
As we head to the polls November 2nd, one of the ugliest and most watched global warming battles will get a litmus test by the voters of California. First some background.
California’s Global Warming Solutions Act called AB32 was passed by the Legislature in 2006 and requires the state to cut greenhouse gas emissions (mostly CO2) to 1990 levels by 2020. Proposition 23 on the ballot tomorrow would suspend the law temporarily, until the state unemployment rate fell to 5.5 percent for four consecutive quarters.
Proponents of AB23 say the suspension is needed because California is financially and figuratively broke, energy costs are already the highest in the nation (I paid 40 cents per kilowatt hour for electricity this summer in 100 degree heat), and it will drive more businesses out of California. Relocation has been on my mind as of late, that’s for sure. Many of my business friends are thinking similar thoughts. California is poised to kill the goose that laid the golden state egg.
Critics say the usual emotional talking points we hear regularly; we have to save the Earth and California has to set the example. I’ll point out that California has already set an example on the world stage, and has the toughest pollution restrictions in the USA. But, the greens here don’t know when to stop. For them, environmental legislation is like an addiction. They can’t seem to get enough to satisfy their cravings.
From my vantage point here in California, the battle has gotten pretty ugly and I can’t wait for November 2nd to be over. This is probably the fiercest state election I’ve ever seen. Virtually every nasty attack ad and dirty trick of all sorts have been hauled out of cold storage to be thrust on-air, onto the web, and into print media. The battle over Proposition 23 is particularly tiresome, since the greens have pulled out all the stops, and have reportedly outspent the backers of Prop 23 by a 2 to 1 margin. The New York Times reported on October 11th that:
As of Monday, the No on 23 forces had raised $16.3 million to the Yes campaign’s $8.9 million, according to California Secretary of State records. Over the last two weeks, nearly $7 million has flowed into No campaign coffers while contributions to the Yes effort had fallen off strikingly.
A lot of that money has come from the Hollywood elite, with Titanic Chicken of the Sea director James Cameron donating a million dollars to the anti Prop 23 campaign.
The money is making the battle on television and web ads reach the supersaturation point. Amazingly, Prop 23 ads even made it into the World Series:
In fact, the anti prop 23 saturation is so bad, I’ll bet that in the Google ads below this, you’ll see a Prop 23 “Dirty Energy” ad appear. Like this one:

Of course the premise of the web ad is a lie. Existing air pollution laws in California won’t change, and companies are still free to develop and sell clean energy solutions wherever the market leads them. And when you look at California’s energy supply…

…you have to ask yourself: “where’s the dirty energy problem?” With coal making up only 18.2%, “dirty energy” is really a non-issue.
“Dirty energy” wailing aside, all that will happen is that the Prop 23 (if passed) will put AB32 on hold until such time that California’s wrecked economy recovers and people are back to work and unemployment drops to 5.5 percent for four consecutive quarters. Critics say this is impossible, but when you look at California’s unemployment rate since 2000, you see it is not:

From the suspendab32.org fact sheet:
California produces only 1.4% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, so our efforts to address climate change cannot be successful alone. AB 32’s go-it-alone approach will impose massive costs on businesses that can be easily avoided by relocation across state or national boundaries. Other states and countries are postponing costly global warming regulations. Suspending AB 32 is common sense and protects businesses and families from cost increases that would result from moving forward with AB 32 now.
Of course I’ll probably be labeled an oil shill for even citing this website, but the only dog I have in this fight is one of my own business survival.
And while we are on the subject of money, I want to say that money has turned the Prop 23 issue into a veritable circus here. TV radio and web is being carpet bombed with anti prop 23 ads. It’s so bad that some other political candidates are complaining they can’t buy ad space on radio and TV.
But what is the worst, is the fact the the anti prop 23 crowd has abandoned all pretense of it being about science related to global warming. Instead, they are focusing on making the issues about pollution and what they call “dirty energy”. Then, they tug at emotional heartstrings. For example, have a look at this ad where the American Lung Association prostitutes itself for the anti prop 23 campaign. This ad has been getting constant airplay:
Direct link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eEmXlJ-Gts
The kid with the inhaler is a nice touch, don’t you think? There’s no science here, AB32 it’s about limiting CO2 and other GHG’s, not particulates! Kids don’t need inhalers for 390 ppm of CO2! And I used to think the Lung Association was a straight shooter. With this ad, they’ve reached a slimy low. They are off my list of charities now. They should be off everyone’s.
