Environment
			Blog				
			
		Moss Landing Fire Shows Renewable Energy Exacts a Price, Too
			“Our true goal is to guarantee safety for the community,” Assemblymember Dawn Addis said a week after the Moss Landing lithium-ion battery storage facility in Monterey County caught fire – and not for the first time  – on Jan. 16. So alarmed was Addis that she introduced a bill that ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			January 29, 2025		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Why can’t California be more like Europe – and Puerto Rico?
			While rational energy policies are being followed elsewhere, even in regions that had loudly and proudly gone “green,” California can’t kick its net-zero obsession. Or maybe the right word is “won’t,” because the state refuses to deviate from its reckless plans. Read the op-ed here:		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			January 16, 2025		
				
					
			Blog					
			
		Read the latest on California's post-wildfire response
Newsom Right to Waive CEQA for Wildfire Rebuilding, But Lawmakers Should Also Act
			The broken clock that has been state government’s response to the Southern California wildfires was right once on Sunday when Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order waving numerous environmental requirements that threatened to add unnecessary delay and expense to the rebuilding process. Under the Newsom executive order, California Environmental ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Tim Anaya		
				
																						
			January 16, 2025		
				
					
			Agriculture					
			
		Read a Christmas wish for California's farmers
A farmer’s ag policy Christmas wish
			Early this year, the 2022 Census of Agriculture was released by the USDA. The data was alarming. California lost 7,387 farms in five years. That works out to be 1,477 farms and ranches a year; 28 a week; four a day. More staggering was the land in farms lost. Between ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Pam Lewison		
				
																						
			December 24, 2024		
				
					
			Blog					
			
		Read the latest on Gov. Newsom's green mandates
Biden Greenlights California’s Unworkable Green Car Mandates on Way Out the Door
			As expected, the Environmental Protection Agency granted on Dec. 17 permission for California to go outside of federal law. California and other states need exemptions from the EPA to enact stricter air quality standards than those set by the 1970 Clean Air Act. And the Biden White House is clearly ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			December 23, 2024		
				
					
			Blog					
			
		Read about wind energy's latest challenges
Should California Go Full Steam Ahead on Offshore Wind Farms? Latest Evidence Says No
			One, the concept is untried on an industrial scale. Floating offshore wind turbines, which California believes will provide a full quarter of the state’s electric power by 2045, “is largely underdeveloped in the United States,” host Kevin Sliman says in an interview with two Penn State University Institute of Energy and ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			December 18, 2024		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		California’s Next Crime Wave – Fuel Theft
			Here are a few examples: On September 27, an Inland Empire resident drove away from her job at an area hospital when her pickup truck puttered to a stop. An investigation showed her tank had been drilled and emptied. A Valero Station in Fremont lost tens of thousands of gallons ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Steve Smith		
				
																						
			December 9, 2024		
				
					
			Commentary					
			
		Learn more about California's water wars
Trump Victory Will Lead to New Battles in California’s ‘Water Wars’
			California has been lately in the business of blowing up dams. So a decision to actually raise one is big news. In a deal approved by eight water agencies as well as the federal government, the San Luis Reservoir between Gilroy and Los Banos, the fifth-largest reservoir in the state, will ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			November 26, 2024		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		When Ambition And Ideology Outpace Reality And Prudent Policymaking
			Turns out the electric trucks aren’t selling well, so manufacturers will be able to build more diesel trucks than regulations were allowing them to. Yet again, the state tacitly acknowledges that its net-zero ambitions are unrealistic. It was a lesson learned late, though. Several states that followed the California model ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			November 20, 2024		
				
					
			Blog				
			
		Desert Push for New Solar Farm Threatens Worker Health, Local Water Supply
			In California’s never-ending effort to retain its self-awarded climate MVP trophy, thousands of acres near Desert Center, east of Palm Springs in Riverside County, will be “cultivated” to accommodate a solar farm. The Intersect Power project, centered on a 390-megawatt solar array with an adjacent battery storage site, was unanimously ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Kerry Jackson		
				
																						
			November 18, 2024		
				
					Moss Landing Fire Shows Renewable Energy Exacts a Price, Too
			“Our true goal is to guarantee safety for the community,” Assemblymember Dawn Addis said a week after the Moss Landing lithium-ion battery storage facility in Monterey County caught fire – and not for the first time  – on Jan. 16. So alarmed was Addis that she introduced a bill that ...		
					Why can’t California be more like Europe – and Puerto Rico?
			While rational energy policies are being followed elsewhere, even in regions that had loudly and proudly gone “green,” California can’t kick its net-zero obsession. Or maybe the right word is “won’t,” because the state refuses to deviate from its reckless plans. Read the op-ed here:		
					Read the latest on California's post-wildfire response
Newsom Right to Waive CEQA for Wildfire Rebuilding, But Lawmakers Should Also Act
			The broken clock that has been state government’s response to the Southern California wildfires was right once on Sunday when Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order waving numerous environmental requirements that threatened to add unnecessary delay and expense to the rebuilding process. Under the Newsom executive order, California Environmental ...		
					Read a Christmas wish for California's farmers
A farmer’s ag policy Christmas wish
			Early this year, the 2022 Census of Agriculture was released by the USDA. The data was alarming. California lost 7,387 farms in five years. That works out to be 1,477 farms and ranches a year; 28 a week; four a day. More staggering was the land in farms lost. Between ...		
					Read the latest on Gov. Newsom's green mandates
Biden Greenlights California’s Unworkable Green Car Mandates on Way Out the Door
			As expected, the Environmental Protection Agency granted on Dec. 17 permission for California to go outside of federal law. California and other states need exemptions from the EPA to enact stricter air quality standards than those set by the 1970 Clean Air Act. And the Biden White House is clearly ...		
					Read about wind energy's latest challenges
Should California Go Full Steam Ahead on Offshore Wind Farms? Latest Evidence Says No
			One, the concept is untried on an industrial scale. Floating offshore wind turbines, which California believes will provide a full quarter of the state’s electric power by 2045, “is largely underdeveloped in the United States,” host Kevin Sliman says in an interview with two Penn State University Institute of Energy and ...		
					California’s Next Crime Wave – Fuel Theft
			Here are a few examples: On September 27, an Inland Empire resident drove away from her job at an area hospital when her pickup truck puttered to a stop. An investigation showed her tank had been drilled and emptied. A Valero Station in Fremont lost tens of thousands of gallons ...		
					Learn more about California's water wars
Trump Victory Will Lead to New Battles in California’s ‘Water Wars’
			California has been lately in the business of blowing up dams. So a decision to actually raise one is big news. In a deal approved by eight water agencies as well as the federal government, the San Luis Reservoir between Gilroy and Los Banos, the fifth-largest reservoir in the state, will ...		
					When Ambition And Ideology Outpace Reality And Prudent Policymaking
			Turns out the electric trucks aren’t selling well, so manufacturers will be able to build more diesel trucks than regulations were allowing them to. Yet again, the state tacitly acknowledges that its net-zero ambitions are unrealistic. It was a lesson learned late, though. Several states that followed the California model ...		
					Desert Push for New Solar Farm Threatens Worker Health, Local Water Supply
			In California’s never-ending effort to retain its self-awarded climate MVP trophy, thousands of acres near Desert Center, east of Palm Springs in Riverside County, will be “cultivated” to accommodate a solar farm. The Intersect Power project, centered on a 390-megawatt solar array with an adjacent battery storage site, was unanimously ...