
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.




The California Air Resource Board (CARB) and some in the CA government are trying to get CA integrated into an international REDD scheme where we’d pay foreign countries huge amounts of money each year to store our carbon. This is nothing but a way to redistribute wealth from the ‘North’ to the ‘South.’ (And what happens to the CO2 when those trees die, does it all go back into the atmosphere? If so and we get connected into this REDD scheme, we should get refunds as those trees die…)
Here’s an opinion from the SacBee that says SB 375 along with AB 32 are going to reshape CA so that we will be ‘encouraged’ by these pieces of legislation to move into high density housing in cities.
http://www.sacbee.com/2010/11/01/3147922/dan-walters-new-big-four-promise.html
It’s going to take a lot more than blogging to stop these greens.
Dear George, just to be sure, I am aware of the high prices in Santa Barbara – and of course, I just lived there as a subtenant in Goleta, in the walking distance from UCSB (and KITP) and I only moved away from the place a few times – and in fact, I have only been to Santa Barbara proper just a few times.
These are pretty places. Santa Cruz had lots of those redwoods – but yes, it was a kind of wild nature, especially because I had to bike to the supermarket miles below the forest of the UCSC campus. 🙂
On the other hand, I think that I met the most obsessed left-wing ideologues in a different place – on a party in San Francisco itself. 🙂
Yes down with the evil coal fired electricity production due to not allowing for proper hydro from all the rivers.
And yes to pot smokers household production of weed for fun and profit.
I confess I had problem seeing the connection but no more, it’s plain as day. Only a weed smoking pothead for hippies could come up with the logic behind refusing river hydro because it would lessen the flow of water to the “medical” gardens, and because everyone knows pot smoke is not so emission-ly bad compared to smoke from evil coal fired power plants better then to smoke weed and not coal. Makes sense to some people obviously which would be the same people who apparently think their “medical” garden solar lamps are powered by the magical buzzing stuff from the wall socket.
Anthony: At least you get the satisfaction that your blog is read by more California voters than the town hall meeting would have reached.
I work for a company of 25 employees and we plan to leave California in about two years. Everybody will get good financial incentive to move with the company, but I expect to take a severe loss on my home sale.
P.S. I forgot, but thank you, Anthony, for a political post on election day (USA). It’s a good reminder to go vote and a nice opportunity for commenters to discuss politics directly and still be on topic :o)
I have been doing my part for the economy of California by clicking on the No on 23 ads and encouraging my friends to do so as well.
🙂
kramer says:
November 2, 2010 at 12:45 pm
The California Air Resource Board (CARB) and some in the CA government are trying to get CA integrated into an international REDD scheme where we’d pay foreign countries huge amounts of money each year to store our carbon.
========
Wow — that comment thru me.
California can not directly enter into trade agreements with other governments. The Constitution grants the federal government the power to enter into treaties and trade agreements and even under a “Fast Track” approval from the White House, Congress still needs to approve or reject the agreements.
Also, CARB is not a governmental agency. It doesn’t have much of any power outside of recommendations and findings which are now highly suspect due to their resent mistakes.
Unless I’m missing something, California does not have sufficient rights under the Constitution to enter into anything other than a promotional agreement with foreign powers. If they attempt to enter into such agreements related to CAP and Trade, they are likely to be quickly overturned by Congress or the Supreme Court.
I pay € 0,0829 + tax € 0,1326 = € 0,2155 / kWh for electric next year. ( 3 % less then now )
Thanks for the right wing government that was elected not so long ago the green movement didn’t get there eco madness made in to legislation.
I still hope the new government has the guts to build another nuclear power plant or two though.
@John from CA,
Actually, ARB is a governmental agency, duly created under California law. It is the Air Resources Board, with purposes to
“1. Attain and maintain healthy air quality.
2. Conduct research into the causes of and solutions to air pollution.
3. Systematically attack the serious problems caused by motor vehicles, which are a major cause of air pollution in the State.”
http://www.arb.ca.gov/html/brochure/arb.htm
ARB’s power is vast, and sweeping in its scope. It is authorized or mandated to not only write air emission regulations, but to enforce them through various Air Districts throughout the state.
“”””” Shub Niggurath says:
November 2, 2010 at 12:08 pm
The guy who made Predator and the guy who made Aliens are running California! “””””
Both totally dumb flicks; specially aliens. I do not watch movies that are filmed in based on a black cat in a cellar at midnight.
