Aboard Hybrid Electric Ferry on the San Francisco Bay, Governor Brown Signs Bills to Promote Zero-Emission Vehicles, Reduce Carbon Emissions

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Written by Green Liver Green Liver
Category: California News California News
Published: 13 September 2018 13 September 2018

San Francisco, California - During the maiden voyage of the San Francisco Bay Area’s first plug-in hybrid electric ferry today, Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. signed a comprehensive package of bills aimed at dramatically reducing carbon emissions by boosting the number of zero-emission vehicles and charging stations in California and getting dirty cars and trucks off the road.

“Whether we travel by car, bus, or boat the need to move to zero-emission transportation is urgent. These bills will help get more clean cars on the road and reduce harmful emissions,” said Governor Brown.

The signing – which took place aboard the Enhydra, a new hybrid electric ferry from the Red and White Fleet based in the San Francisco Bay, included 8 bills that aim to reduce carbon emissions from the transportation sector, which currently accounts for approximately 50 percent of the state’s greenhouse gas emissions and about 80 percent of smog-forming pollutants.

The bills signed by the Governor today include:

Today’s action builds on the state’s past efforts to boost zero-emission vehicles in California, including Governor Brown’s executive order earlier this year to get 5 million zero-emission vehicles onto California’s roads by 2030 and the state’s Zero-Emission Vehicle Action Plan.

Governor Brown tonight also signed other climate-related bills that help low-income communities impacted by pollution, advance zero net energy buildings, fight dangerous gases in refrigerants, and increase penalties for heavily polluting glider kits – trucks with older, higher-polluting engines installed.

These bills include: 

More information about tonight’s voyage can be found here.

On the first full day of the Global Climate Action Summit, Governor Brown also joined a ministerial dialogue hosted by the U.S. Climate Alliance to facilitate bilateral engagement between an international array of heads of state, senior officials from U.S. Climate Alliance states and other climate leaders.

The participants in today’s ministerial dialogue included: European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy Miguel Arias Cañete; Canada’s Minister of Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna; China’s Special Representative for Climate Change Minister Xie Zhenhua; Ethiopia’s Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change Gemedo Dalle; Germany’s Director General of the Ministry for Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety Karsten Sach; President of Hungary János Áder; Ireland’s Minister for Communications, Climate Action and Energy Denis Naughten; Italy’s Director General for Sustainable Development, Energy and Climate Francesco La Camera; Republic of the Marshall Islands’ Minister-in-Assistance to the President and Environment Minister  David Paul; Mexico’s Deputy Minister for International Affairs Enrique Lendo Fuentes; New Zealand’s Minister for Climate Change James Shaw; Norway’s Junior Minister of Climate and Environment Astrid Knutsen Hårstad; Sweden’s State Secretary Eva Svedling; Netherlands’ State Secretary for Infrastructure and Water Management Stientje van Veldhoven; New York’s Chairman of Energy and Finance Richard Kauffman; UN Foundation Deputy Chief Executive Officer Elizabeth Cousens; UK Foreign Secretary’s Special Representative on Climate Nick Bridge; Ukraine’s Minister of Ecology and Natural Resources Ostap Semerak; Peru’s Minister of Environment Fabiola Martha Muñoz Dodero; Washington Governor Jay Inslee; and senior officials from the U.S. Climate Alliance states of Minnesota, Vermont, Oregon and Colorado.

Governor Brown speaks at U.S. Climate Alliance ministerial dialogue. 

In addition, Governor Brown met with Minister McKenna, Deputy Minister Lendo, Governor Inslee and Governor David Ige of Hawaii to finalize areas for cooperation first outlined in Bonn last year with the launch the North American Climate Leadership Dialogue. The leaders today discussed near-term priorities for ambitious climate action across the region and will develop a framework for implementation in the coming months. California has partnered extensively with its neighbors to combat climate change, including the addition of Mexico and Canada to the Under2 Coalition last year, the linkage of the California and Quebec cap-and-trade programs in 2014 and partnerships between California and other Pacific Coast states on a range of issues, including to oppose expanded offshore drilling.

Earlier in the day, Governor Brown and fellow Summit co-chair and America’s Pledge co-founder Michael Bloomberg released a new report quantifying non-federal action in the U.S. to drive down greenhouse gas emissions, and Governor Brown joined fellow U.S. Climate Alliance governors to announce ambitious new commitments by the coalition. Governor Brown and Commissioner Cañete also reiterated their commitment to greater alignment of California and EU carbon markets and to engage other jurisdictions with emerging programs, building on last year’s meeting between the leaders in Brussels.

Yesterday, Governor Brown welcomed China’s delegation to the Summit, signing an agreement to enhance climate and clean energy cooperation, meeting with the Vice Governor of Jiangsu Province and joining leaders, including former Vice President Al Gore, for a U.S.-China subnational climate dialogue. Governor Brown also addressed the Under2 Coalition General Assembly and joined a signing ceremony for 16 new members; participated in an event to support the Talanoa Dialogue, led by the Prime Minister of Fiji Frank Bainimarama; and met with C40 Steering Committee members at San Francisco City Hall.

On Tuesday, Governor Brown highlighted the importance of California’s landmark cap-and-trade program at an event co-hosted by the by the European Commission, Canada and California, during which he blasted the Trump Administration’s proposal to roll back methane regulation; met with Minister Xie to discuss the China delegation’s leading role at the Summit; held discussions with Governors’ Climate and Forests Task Force members and indigenous community leaders; and delivered remarks at the National Governors Association’s Water Policy Institute conference. Earlier this week, Governor Brown signed legislation setting a 100 percent clean electricity goal for the state, and issued an executive order establishing a new target to achieve carbon neutrality – both by 2045. Late last week, Governor Brown also signed legislation to block new federal offshore oil drilling along California’s coast and announced the state’s opposition to the federal government’s plan to expand oil drilling on public lands in California.