
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.




“Never mind that other countries that tried that have wound up in financial ruin (Spain, anyone?)”
Financial ruin in Spain isn’t directly related to the “going green” madness, but this madness is already working as a big lock that will prevent economic recovery in Spain for decades to come.
tommy says:
November 2, 2010 at 7:55 am
“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.”
No doubt. Almost all your domestic supply is hydroelectric and when that’s not sufficient it’s imported from a neighboring country but on the flip side you export to those same countries when there’s an excess of hydro. Prices evidently aren’t well regulated so it’s feast or famine depending on precipitation. I’d be interested in knowing the least you ever pay for electricity since wikipedia says
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_sector_in_Norway
If wikipedia is not accurate or not telling the whole story you should go edit it.
“tommy says:
November 2, 2010 at 7:55 am
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.”
I hope no deaths resulted from people not being able to afford to heat their homes. That would have pleased the neo-Malthusian eco-fascists.
Electricity @ur momisugly $0.065 KWh here in Ontario Canada. Not to worry, it’s going to go up…soon. Citizens stopping installation of natural gas plants, government shutting down all coal plants and investing $billions in wind. We are fighting the big bad global warming monster too…..how sad. Good luck California.
Here’s what the idealists in California expect to happen if (and when) Prop 23 fails. The key paragraphs:
Saving California’s economy with AB 32 and the defeat of Prop 23 is supposed to ride on developing and installing the means to provide renewable electricity, more efficient vehicles, and (someday, somehow but nobody knows when or how, exactly), solving that pesky storage problem to make energy cheap. There are those who talk about investments in smart grids, and white roofs, and reflective asphalts, and cool cars (in the hot temperature sense), and recycling all our organic wastes into bio-gas or cellulosic ethanol, and that these cutting-edge technologies will forever make oil and natural gas a thing of the past.
Maybe so. But, California has to exist in the real world, where there are other states, and other countries where low-cost energy powers the factories, homes, vehicles, and businesses. Goods and services provided by the lowest-cost methods are available in the market. While it is true that Californians are afforded the opportunity to help unfortunate producers in remote areas of the world, and pay a premium price for the privilege of purchasing their products, it is not entirely clear that anyone else in the world will return the favor and buy high-priced California products or services as a charitable gesture to encourage the noble use of renewable energy.
http://sowellslawblog.blogspot.com/2010/10/showdown-over-prop-23-and-ab-32-in.html
California has become something resembling an East European socialist republic under the Soviet Union. A gerrymandered political system has given us a government that resembles an entrenched, one-party dictatorship.
AB32 was a power grab by the entrenched green-leftist elite. It basically says that the state gets to review and can veto all development regardless of what local authorities say on the matter. And if they can’t defeat them outright, the state will be able to tie up any and all projects for years.
I will be retiring elsewhere. Kentucky, where I went to college, is just about right.
Flyover country is the last bastion of civilized culture in this country.
“The kid with the inhaler is a nice touch, don’t you think?”
Nice to see the “kid” doing so well after the CFC-using albuterol inhalers were banned at the behest of the environmentalists. The replacement inhalers aren’t quite as good, but we’re saving the planet!
California Assembly Bill 32 passed in 2006 by the legislature and signed by the Governor is simply a state government tax subsidized green market disaster bill which will result in huge free market jobs losses, massive energy cost increases with the imposition of intrusive and burdensome regulations affecting all California’s citizens and businesses. AB 32 is completely impotent and inept at making any reductions in global emissions which are driven and dominated by the burgeoning energy consumption of the worlds developing nations. AB 32 will however hasten the looming bankruptcy of California which may finally cause needed corrective actions to occur.
Wondering Aloud says:
November 2, 2010 at 8:14 am
“Wow at $.40/kwh even stupid things like wind power are almost competitive.”
Aha, you’ve got that then? First increase the price so it is unbelievebly expencive…..then argue that, look, alternative energy is competitive!
