According to today's New York TIMES
(http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/15/us/15energy.html), in 2003,
California used the least amount of electricity per person of all the
50 US states (and the District of Columbia). In 2004, it used the 8th
least amount of gasoline per capita. California electricity use per
person has stayed rather flat since the 1970s, unlike for the rest of
the country, for which per capita electricity use went up by more than
50 percent.

Obviously, California has more people than most states (not to mention
DC). But it does show the potential for more ecological ways
prevailing.
----

September 15, 2006
In Gamble, Calif. Tries to Curb Greenhouse Gases
By FELICITY BARRINGER

SACRAMENTO — In the Rocky Mountain States and the fast-growing desert
Southwest, more than 20 power plants, designed to burn coal that is
plentiful and cheap, are on the drawing boards. Much of the power,
their owners expected, would be destined for the people of California.

But such plants would also be among the country's most potent
producers of carbon dioxide, the king of gases linked to global
warming. So California has just delivered a new message to these
energy suppliers: If you cannot produce power with the lowest possible
emissions of these greenhouse gases, we are not interested.

"When your biggest customer says, 'I ain't buying,' you rethink," said
Hal Harvey, the environment program director at the William and Flora
Hewlett Foundation, in Menlo Park, Calif. "When you have 38 million
customers you don't have access to, you rethink. Selling to Phoenix is
nice. Las Vegas is nice. But they aren't California."

California's decision to impose stringent demands on suppliers even
outside its borders, broadened by the Legislature on Aug. 31 and
awaiting the governor's signature, is but one example of the state's
wide-ranging effort to remake its energy future.

The Democratic-controlled legislature and the Republican governor also
agreed at that time on legislation to reduce industrial carbon dioxide
emissions by 25 percent by 2020, a measure that affects not only power
plants but also other large producers of carbon dioxide, including oil
refineries and cement plants.

The state's aim is to reduce emissions of climate-changing gases
produced by burning coal, oil and gas. Other states, particularly New
York, are moving in some of the same directions, but no state is
moving as aggressively on as many fronts. No state has been at it
longer. No state is putting more at risk.

Whether all this is visionary or deluded depends on one's perspective.
This is the state that in the early 1970's jump-started the worldwide
adoption of catalytic converters, the devices that neutralize most
smog-forming chemicals emitted by tailpipes. This is the state whose
per capita energy consumption has been almost flat for 30 years, even
as per capita consumption has risen 50 percent nationally.

Taking on global warming is a tougher challenge. Though California was
second in the nation only to Texas in emissions of carbon dioxide in
2001, and 12th in the world, it produced just 2.5 percent of the
world's total. At best, business leaders asked in a legislative
hearing, what difference could California's cuts make? And at what
cost?

California, in fact, is making a huge bet: that it can reduce
emissions without wrecking its economy, and therefore inspire other
states — and countries — to follow its example on slowing climate
change.

Initiatives addressing climate change are everywhere in California,
pushed by legislators, by regulators, by cities, by foundations, by
businesses and by investors.

Four years ago, California became the first state to seek to regulate
emissions of carbon dioxide from automobile tailpipes. Car dealers and
carmakers are challenging the law in federal court.

In late August, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a measure requiring
builders to offer home buyers roofs with tiles that convert sunlight
into electricity. Homeowners in some communities are already choosing
them to reduce their electric bills.

California, which has for decades required that refrigerators, air
conditioners, water heaters and other appliances become more energy
efficient, just added to the list: first, chargers for cellphones or
computers; second, set-top boxes and other remote-controlled devices.
Those categories consume up to 10 percent of a home's power.

Last fall, California regulators barred major investor-owned
electrical utilities from signing long-term contracts to buy energy
unless the seller's greenhouse-gas emissions meet a stringent
standard.

"We are dealing with it across the board," said Michael R. Peevey, the
president of the Public Utilities Commission. By contrast, the Bush
administration has been averse to any legislative assault on climate
change.

Opponents say California may hurt its own residents with its
clean-energy mandate. Scott Segal, a lawyer for Bracewell & Giuliani
who represents electric utilities, summarized California's policy as:
"All electrons are not created equal. We're going to discriminate
against some of them, and create artificial barriers in the
marketplace for electricity." California consumers could end up paying
more for their energy and struggling to find enough, Mr. Segal said.

