Title: California Transit Association
1AB 32 and the Scoping Plan
- California Transit Association
- May 20, 2008
- Karen Khamou
- Office of Climate Change
- California Air Resources Board
2What Is AB 32?
- Sets in statute 2020 GHG emissions limit at 1990
level - Acknowledges that 2020 is not the endpoint
- Air Resources Board (ARB) to monitor and regulate
GHG sources - Air Resources Board lead, but
- Cal/EPA and Climate Action Team continue
statewide climate policy coordination - Other agency authority preserved
3Climate Action Team (CAT)
- Led by Cal/EPA
- Many GHG reduction activities cut across agency
boundaries - Agencies other than ARB are lead for important
components - CAT will oversee coordinated effort to implement
GHG emission reduction programs and report on
progress
4AB 32 Timeline
2010
2011
2012
2020
2008
2009
2007
Identification/ implementation of further
emission reduction strategies
GHG reduction measures enforceable
Publish list of early actions
Early action regulations enforceable
Mandatory reporting 1990 Baseline
Adopt scoping plan
Reduce GHG emissions to 1990 levels
Adopt GHG reduction measures
Adopt enforceable early action regulations
5California GHG Emissions
Note Percents do not total 100. Roughly three
percent of the inventory is due to unspecified
fuel combustion and ODS substitute use, which is
not attributed to an individual sector (16.0
MMTCO2e in 2004).
ARB, California 1990 Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Level and 2020 Emissions Limit (2007),
www.arb.ca.gov/cc/ccei/inventory/1990_level.htm
6Magnitude of the Challenge
7Scoping Plan
- Describes how California will reduce GHG
emissions to 1990 levels by 2020 - Provide a vision for a low carbon future -
2020 and 2050 - Establish Californias leadership in climate
change, while considering other GHG programs - Maximize benefits to California
8Scoping Plan Measures
- AB 32 requires ARB to achieve the maximum
technologically feasible and cost-effective
greenhouse gas emission reductions - Possible measures include
- Direct regulations
- Alternative compliance mechanisms
- Market-based compliance mechanisms
- Monetary and non-monetary incentives
9Core Measures in the Scoping Plan
- Core emission reduction measures expected to be
included in the Scoping Plan - Tailpipe GHG standards
- Low Carbon Fuel Standard
- Energy efficiency beyond current programs
- 20 Renewable Portfolio Standard
- Discrete Early Actions
- Vehicle Miles Traveled reductions
10Voluntary Early Actions
- Voluntary early actions are win/win
- Board adopted policy on February 28 to encourage
voluntary action - Work with California Climate Action Registry to
allow documentation of voluntary actions - Work with interested parties to review proposed
quantification methodologies - Work with air districts to promote expedited
development of quantification methods
11Transportation Strategies
Vehicle Technology
Vehicle Use
Fuels
Transp. GHG
GHG Mile
GHG Gallon
VMT
Transp. Land Use Strategies
AB 1493 Regulation
Low-Carbon Fuel Standard
12Examples of Scoping Plan Vehicle Measures
- Adopted measures
- AB 1493 (Pavley)
- Early Actions
- Strengthening the Pavley regulation
- Cool Paints
- Truck Efficiency
- Additional Early Actions Tire Inflation,
Enforcement, Hybridization of Urban Trucks,
TRUs (electric standby)
13Low Carbon Fuel Standard
- Directed by the Governors Executive Order
(S-01-07) - ARB approved the LCFS as a Discrete Early Action
- Adopt the regulation in 2009, implement beginning
in 2010 - Reduce carbon intensity of Californias
transportation fuels by at least 10 percent by
2020
14Overview of LCFS
- Life-cycle-based
- Fuel providers to decrease GHG emissions on a
life-cycle basis (the carbon-intensity) of
average fuel sold - Intensity
- Governs intensity, not amount sold
- Performance-based
- Sets carbon reduction standards and methods to
calculate compliance - LCFS elements for compliance
- Allows averaging, banking and trading to lower
cost and provide flexibility among fuel
providers - Fuel neutral
- Fuel providers can choose which fuels and volumes
to sell
15Potentially Lower or Very Low Carbon Fuels
- Lower carbon ethanol (more efficient production
process) or very low carbon ethanol
(cellulosic) - Increase use of ethanol at 10 or at 85 for flex
fuel vehicles - Electricity and Hydrogen
- CNG, LNG, LPG
- Biogas, Biodiesel, Renewable Diesel
16Benefits of LCFS
- Less dependence on petroleum
- Larger renewable fuels market
- Expand Californias alternative fuels markets by
3 to 5 times, while reducing emissions - More alternative fuel and hybrid vehicles
- Several million advanced technology vehicles,
more than 10 times the current level
17Reducing VMT
- Land Use Sub-Group of the Climate Action Team
(LUSCAT) - Multi-agency planning effort
- Considerations include
- Reducing growth
- City planning
- How cities operate
- Alternative commute options
- Topic of Board update on May 22 (Fresno)
18Scoping Plan Development Schedule
19Contacts and More Information
- ARB Climate Change Web Site
- http//www.arb.ca.gov/cc/cc.htm
- Stay informed - sign up for list serve
- California Climate Change Portal
- http//www.climatechange.ca.gov
- Karen Khamou, (916) 445-3865,
- kkhamou_at_arb.ca.gov