And it gets worse. This screwball advertising focus on “dirty energy” and “dirty pollution”, problems that have already been mostly solved in California and have little to do with GHG’s like CO2, has been so intense that it’s illegally spilled over into the ballot language itself.
The Sacramento Bee reports:
Ballots printed for the county’s roughly 380,000 registered voters say Proposition 23 would suspend laws requiring “major polluters” to report and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. That language was thrown out by a Sacramento superior court judge, who ordered several edits to the original language drafted by the attorney general’s office, including changing “major polluters” to “major sources of emissions.”
The Proposition 23 campaign has demanded that the county “take immediate steps to reprint the ballots remaining to be sent to vote by mail voters as well as ballots to be distributed on election day.”
“Fresno County is a county of significant size in California and in a close election, its vote, now tainted by this serious error, could call into question the state results and possibly give rise to an election contest and require a new statewide election on Proposition 23,” attorney Colleen C. McAndrews wrote in a letter to the Fresno elections officials.
According to Paul Chesser in the American Spectator:
Officials say it’s too late to do anything about the 140,000 mail-in ballots that have already been distributed, and that they will post signs with the correct language at polling places.
Well la dee dah, what if Prop 23 loses by about 100,000 votes? Do we get a do-over? A month ago, the LA Times reported Prop 23 was in a dead heat.
Now the LA Times says support for Prop 23 is slipping:
Education mattered more than income in the survey. Among likely voters with college degrees, 55% opposed Proposition 23, as opposed to 37% of those with a high school degree or less. But there was no significant difference between those earning more than $80,000 a year, or less than $40,000
But there’s that education issue again. and as pointed out in our recent WUWT profile of the thoughts of Dr. Roger Pielke Jr., the haves versus the have-nots of education are greatly outnumbered:
So it’s still a crapshoot in my book. And that’s why the legal battle over the ballot language could be very important.
There’s nothing good I can say about the debate surrounding Prop 23. There’s been a lot of dirty pool played. I was invited to be in a community leaders debate on Prop 23 by my local Chico State University, but they balked and I was disinvited when I said I wanted to show some slides, even though there were no caveats on presentation style in the invitation. Plus the student debate just a couple of hours before, in the very same room, organized by the very same people, used slides. But I couldn’t?
What would I have shown? Well, in additional to showing the unemployment slide (above) there’s really only two slides and one news story that matter to the faulty science behind California’s AB 32 global warming law.
Here’s what I would have talked about if I was allowed:
1. I would have shown a screencap of this story in the San Francisco Chronicle:

And pointed out or read these pertinent passages:
The pollution estimate in question was too high – by 340 percent, according to the California Air Resources Board, the state agency charged with researching and adopting air quality standards. The estimate was a key part in the creation of a regulation adopted by the Air Resources Board in 2007, a rule that forces businesses to cut diesel emissions by replacing or making costly upgrades to heavy-duty, diesel-fueled off-road vehicles used in construction and other industries.
…
The setbacks in the Air Board’s research – and the proposed softening of a landmark regulation – raise questions about the performance of the agency as it is in the midst of implementing the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 – or AB32 as it is commonly called, one of the state’s and nation’s most ambitious environmental policies to date.
The 340% error really calls the regulatory authority of CARB into question.
2. This graph about CO2 being logarithmic along with this text.
The greenhouse gasses keep the Earth 30° C warmer than it would otherwise be without them in the atmosphere, so instead of the average surface temperature being -15° C, it is 15° C. Carbon dioxide contributes 10% of the effect so that is 3° C. The pre-industrial level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was 280 ppm. So roughly, if the heating effect was a linear relationship, each 100 ppm contributes 1° C. With the atmospheric concentration rising by 2 ppm annually, it would go up by 100 ppm every 50 years and we would all fry as per the IPCC predictions.
But the relationship isn’t linear, it is logarithmic. In 2006, Willis Eschenbach posted this graph on Climate Audit showing the logarithmic heating effect of carbon dioxide relative to atmospheric concentration:
We’ve already gotten most of the warming CO2 will provide.
