Will the Clean Power Plan make every state look more like California?
In many ways, the Clean Power Plan looks a lot like what California is already doing: Cutting carbon emissions and focusing on renewable resources.
In many ways, the Clean Power Plan looks a lot like what California is already doing: Cutting carbon emissions and focusing on renewable resources.
President Obama鈥檚 Clean Power Plan is about 1,500 pages long, but it can be summed up succinctly: Mr. Obama wants the United States to be more like California.
The Clean Power Plan aims to replace most coal-fired power plants with renewable sources of energy like wind and solar, and California has almost completely eliminated coal as a source of energy already, the LA Times reported.
In his announcement of the regulations, Obama recalled arriving as a student at Occidental College in 1979, when 鈥淟os Angeles still was so full of smog that there were days where people who were vulnerable just could not go outside.鈥
鈥淎nd you fast-forward 30, 40 years later, and we solved those problems,鈥 he said.
Obama鈥檚 plan aims to bring the percentage of energy derived from renewable resources up to 28 by 2030. According to the Times, because California鈥檚 renewable energy was already at 19 percent in 2013, the California Air Resources Board estimates the state will be able to meet federal emissions targets a full decade earlier than the plan requires.
"We're going to be able to comply and even over-comply," Edie Chang, who oversees the board, told the Times.
海角大神鈥檚 David Unger wrote,