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California senate pushes for 100% renewable energy by 2045

California Senate President Pro Tempore President Kevin DeLéon

PV Magazine

The leader of the California Senate has introduced a bill that would put the state tied with Hawaii for the most aggressive renewable energy mandate in the nation, and one of the most aggressive in the world.

California Senate President Pro Tempore President Kevin DeLéon
California Senate President Pro Tempore President Kevin DeLéon

On the same day that the U.S. Senate in a mostly party-line vote approved Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt – who is by all accounts an enemy of environmental regulation – to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, the head of California’s state senate was busy leaving a very different kind of legacy.

Last Friday, Speaker Pro Tempore Kevin de Léon introduced a bill (SB 584) to mandate that utilities procure 100% of their electricity from renewable energy sources by 2045.

This would accelerate the 50% by 2030 mandate which is currently in place, and would put California tied with Hawaii (which also has a 100% by 2045 mandate) for the most aggressive renewable portfolio standard (RPS) in the United States. On the global scale there are only a few nations with more ambitious plans, among them Denmark, which seeks to obtain all energy – not just electricity – from renewables by 2050.

The legislation would also increase the state’s interim goal for renewable energy to 50% by 2025. This should not be a problem for California’s three large investor owned utilities, which are already well ahead of RPS compliance goals.

Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric Company were already meeting 24-35% of their electricity with renewables in 2015, and have enough resources contracted to meet 41-45% of demand by 2020.

However, there are technical challenges. California is already wiping out its mid-day demand with solar PV, which combined with inflexible conventional generation and imports has already led to negative prices in spring and fall months. Additionally, this increases the ramping that other forms of generation must make when the sun goes down.

The state is addressing these issues with the deployment of energy storage and a host of regulatory proceedings to integrate demand-side resources into utility and grid planning. And while California is a national leader in this regard, such measures are still piecemeal and short of a full re-organization of the grid.

If it passes, SB 584 will be the latest step in California’s leadership in renewable energy, which dates back to the early development of large-scale wind and the world’s first concentrating solar power (CSP) plants in the 1980s. In 2002, the state’s renewable portfolio standard (RPS) was ground-breaking and precedent setting, as was the California Solar Initiative. In 2015 the state’s RPS target was increased to the current 50% by 2030.

It is difficult to speculate on the political odds of this bill passing. Like other states the fossil fuel industries have a strong political presence and have defeated environmental bills before; however DeLeon’s Democratic Party controls both houses of the state Assembly and California Governor Jerry Brown is an outspoken proponent of renewable energy.

The same day DeLéon introduced the 100% by 2045 bill, he also issued a statement on the approval of Scott Pruitt as EPA Administrator.

“Mr. Pruitt is a clear and present danger to our economic prosperity and the health of our children. He was appointed for one reason: to systematically dismantle our environmental protections when it comes to our water, air and wildlife. He made a career of defending corporate polluters and blocking environmental protections by litigating against the agency he now leads.”

“California will not follow Trump’s destructive path. We’ve proven that you can protect the environment and grow jobs. We’ve delinked economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions and helped turn clean energy into a pillar of our economy that now supports over half a million jobs in our state.”


Source: PV Magazine. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

4 responses to “California senate pushes for 100% renewable energy by 2045”

  1. Rob G Avatar
    Rob G

    It is often the case, when policy is set down and both sides of politics are onboard, these kind of targets are met much earlier than expected. After all, why would any company dilly dally with older technologies any longer than needs be. Most want to get ahead of things – South Australia is another example of this, getting close to 50% well before time.
    No wonder coal is running scared.

  2. George Darroch Avatar
    George Darroch

    Our neighbours in New Zealand could get there, with 90% of nameplate capacity and 75% of generation. But they have a government which is less ideological but just as incompetent as Australia’s, and unable to see the opportunity available to them.

  3. john Avatar
    john

    A target of 100% now that is one big target is it achievable?
    One would expect with good engineering this is achievable.
    We are talking California correct where there are just a few people who have knowledge about how to do some simple or more complex programs.
    I would expect with the amount of expertise in California if they wish to go to 100% then they can and will work out exactly how to reach this target.

    When you put brains to solve a problem and have a goal you will get there this is not hard to do.

    I do not want to hear from any person who thinks this not achievable.

  4. Doug Hendren MD Avatar
    Doug Hendren MD

    The naysayers in 2010 claimed a strong clean energy policy would destroy California’s economy. Five years later, it was growing at 4%, compared with US at 2%. This success story should slam-dunk the issue of economy vs clean energy.

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