Is California dreaming? Can its multifaceted approach become a toolkit
for other states? Will investors make the state the incubator for
clean-energy technologies that will reduce its energy bills and buoy
its economy? Or will all this turn California into a stagnating
economic island of ever-rising electricity prices and ever-rolling
blackouts?

One thing is certain: The issue will not go away. This summer, a
brutal California heat wave killed roughly 140 people. A 2004 National
Academy of Sciences report predicted that, at the current growth rate
of emissions, there would be at least five times as many heat waves in
Los Angeles by 2100 compared with the current historical average, and
twice as many heat-related deaths.

The study predicted that at least half the state's alpine forests
would disappear by century's end, and that the Sierra snowpack —
crucial to California's water supply — would decline by at least 29
percent and as much as 70 percent.

There seems to be political support, in California and nationally, for
action on climate change. Statewide, a July 26 poll from the Public
Policy Institute of California showed that 79 percent of 2,051 people
surveyed said that global warming was a "very serious" or a "somewhat
serious" threat to the state's economy and quality of life. The
findings mirrored those of a national poll of 1,206 people conducted
in mid-August by The New York Times and CBS News.

But polling organizations have asked little about the potentially
painful sacrifices that may be required.

The Car Culture

Back in the 1950's, when the movie director George Lucas was growing
up, cars rocked around the clock in Modesto, and they were so
enshrined in his 1973 hit, "American Graffiti." The movie reaffirmed
what much of the nation knew — there was no car culture like
California's. Sleek convertibles? Muscle cars? Sport utility vehicles?
Many were hatched in the design studios of Detroit, but popularized by
Hollywood movies and celebrities, and by plain old California
consumers.

Fast forward to August. In the middle of the sales lot at Modesto
Toyota sat a long row of sport utility vehicles the dealership had
acquired as trade-ins in previous weeks. Leaning on a 2006 Ford
Expedition, George S. Ismail, a sales manager, said, "We're getting a
lot of people trading in their sport utility vehicles for smaller
cars." Even heavily discounted, the used S.U.V.'s sit for weeks.

Yet Modesto Toyota is breaking records, Mr. Ismail said, selling about
400 vehicles a month, up from 260 a year ago. Most are small cars —
Camrys and Corollas. Some are hybrid vehicles that use even less fuel,
like the Prius. One-quarter of 200,000 new hybrid vehicles registered
nationwide in 2005 belonged to Californians, according to the
automotive analyst R. L. Polk.

With smaller cars increasingly popular, California now burns less
gasoline per capita than all but six states. Burning less gasoline
cuts carbon dioxide. Tailpipes account for more than half the state's
carbon dioxide emissions, federal figures show.

Much of this change in driver taste is attributable to the higher
price of gasoline. But what if gasoline prices fall again and bigger,
less efficient vehicles become more popular? California has an answer.

It came from Assemblywoman Fran Pavley, a Democrat and former
schoolteacher who drives a Prius and whose South Coast district has a
bird's-eye view of the smoggy Los Angeles basin. Four years ago Ms.
Pavley wrote the first state law regulating carbon dioxide emissions
from cars and trucks. It requires vehicle makers to eventually reduce
the average emissions of carbon dioxide of the mix of cars it sells in
California by 30 percent, beginning with the 2009 model year. Light
trucks, including sport utility vehicles, must meet the same standard
by the 2016 model year.

Ten states, including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, have
followed suit. Canada instituted voluntary emissions reductions at
similar levels, which major automobile manufacturers have agreed they
can meet. "We think that, coupled with Canada, we're now over
one-third of the market," Ms. Pavley said in an interview.

But automobile manufacturers and some dealerships have vowed to wipe
her law from the books. Their lawsuit's central assertion is that, by
regulating carbon dioxide emissions, California is using a backdoor
means to control fuel efficiency, which, under the federal Energy
Policy and Conservation Act, is the exclusive preserve of the federal
Transportation Department. To produce less carbon dioxide, cars would
have to be more fuel efficient.

On Sept. 15, Judge Anthony W. Ishii of Federal District Court in
Fresno will hear arguments on California's request to dismiss the
case. If the lawsuit survives, the first hearing is set for January.
This schedule overlaps with that of another case with direct bearing
on this issue. The Supreme Court, petitioned by a dozen states, led by
Massachusetts, and three cities, including New York, will decide
whether the law requires the Environmental Protection Agency to
declare carbon dioxide a pollutant and to regulate it. The Bush
administration contends it has no authority to do either.

