California Adopts Landmark Low-Carbon Fuel Rule

April 24, 2009

California on Thursday adopted a first-ever rule to slash carbon emissions in automotive fuels, and spur the market for cleaner gasoline alternatives.


California Adopts Landmark Low-Carbon Fuel Rule

World Leader

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has pushed for a low-carbon fuel standard since 2007 (Photo: Shutterstock)

 

The low-carbon fuel standard approved by the state's influential air-quality regulators was hailed by backers as an historic initiative that the rest of the United States and other countries were likely to emulate.

 

It marks the first attempt by government anywhere in the world to subject transportation fuels—as opposed to the cars and trucks they power—to limits on their potential for releasing greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.

 

Transportation alone accounts for a third of the nation's greenhouse gas emissions, and 40 percent in California, which ranks as the leading automobile market in the United States.

 

At least 11 other states are weighing similar rules, and President Barack Obama has called for a nationwide low-carbon fuel standard to help meet his goal of cutting greenhouse gas emissions more than 80 percent by mid-century.

 

But ethanol industry executives and other critics say the measure contains a built-in bias against biofuels—especially those made from corn—that will undermine regulators' aims of helping abate climate change and reduce the nation's dependence on foreign oil.



The heart of the rule is a new standard requiring refineries, producers and importers of motor fuels sold in California to reduce the "carbon intensity" of their products by 10 percent by 2020, with greater cuts thereafter.

 

Fuel suppliers can achieve those targets by reducing the carbon content of their own products, buying and reselling cleaner-burning fuels from others or by purchasing carbon credits as offsets.

 

The rule is supposed to lower California's carbon emissions by 16 million metric tons over the next decade, and replace 20 percent of the state's fossil fuels with cleaner options, such as electricity, hydrogen, natural gas and biofuels.

 

The measure thus creates a market for alternative fuels insulated from the volatility of petroleum prices and lets the market decide which new fuels will thrive commercially.

 

California's plan also takes a sweeping "cradle-to-grave" approach to cutting the carbon footprint of fuels by accounting for direct tailpipe emissions and indirect impacts associated with a fuel's overall "pathway" from production to combustion.

 

In the case of grain-based ethanol, the measure factors in the carbon consequences of plowing up grasslands or clearing forests for large-scale corn or sugar cane cultivation.

Related Articles


Critics say the model for indirect effects of land use is flawed and selectively applied to ethanol only, putting a cleaner-burning fuel already widely available at a disadvantage to alternatives still being developed.

 

In an 11th-hour bid to ease those concerns, the head of the state's Air Resources Board, Mary Nichols, wrote a letter to biofuel executives insisting that corn ethanol will play a key role in California's fuel market well into the next decade.

 

editor: Suzanne Hurt (Reuters)

 

Write a Comment

Do you have something interesting to add? Write a comment and discuss this topic with other readers. Comments should be on-topic, non-commercial, and not contain abuse of any kind.

Comment Policy
 
Please fill in the code
Salutation*:
First Name*:
Last Name*:
Your E-Mail*:
Subject*: Your Text*:
Please note that fields marked with asterisk (*) are mandatory.
 I would like to receive the Allianz Knowledge Newsletter
 I agree to the Allianz Group Privacy Principles and to the Comment Policy*
> See Privacy Principles
Notification by email:
none
If further comments are written
If replies to this comment are written
> Topic Specials
> Share this
 

Biofuel Special

Can biofuels help fight climate change or do they destroy nature? Are biofuels responsible for high food prices? What are the best crops? Find out.

Featured Video

A New Green Deal for the Future

Climate Change

Watch the video

Take Action

How to drive more sustainably!