Greening the grid in California

Since the 1970s, California has been a bellwether state in greening the electricity grid. Climate change has made these efforts more urgent with passage of California Assembly Bill 32 (AB 32), the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, which requires statewide GHG emissions to be reduced t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Administrative & Regulatory Law News 2011-01, Vol.36 (2), p.10
1. Verfasser: Duane, Timothy P
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description Since the 1970s, California has been a bellwether state in greening the electricity grid. Climate change has made these efforts more urgent with passage of California Assembly Bill 32 (AB 32), the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, which requires statewide GHG emissions to be reduced to the equivalent of 1990 levels by the year 2020. Meeting California's ambitious renewable portfolio standard goals requires moving power from where it can be generated renewably to where the load and demand require it. The state's experience with energy efficiency standards coupled with rate-payer funded demand-side management programs, renewable portfolio or energy standards that recognize all of the long-run avoided cost benefits of renewable generation, and strategic investments in environmentally conscious renewable power transmission is instructive for any effort to implement climate change policy by greening the grid.
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subjects Air pollution
Alternative energy
Alternative energy sources
Atmospheric carbon dioxide
Climate change
Coal-fired power plants
Costs
Deregulation
Electric rates
Electric utilities
Electricity
Electricity distribution
Emissions
Emissions control
Energy efficiency
Environmental policy
Global warming
Greenhouse effect
Greenhouse gases
Industrial plant emissions
Innovations
Natural gas prices
Natural gas utilities
Renewable resources
States
Sustainable development
Sustainable living
Tariffs
title Greening the grid in California
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