If the Supreme Court accepts the administration's arguments, it will
not help California in its legal fight against Detroit, because a key
to the state's case is the contention that carbon dioxide is in fact a
pollutant under the Clean Air Act.

Hungry Electronics

Imagine all the small electronic devices in a modern home — iPods and
handheld organizers, cellphones and laptops — charging at a power
strip.

Arthur H. Rosenfeld, a member of the California Energy Commission,
knows how much electricity is wasted when people unplug the devices
but leave the charger plugged in. Dr. Rosenfeld estimates that such
chargers — along with appliances like televisions that draw power even
when they are off because they are designed to respond to remote
controls — use up to 10 percent of an average home's power.

He calls them "vampires" — things with teeth that suck power at night.

Recently, Dr. Rosenfeld proudly held up a small green cellular phone
charger that consumes less than half a watt of electricity — a fifth
as much as its predecessors — when left plugged into an outlet. It
meets state standards that take effect in 2007. The same standards
will require sharp power cutbacks from audio and video equipment, both
when the devices are in use and when they are standing by for a remote
signal.

Since the 1970's, California's energy-efficiency standards have
reduced electricity consumption by the equivalent of the output of
more than 20 average power plants, Dr. Rosenfeld said. And the
standards have become templates for other states and Washington.
Nationally, Dr. Rosenfeld added, energy-efficiency policies have saved
the economy $700 billion since the 1970's.

But why would utilities, which sell electricity, have any interest in
seeing sales diminish? In 1982, the Public Utilities Commission
decoupled utilities' sales and their profits by allowing rate
increases for utilities that helped customers cut energy use.

The logic was that for every dollar the consumer did not spend on
energy, the utility would get real income — say 15 cents, which would
exceed the profit the utility could have made on that dollar. For
consumers, efficiency savings more than offset the rate increases.
"Even though rates go up, bills go down," said Mr. Harvey of the
Hewlett Foundation.

Ralph Cavanagh, the co-director of the energy program at the Natural
Resources Defense Counsel, said: "Every other state in the country
rewards utilities for selling more energy. It's a perfectly perverse
incentive."

Mr. Peevey, of the utilities commission, said he expected new
efficiencies to absorb half the increase in demand as the state grows
to 40 million people, from 38 million.

Mr. Peevey's commission has also been a prime mover in increasing
state support for residential solar power. Solar energy remains four
times as expensive as electricity produced by conventional fuels. But,
he said, "the idea is to make the solar industry a self-sustaining,
economically viable industry," and to make the cost come down.

California businesses and investors, public and private, are getting
into the act. The state's huge pension fund, Calpers, is committing
just under $1 billion to renewable-energy investments. Among the early
incentive-driven ventures in solar power are the homes in the Carsten
Crossings subdivision in Rocklin, a Sacramento suburb. In August, Mr.
Schwarzenegger signed legislation making solar panels a standard
option for new-home buyers by 2012 and ensuring that utilities reduce
homeowners' bills based on the electricity returned to the grid.

Some of those incentives were available when construction started. Now
four families have moved in. They see themselves as pragmatists, not
crusaders. "This is the next logical step" in construction, said one
of the homeowners, Lt. Col. Thomas Sebens, a specialist in drone
aircraft at Beale Air Force Base.

Their roofs show how public and private decisions, markets and
government, have meshed. T. J. Rodgers, a fiercely anti-regulatory
entrepreneur, underwrote the solar cells' production. The PowerLight
Corporation, based near San Francisco, bought the cells from Mr.
Rodgers's company, the SunPower Corporation, and turned them into roof
tiles. The tiles ended up on houses built by Grupe Homes, based in
Stockton, because state utility regulators established a $5,500
state-financed rebate for builders who install similar systems, which
cost $20,000. Federal law gives home buyers a $2,000 tax credit; state
law guarantees lower electric bills as utilities buy back power
homeowners do not need.

The July utility bills, the new homeowners' first, were the talk of
the neighborhood.

Larry Brittain, an office products salesman with a four-bedroom,
2,400-square-foot home, was the winner at $73.27 for electricity in
the month ending July 25 — the hottest July on record. For the last 10
June days in a similar house nearby, his bill was $103.

"This is a bet with a winning hand," Mr. Brittain said. "You can't lose."

(continued)

--
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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