If I can’t see your critter up close and personal, I ain’t interested in your movie; even an idiot knows to turn the lights on.
Dan in California says on November 2, 2010 at 1:52 pm
Any hints on what company or area that is so I can watch for the canary to die?
Re, John from CA, November 2, 2010 at 2:21 pm;
Here’s some ARB and related links that talk about REDD and how California is looking at it.
http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/capandtrade/meetings/073010/notice.pdf
http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/capandtrade/meetings/073010/usepapresentation.pdf
http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/capandtrade/meetings/073010/gcfpresentation.pdf
And check out this excerpt from the third link:
Objective: to convene technical experts to develop regulatory design recommendations for incorporating REDD into emerging GHG compliance systems, with a specific focus on options for CA ARB’s Preliminary Draft Regulation (PDR) for Cap‐ and‐Trade.
Clearly CA is exploring the idea of becoming part of a REDD scheme. I suspect the goals to achieve before we get into a REDD system are a national cap-and-trade system and then the US tied into an international cap-and-trade system. But you never know…
Intersting take on Proposition 23 from the BBC:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11654809
All sorts of ‘ballot initiatives’ detailed, like the internationally-significant Multnomah Casino, but a certain Proposition that could have ramifications far away isn’t even listed. Good to see that the alleged new even-handed approach to AGW issues has swept through the Corporation…
*sigh* I think we in California are doomed to be the bad example that sets the rest of the country straight. If I’m the last one, I’ll turn out the lights–er, blow out the candles–when I leave. 🙂
I concure with your assesment of the pac ads.
Watching our local and state election campaines unfold, I saw numerous, very negative adds on TV made by third parties. It occured to me that the negative adds were paid for by establishment types trying to protect their status quo. I’m not particularly fond of the status quo in politics right now so I decided to not vote for the lesser of two evils like the establishment wanted but for the greater of two evils! Honestly nobody can be as evil as the PAC comercials make out the other guy to be. The next person I vote for for president is going to be the kind of person that clubs baby harp seals to death, trips little old ladies as they push their walkers down the isle and eats Sweetbread and Fava beans in front of Hanable Lecter without sharing; at least according to the PACs.
“Djozar says:
November 2, 2010 at 7:16 am
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.”
Texas is first on our list. I wonder what the unemployment rate in California will be in two years?
“Any hints on what company or area that is so I can watch for the canary to die?”
We employ 100. I’ll let you know after we move. I don’t want our company to be made an example of, Soviet-style.
Atlas is shrugging. California will be one of the first to go down.
Looks like Prop 23 has gone down in green flames. What are them folks in Cafilornia smokin’ these days? {Yes … I spelled it Cafilornia}
I’m planning an escape 2 to 3 years hence. Sooner if I can manage it.
I’d love to hear opinions on great places to relocate (business-friendly climate, decent weather, good scenery, etc).
“California is poised to kill the goose that laid the golden state egg.” (Anthony Watts)
“Killing the goose that lays the golden egg is a viable political strategy, so long as the goose does not die before the next election and no one traces the politicians’ fingerprints on the weapon.” (Thomas Sowell, Applied Economics)
It’s circa 1975 in California. Just as New York City lived in a dream world then, California lives in a fantasy world now. As the state careens towards bankruptcy, its own voters pile on greater energy costs on itself via Prop 23 while at the same time voting itself ever higher taxes via Prop 25. The middle class of the state will flee to Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Colorado and other more welcoming environs. As for the rest, they will beg for Obama and the feds for a bailout. While Jerry Ford said to NYC to “drop dead” without compunction, Obama will tell Jerry Brown and the rest of the California clowns that he cannot help them. Thus reality finally comes to the Fantasy State.
The States have been said to play a role as experimental laboratories of national policy.
Economic seppuku (aka hari-kari) has not yet been tried in a state as large as California. An interesting experiment, this.
Ahh yes. I can already hear the heavy footprints of companies headed for the border and beyond.
I personally was waiting to found an entrepreneurial venture until after the election. Given the outcomes of the elections here, I am proud to announce that my new LLC will call TENNESSEE home. No state income tax, cheap gas and labor and energy, and none of the gazillion regulatory restrictions that have strangled California’s economy to beyond dead.
What was once the promised land is now nothing more than a big promissary note that will never be repaid. I refuse to participate in that futility. Later Gate-ers…
A sad state of affairs for democracy…..
As opposed to making people go out to vote, why not just count the money raised for the campaigns? As is the case with the last federal election, the one with the biggest bank account wins.
Bob.