3. And finally this graph and map:
Goodrich (1996) showed the importance of urbanization to temperatures in his study of California counties in 1996. He found for counties with a million or more population the warming from 1910 to 1995 was 4F, for counties with 100,000 to 1 million it was 1F and for counties with less than 100,000 there was no change (0.1F).
I’d ask this question: How does a CO2 molecule know which county to heat the most?

But, as we’ve seen, the argument about global warming, AB32, and Prop 23 isn’t about science, it’s about emotions, icons, power, elitism, and money. Lots of money.
Whatever happens on election day, the issue is far from over. As I commented to Dr. Judith Curry recently, it is like the world’s longest Monopoly game.




> In fact, the anti prop 23 saturation is so bad, I’ll bet that in the Google ads below this, you’ll see a Prop 23 “Dirty Energy” ad appear.
Nope! Google et al think I live in Canterbury NH (nope, one town over), so I got a campaign add for Ann Kuster for US rep (she supports Cap and Trade). Her latest ads use Flash, so my flash block have saved them from me, but I checked last night and clicked to see if she has anything new.
BTW, New Hampshire isn’t as friendly to small business as it once was, but we’re craling out of the recession pretty well. I think the unemployment rate is 5.5%. Folks are looking for a route for a 2nd DC powerline from Hydroquebec (flooding indigenous tribal areas seems to be okay politically here). While there are rebates for wind and solar installations, I’ve testified against them at a state house hearing and will give the committee some of Joe D’Aleo’s latest writing on the matter.
We do have RGGI – the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, but given the price of CO2 permits lately it hasn’t been too bad. Plus, the money raised goes back toward various conservation initiatives like assistance for home insulation, so it’s not much more than a bad tax. Generally when home heating oil goes up, there’s a shift to burning more wood, a good negative feedback loop except for asthmatics.
Juraj V. says:
November 2, 2010 at 5:07 am
> In medieval times, angry mob went into mayor´s house in Prague and threw some clerks out of the windows. Just sayin’.
The New Hampshire state constitution, http://www.nh.gov/constitution/billofrights.html includes
[Art.] 10. [Right of Revolution.] Government being instituted for the common benefit, protection, and security, of the whole community, and not for the private interest or emolument of any one man, family, or class of men; therefore, whenever the ends of government are perverted, and public liberty manifestly endangered, and all other means of redress are ineffectual, the people may, and of right ought to reform the old, or establish a new government. The doctrine of nonresistance against arbitrary power, and oppression, is absurd, slavish, and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind.
June 2, 1784
I used to be a Californian. Now I live in Reno and work at a company that moved here from Sacramento. Geographers say I live in a desert, but the grass sure looks greener here to me.
I cast my vote against Harry Reid last week. Early voting is cool.
California has the right to self destruct. I am ready to let it.
Let them pass the pot bill and destroy the economy. The consequences of those actions will be the end of the state.
I will be a curious onlooker to see what happens when a state government collapses. The federal government will step in. Perhaps the smartest things would be to break the failed state up into 3-4 smaller states.
Guess it will depend if voters are “stoned” or not, if so, they will be seeing all “green”. 🙂
If you want to see a shining example of how this works, just take a look at the east coast and the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI). After a couple of years of auctioning CO2 allowances, the price per allowance has dropped to the lowest possible legal value of $1.86. In the last auction, all of the allowances for sale were not bought. At that price, it is not encouraging anyone to stop emitting CO2, so this becomes, you guessed it, a tax. The grand schemes for using the funds from RGGI for energy efficiency and environmental programs quickly went out the window when several state governments recently diverted millions of RGGI dollars to the general coffers to compensate for budget shortfalls.
So the low prices for allowances have kept the leakage out of RGGI rather low, terrific. Let’s see, low prices = lower impact to customers and business that also = low impact on deterring CO2 emissions. High CO2 prices = more pain for customers and business = more leakage out of the CO2 control region = low impact on deterring CO2 emissions. This dog don’t hunt. Consider this when voting on Prop 23.
California fell off my list of retirement locations due to the restrictions passed since the late 90s. I was actually looking at property along 49 as I wanted to watch the trees grow. I settled for rural Southeast US for the laid back life style and fewer regulations. Far enough inland to avoid the worst of the extreme weather that is possible near the coast.
Anthony: I agree that you should give more thought to relocation. I could give you a list of states that I considered.
