Title: Climate Action Planning in the States
1Climate Action Planning in the States
Maryland Commission on Climate Change First
Meeting June 18, 2007 Baltimore, MD
Kenneth A. Colburn Center for Climate
Strategies kcolburn_at_symbioticstrategies.com 617-78
4-6975
Thomas D. Peterson Center for Climate
Strategies tdp1_at_mac.com 703-691-2199
2Why Are States Leading on Climate?
- States have always led
- Origin of innovative approaches (Laboratories)
- Where consensus is built and conflicts resolved
- Where implementation really happens
- Prior lead-by-example success (Acid Rain, toxics,
Hg, cars, etc.) - Playing Offense
- Can shape climate policy favorably
- Get head start on technological opportunities and
markets - Get savings, productivity, security, and health
co-benefits - See political opportunity
- Gretsky Skate to where the puck is going to
be. - Playing Defense
- Want to avoid severe climate impacts
- Contribute significant GHG emissions
- Know climate policy is coming
- Gough If youre not at the table, youre on
the menu.
3States Can Shape Policy
- More pioneers than laboratories where real
policy gets hammered out
4Economic Opportunity in the Offing
- International carbon market 2005 12 B 2006
29 B 2007(est) 31 B Point Carbon - US clean-tech investment 1.5 billion 2005
2.9 billion 2006 projected to hit 8.7 billion
by 2009 Margaret Beckett - 21 trillion energy sector investment from now
thru 2030 International Energy Agency - Energy largest economic opportunity this
century John Doerr (VC/BOD Google, Amazon) - A tectonic force that will change the economic
landscape firms that recognize early, and
respond imaginatively and constructively will
create opportunities for themselves and thereby
prosper Lehman Brothers (Business of Climate
Change)
5Political Benefits Increasingly Clear
OMalley MD Join RGGI
Schwarzenegger CA State Cap
Richardson NM New Targets
Patrick MA Join RGGI
1. Rachel Carson 20. John James Audubon 27.
John Muir 29. Arnold Schwarzenegger 48. Jane
Goodall 49. Henry David Thoreau 81. Mahatma
Gandhi 89. Dalai Lama
Napolitano AZ New Targets
Spitzer NY 100 RGGI Auction 200 million
Ritter CO GHG Market
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7Comprehensive Climate Plans
9 States
8Plans - Recent Underway
20 States
9www.azclimatechange.us
285,000 jobs
10Arizona Climate Plan Results
- 49 Recommendations 45 Unanimous
- NPV 5.5 Billion Savings
11New Mexico Climate Plan Results
- 69 Recommendations 67 Unanimous
- NPV 2.1 Billion Savings
12California Its Already Working
AB-32 (Statewide GHG cap) will add 4 Billion and
83,000 jobs. (UC-Berkeley)
12
13GHG Reduction Strategies
14Partial Efforts Possible Plans
29 States
15Some Initial Contact
37 States
16Comparison to National Bills
17Leadership States Wedges
Conclusion Closing the gap is quite doable
18National Gross-Up of States Actions
NPV 2007-2020 -117 Billion
19Strength in Numbers
- Regional multi-state efforts
- Potential game changers
- No longer just the usual suspects
- NEG/ECP, RGGI, WCI, The Climate Registry,
international efforts - Keys
- Carbon fungibility (a ton is a ton)
- Uniformity reciprocity
- Transparency
- International component (e.g., BC, Sonora in WCI)
could lead, expedite development of a global
climate market, solution
20The Global Picture
- Could be a 1 trillion, state-driven carbon
market. - Key to China India What offsets to allow?
21CCS Climate Action Planning Process
- Tailor the process to the specific state
- Convene stakeholder group
- Develop GHG Inventory Forecast
- Review Catalog of State Actions (300)
- Identify priority policy options
- Develop straw proposals for analysis
- Quantify costs/savings GHG reductions
- Review and revise as necessary
- Vote aggregate results final report of
recommendations back to Governor
22CCS Process Coverage
- All sectors, all implementation approaches
23Policy Matters!
Source David Goldstein
24It Can Be Done
25Thank Youfor Your Timeand Attention!