity of the 21st century estimated to be valued at $2.3 trillion globally. Here's how:
- The first win is economic: thousands of new jobs will be created by clean energy companies and millions of dollars will be saved by using less energy and more efficient technologies.
- The second win is on national security: California’s push for cleaner, homegrown fuels will help catalyze our domestic energy market and reduce dependence on Middle Eastern oil.
- The third win is environmental: a cleaner, healthier environment and a transition to sustainable sources of energy, such as sun and wind, that don’t pollute or run out.
Despite this ‘triple win,’ AB 32 is under attack by, not surprisingly, the oil industry.
Case in point: two oil companies, Valero Energy Corp. and Tesoro Corp. are funding a California ballot initiative sponsored by Assemblyman Dan Logue (R-Marysville) to delay AB 32 until the state's unemployment rate–currently at 12%–is below 5.5% for four consecutive quarters. This has happened just three times in the last 30 years. They are using discredited economic reports to make their case to the public.
These out-of-state special interests want to get off Scott-free and continue to pollute our environment–for which we are all paying a price—rather than joining California's burgeoning clean energy economy that will grow jobs and protect our health.
So, it's special interests against public interests. A majority of Americans believe that climate change is happening and want government to fight it. A recent poll by Frank Luntz found that American people are eager for Congress to act on climate legislation that would promote energy independence and a healthier environment. In the Golden State, 66% of Californians support AB 32.
And those who favor a clean energy economy are a geographically and demographically diverse group of business leaders, scientists, health experts, economists, community and religious leaders and environmental groups.
California's climate policies over the last 35 years have saved consumers billions of dollars and put thousands of people to work. The state has also been able to attract the majority of venture capital investments made in the U.S., and we are home to five of the top clean tech cities in the country with more green jobs than any other state, by far
Related Articles:
- Janney Montgomery Scott Reiterates Clean Energy Fuels (CLNE) Buy Rating, Stock Soars To All Time High
- Clean Energy Fuels (CLNE) Surprises With Another Profitable Quarter
- Live from Stanford: Secretary Chu on the Global Clean Energy Challenge
- Remarks by the President on Clean Energy Jobs
- Insurance scams could lead to unrecoverable bad debt
Pages: 1 2