You say “AB32 was passed by voters in 2006”. I thought “AB” stands for “Assembly Bill,” not a referendum. Wouldn’t it be more correct to say that “AB32 was passed by California legislators in 2006”?
for all you manufacturers and retirees – let me point out that Texas has no income tax, good property prices, and the best business climate in the nation!
This is where all the new growth is going to be, don’t stay in socialism’s graveyard, move to where the Future is being made!
@anthony
$0.40/kwh is bad. It’s $0.11/kwh from my electric cooperative here in Texas. There’s no cap on how much you can buy at that price either.
Do you have net metering there and if so how much does the electric company pay you for energy you produce and put onto the grid? Here it’s only about $0.05/kwh and that’s not economically viable. Breakeven is about $0.10/kwh not counting whatever labor it took to keep it all working. If it was $0.20/kwh that would be way beyond breakeven and I’d be buying solar panels like a mofo and be producing a nice supplementary income with them!
On the economic front it’s going to get worse when and if Obamacare kicks in. I have a good friend in San Antonio who started a temporary employment agency 20 years ago and grew it into a multi-million dollar employee-owned business with offices in three major cities. Obamacare is going to force him to provide health insurance to everyone who works there no matter how few hours per week they work. He can’t make the numbers work and will have to shut the business down.
I don’t know how that’s going to fall out nationwide but I suspect it won’t be pretty. For instance my old employer Dell Computer routinely goes through temp agencies for new permanent hires. They fill an open position through a temp agency with a contract which prohibits Dell from hiring that person directly for a period of 6-12 months. So Dell gets to test-drive a potential new employee for 6 months to a year without making any commitments or paperwork hassles. If they like the person then at the end of the temp contract they offer them a permanent position with all the great benefits offered by Dell including health insurance. I know lots of people who got hired that way and Dell is far from the only large company doing it so if Obamacare puts temp agencies out of business it’s going to put additional burdens on large companies who do much of their permanent hiring via temporary employment agencies.
Anthony-
Brad R. is correct. AB 32 was not passed by voters, it was passed by the State Legislature and then signed into law by Gov. Arnold.
REPLY: Yep, my bad, fixed. – A
I presume that California is like the UK, where the most ardent Greens are always tucked up in nice, safe government jobs.
The solution, therefore is simple. Pass the Green law, but only if the government leads the way with 25% job losses across the board. That will concentrate their minds.
.
I grew up in Northern California – lived there until I was 18 (24 years ago). I loved California; the smell of the forests, the gorgeous Sierra Nevada’s, the unbelievable redwoods, the beaches, the desert the rolling foothills, the unbelievable climate. I count myself very fortunate to have had the opportunity to live there.
I considered moving back to California when I finished college, but felt I couldn’t afford to live there. “Maybe someday I’ll make enough money to be able to afford it” I told myself. I pursued a career in manufacturing and it became quickly apparent decades ago, that I would never move back to California – there was no future there for me. Only constant hemorrhaging of jobs under regulations and unnecessary burdens.
I’ve never been able to call anywhere else I have lived “home”. But it is with regret that I have to say that I won’t be disappointed if I never return to visit there – to my home. All my friends have left. The city I grew up in is now a place I wouldn’t want to raise a family.
Alas, it didn’t have to be this way.
Regards
Jack
>>California is broke for just one reason. To quote Margaret
>>Thatcher “They’ve got the usual Socialist disease — they’ve
>>run out of other people’s money.”
How true.
But, like Europe, they (we) have also indulged in a slave economy for the last 15 years, because it made us feel rich, for a while. Our slaves don’t live at the bottom of the road, they live in China, and that’s where all the jobs have gone.
However, just as in Rome’s Slave Revolt, the slaves can sometimes flex their muscles. On this occasion, it is industrial and economic muscles, and they are devastating our economies. But it is not just jobs that are lost, entire technologies and industrial processes have been transported to China, and they may be impossible to retrieve back to the West. The UK, for instance, has not a clue how to produce a whole raft of high-tech electronic goods, so we are no better than Africa in many respects.
$0.40/KW? Really? Here, in Northern Virginia, we paid Dominion Electric $0.088/KWh for this past month of October, all in. I thought that was high.
You are more than welcome to leave California for a state that actually wants to have productive citizens. There are lots of choices available to you.