Post Modern Logic.
tommy says on November 2, 2010 at 7:55 am
But, but, but, Norway is supposed to be one of those intelligently managed socialist paradises. That’s not supposed to happen there! You must be mistaken or else you are some sort of evil capitalist troll.
For those who want to follow along with the Prop 23 results, minute by minute, this website shows the vote tally.
http://vote.sos.ca.gov/maps/ballot-measures/23/
RE:
Kevin_S says:
November 2, 2010 at 7:11 am
Adding to the above comment: leave your politics in the old state, no need to kill the goose again and screw your new state
______________________________________________
Take serious note of Kevin’s comment. I live in an area of Washington State that used to be semi-rural and politically conservative. People benefited from an abundance of common sense. Then we became a popular place for Californians to relocate because “the weather is great and it’s so inexpensive and and the people are so friendly.”
Ironically, those transplanted Californians’ most common refrain is “but in California we did it this way…..”
Their ever increasing numbers (and votes) have changed our area to what I now call Mini-California North. So Anthony aside, be careful what you wish for, because your state/county/town could be next.
“….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…”
Of course it is impossible. If you think they’re wrong, wait ’til you see what the legislature passes next. We’re headed for 16% unemployment in California by 2013. This is not unintended consequences of green laws; it’s their objective.
Democrats will take the blame for skyrocketing electricity rates. Toronto, Canada just replaced their liberal mayor with conservative Rob Ford in a landslide partly as a backlash to rapidly rising electricity rates from feed in tariffs from wind and solar projects and other elite green policies.
Patrick Davis, John Cooper,
Quite correct in that we get significant power from our neighbors. But notice that AB32 legislation presumes to regulate that power, even though it originates in other states:
(m) “Statewide greenhouse gas emissions” means the total annual emissions of greenhouse gases in the state, including all emissions of greenhouse gases from the generation of electricity delivered to and consumed in California, accounting for transmission and distribution line losses, whether the electricity is generated in state or imported. Statewide emissions shall be expressed in tons of carbon dioxide equivalents. (emphasis added)
The embargoing of power deliveries by Arizona that was facetiously suggested earlier
this year in a different dispute may well be partially accomplished by California itself.
Well Valero and Tesoro, the two Texas “big oil” bad guys that are the alleged promoters of prop 23 (according to the antis) happen to be two main suppliers of energy to California. And the reason we need to use Texas energy, is the greenies won;’t permit the use of California’s own extensive oil and natural gas supplies.
So T&V have very few jobs in California so neither AB-32 nor prop 23 have much impact on those two companies; who aren’t producing fuel in California; just selling it. Prop 23 has the ear marks of the TEA party; it is mostly a grass roots people effort to save small business and jobs in California.
Hi Tech in California is less and less about making hardware; and more and more about software and both of those can more easily be done in Bangladesh or communist red China; who couldn’t give a rip about California’s enviro-wackos.
And after years of campaigning (and hard work) by both California Senators, Feinstein and Boxer, to protect the delicate fabric and ecology of the desert South West; in just the twinkling of an eye the same people want to give Federal lands amounting to 20% more than the entire Artic National Wildlife Refuge of Alaska to a new breed of land rapists in the form of the silicon goons of Si-valley and their “Green free clean renewable” energy plans. Well actually those programs for 23 million acres are already approved; and unlike in ANWR where “Big oil” wanted to drill on 2400 acres; the desert energy farms will require total human exclusion from the entire area because of their vulnerability to vandalism or terrorism.
California used to be the world’s 6th largest economy; and under the current Sacramento legislature, and girlie man Governors like Schwarzenegger; who sleeps with “the enemy”, we have slowly climbed up to where we now can proudly claim to be the 8th largest economy in the world; or did we reach #9 already. If prop 23 fails, we will climb that ladder very quickly. When AB-32 was passed unemployment in Ca was 4.8%. Prop 23 simply wants to delay the implementation of carbon tax penalties on ALL CO2 emitters (has nothing to do with environmental pollution laws, which haven’t changed) until the unemploymnet level which currently is over 12% and more likely 17%, drops below 5.5% and stays there for four consecutive quarters; in other words till after the current depression.
