Global warming landscape (2013). Credit: Russ Allison Loar.

On climate change, contrast between California and national policy couldn't be starker–and that presents a huge opportunity.

"Today, we wake up as strangers in a foreign land," began the somber speech prepared by California's top Democrats after Trump's win.

This profile of Sacramento's gathering response is really worth the read. Notably, the state is confident the law will continue to allow them to go out in front of rolled-back EPA regulations, and Jerry Brown's lieutenants are convinced the grizzled governor will attack climate change with a referendum soon.

"He has every incentive to do it,” says Gavin Newsom. “This is the opportunity of a lifetime to strengthen his legacy on the existential issue of our time.”

Jan 31, 2017

Even some conservatives support a national carbon price, but it's unlikely with this Congress.

It's not surprising that California has asked the country to tax carbon pollution. You may also have heard the Rex Tillerson, incoming secretary of state, supports a price on carbon; the weight behind his declarations is questionable, but the National Review sees him as positively green. Elon Musk, friend of Peter Thiel, also promotes the policy.

But while think-tank Republicans propose swapping corporate taxes for a carbon price, the reality is that most Republicans are bound by pledges not to add new taxes

Jan 31, 2017

Many Californians hope the state can join the Paris Agreement, but the Constitution doesn't offer much latitude on that front—foreign treaties are handled federally.

There is a chance the Paris Agreement could be amended so that large parts of America could join. But California has been aggressively signing memorandums with other subnational governments, and while its progress may falter without federal subsidies for clean energy, the state cap-and-trade program isn't in doubt.

That means that even if California isn't officially party to Paris, it's effectively doing the same thing.

In California, electric vehicles finally have the infrastructure they need to succeed.

California, like the rest of the nation, has sputtered on reaching electric vehicle goals. Unlike the rest of the country, it is taking proactive steps to fix what's wrong. These include allowing utilities to build charging stations, directing subsidies towards lower income brackets, and targeting heavy industry applications.

Los Angeles and San Francisco are leading the charge by making a huge order of EVs for their municipal fleets.

Jan 31, 2017
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