“wws says:
November 2, 2010 at 6:22 am
for all you manufacturers and retirees – let me point out that Texas has no income tax, good property prices, and the best business climate in the nation!
This is where all the new growth is going to be, don’t stay in socialism’s graveyard, move to where the Future is being made!”
Adding to the above comment: leave your politics in the old state, no need to kill the goose again and screw your new state.
Y’all bring those manufacturing jobs over to Texas. Our attorney general spends his time fighting those silly EPA regulators and revenuers. Heck, our state LOVES industry (something to do with jobs). Just make sure y’all leave your air heads behind.
John Cooper says:
November 2, 2010 at 5:07 am
Four Corners is on hold, the EPA pulled their permits when Obama took office. I live in N.E. Arizona. The SRP coal fired Power plants in Holbrook and St Johns supply power to S. Cal exclusively.
I did my duty for California and reduced my CO2 output by leaving the state in 2007. Last one out turn off any remaining power plants.
I completely agree about the dirty politics, nasty attack ads, and dis-information campaigns in California. The spin from organizations like the American Lung Association is unbelievable and the fact that voters fall for this nonsense is amazing.
However, California voters are unfortunately exposed to some of the most left wing news I’ve ever seen. Voters are denied balanced coverage of the issues and the fact that none of the news sources bothered to evaluate AB32 for its merits (assuming there are any) is absurd.
I have no idea why California wants to enact Cap and Trade when none of the other States are willing to support it. Who do they think they are going to assess other than California based companies? They can’t impose the Carbon Tax on any company outside of California or they will have violated the Interstate Commerce Act. So they are essentially imposing penalties on California Business and Agriculture.
This is the stupidest thing California has ever done. Talk about shooting yourself in the foot.
Five States have already lined up to sue California if AB32 enacts Cap and Trade and guess who will end up paying for the litigation.
What an absurd and wasteful mess!
Your argument seems really inconsistent Anthony – you say there’s no dirty energy problem in CA because only 18% electricity come from coal while simultaneously complaining electricity costs are going to rise. If the electricity sector is not the place to achieve emissions reductions then it going to come from a different sector – probably the transportation sector. As I’m sure you know, vehicle emissions are a key cause of SoCal’s record-breaking ozone levels. So, if you’re the American Lung Association and want to protect inner-city kids from involuntary exposure to harmful air quality – the Global Warming Solutions Act seems like a good proxy to achieve this goal.
Reduced ozone levels are a foreseeable positive externality of reducing CO2 emissions in CA – therefore it makes perfect since for the ALA to oppose Prop 23.
Instead, you call them prostitutes and say we should all stop donating to them. I think you’re way off on this one.
And here in middle of Norway the electricity prices soared to well over a 1 euro pr kw/h for several days during last winter. This lead to alot of people being unable to pay electricity bills.
40 cents per kwh! holy ____ why do you live there? Is it because you like the high prices? Wow at $.40/kwh even stupid things like wind power are almost competitive.
John Doyle,
Are you going to vote for the legal marijuana option? If so, I think it’s a bigger threat to lungs than ozone. And it still seems that AB23 is more about carbon than ozone.
If people want clean air they shove move out of the city. I work in San Francisco and I see it every day. The idiots who live in this sh_thole city want it all ways. They want free housing and food for the homeless, but they want the homeless out of SF. They want to keep all the business, but they don’t want all those nasty cars. They want gays to get married, as long as they stay in the Castro.
Prop 23 will fail because, as I’ve said time and time again, humans are stupid and lazy by default. They believe what they see the most on TV or hear on the radio. If enough people tell them the sky is pink, they’ll start to believe it.
Jack Edwards says:
November 2, 2010 at 6:48 am
“I grew up in Northern California – lived there until I was 18 (24 years ago). I loved California; the smell of the forests, the gorgeous Sierra Nevada’s, the unbelievable redwoods, the beaches, the desert the rolling foothills, the unbelievable climate. I count myself very fortunate to have had the opportunity to live there.”
I hear ya. I lived in SoCal near the coast from 1975-1993 about halfway between LA and Sandy Eggo. Some great years. There were no problemos with Mexico then either and we used to think nothing of driving across the border for just a few hours of shopping and a lobster dinner to a few days in an ocean-front hotel or motel.
Times sure have changed. I never regretted moving to Texas in 1993 though and now more than ever!