Most of the job creators in California can do their work anywhere on the planet; they won’t do it here.
“”” Luboš Motl says:
November 2, 2010 at 12:53 am
I’ve spent one year in California in total – half a year in Santa Cruz, half a year in Santa Barbara (besides a few visits elsewhere). So of course I have learned not only about its pleasant weather and sunny beaches but also about the vigorous political activists I met at parties, at universities, and so on. “””
Well sadly, you spent your time in two of the nuttiest places in the entire State of California.
Santa Barbara, is a totally unique place; an absolute magnet for the over-rich Hollywood types and their idle ilk (no I don’t begrudge them their wealth; if folks are dumb enough to pay for their product, why should I care.)
But SB has a very limited space, between the ocean and the coastal mountains, so real estate prices are through the roof.
As a result policemen; firemen, school teachers, and similar essential community employees simply cannot afford to live in the very city they maintain; and they basically have to reside in that pestilence that is the LA north corridor with its impossible commute. I simply refuse to drive Hiway-1 to the LA area; because it is such a pain to get through Santa Barbara’s bottleneck. Hey it’s also a school town; so full of young mushheads who can solve all the world problems.
footnote to my earlier post:
I’m completely uncertain who anyone can educate Democrats in this State but here are the Poll results from Pew Oct. 2010:
Of those believing Global Warming is a Very Serious, Somewhat Serious, or Not Too Serious problem.
Is there solid evidence the Earth is warming [due to human activity]?
Tea Party Republicans: 84% No
Republicans: 71% No
Democrats: 31% No
Independents: 48% No
How serious a problem?
Tea Party Republicans: 74% Not too serious or Not a problem
Republicans: 57% Not too serious or Not a problem
Democrats: 15% Not too serious or Not a problem <– Yikes
Independents: 35% Not too serious or Not a problem
Do scientists agree the Earth is getting warmer?
Tea Party Republicans: 71% No
Republicans: 58% No
Democrats: 32% No
Independents: 45% No
On the plus side, with the Dems getting crushed in the House, and Pelosi getting booted, there won’t be anymore Federal bailouts for California. So they will finally have to live with the consequences of their socialism and not past the bill on to the rest of us.
The future outcome of AB32 is already here in Canada.
http://www.yorkregion.com/news/local/article/896559–skyrocketing-energy-costs-exacts-toll-on-poor-social-services
California democrats should prepare for the coming backlash.
All credit to the commenter upthread who pointed out that we Californians had AB32 inflicted upon us with the enthusiastic support of Governor Schwarzenegger, who signed it into law.
It’s also worthy of note that Schwarzenegger appointed Mary Nichols to head the California Air Resources Board — i.e., chose an arrogant limousine-liberal lawyer with not an iota of technical or scientific background.
(It was on the watch of Nichols that outsiders found a senior CARB scientist was completely unqualified for his position, holding a two-week “doctorate” from a known diploma mill. And this charlatan was then allowed to continue his employment with the Board!)
It would be simpler if all of the enemies of common sense and arithmetic were all concentrated in one political party. Very sadly, this is not the case. Schwarzenegger vividly proves the point.
BOOOO!…You are doomed to be haunted by Big Foot carbon prints and Big oil gas prices and delicious Cap&Trade phantom taxes!
Well, housing and energy prices are a lot lower around here as well as no shortage of fresh water. We have just as much beach front property and like in California most of it is too cold to swim in.
Our politicians are a little bit stupid but usually not as far out as CA. Maybe you should relocate your business. If the warmists believed their own story they’d all be moving to Wisconsin.
The guy who made Predator and the guy who made Aliens are running California!
yah, what kind of idiots keep voting these bobblehead actors into public office? reagan, bono, thompson, schwarzenegger…i really just don’t get it.