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The windmill tour has begun!

Groups, Legislators Call for Passage of 33% by 2020 Bill

Supersized Windmill on Capitol Steps Symbolizes State’s Giant Potential for Renewable Energy

Standing in front of a giant, fourteen foot wind turbine on the steps of the State Capitol, environmental groups and state legislators called for passage of a bill that will triple California’s use of clean, renewable electricity.  The prop, made by Environment California, is on a statewide tour traveling through cities from Sacramento to San Diego to bring attention to the 33% by 2020 renewable electricity standard policy moving through the state legislature.

“It is time for California to once again lead the country in renewable energy,” said Bernadette Del Chiaro, clean energy advocate with Environment California. “Tripling California’s renewable energy is key to reviving our economy, creating green jobs and solving global warming,”

There are two bills moving through the state legislature that would triple California’s renewable energy resources. SB 14, authored by Senator Simitian, and AB 64, authored by Assembly member Krekorian, would both require utilities to generate a minimum of 33% renewable electricity by 2020. Such a policy is considered a cornerstone of California’s AB 32 global warming plan promising to reduce carbon dioxide pollution by 21 million tons by 2020. It is also considered key to bringing green jobs to the state with estimates of 200,000 new jobs created as a result of the clean energy mandate.

“California should act sooner rather than later to increase the use of renewable energy,” said State Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto), author of SB 14.  “Renewable energy provides an immediate response to the threat of global warming, cuts air pollution, reduces our dependence on foreign energy and helps to limit the threat of another energy crisis.”

Joining Environment California and state legislators was a coalition of environmental groups including the Union of Concerned Scientists, Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, Clean Power Campaign, Coalition for Clean Air, California League of Conservation Voters and the Planning and Conservation League.

Environmentalists are concerned that opposition from utility companies has made passage of this renewable energy policy challenging. While there is no disagreement about the 33% by 2020 goal, utilities and others are pushing for amendments that environmentalists fear would weaken the bill significantly. For example, some are pushing for amendments that would change the definition of renewable energy to include trash incineration or large dams.

“If we’re serious about addressing global warming and leading the country toward a clean energy economy, we must send a strong bill to the governor that gets the job done,” said Dan Kalb, California Policy Manager at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “That means avoiding loopholes or vague off-ramps that could impede progress on renewables over the next decade.”

California’s current law requires the state’s utilities to reach 20% renewable energy by 2010. The 33% by 2020 would represent roughly a tripling of renewable energy in ten years. Twenty five states and the District of Columbia have renewable electricity standards. A 33% by 2020 in California would be the strongest and largest in the country.

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From the folks at environmentcalifornia.org doing their best to make California green.

Southern California Wind Farm

Southern California Wind Farm

In California, we are working to triple our use of wind and solar power — and that vote is imminent. Meanwhile in Congress, the Senate is taking up the global warming bill, which if passed, would revolutionize how we get electricity.

With all the troubles in Sacramento and Washington, D.C., it’s going to take extra public support to pass these groundbreaking measures.

But I have an idea to bring some much-needed visibility to the energy debate unfolding right now in both Sacramento and Washington, D.C. — set up a giant windmill in cities across California.

We’re taking a 14-foot windmill on tour, holding events all over the state. Can you donate $25 to help support the windmill tour?

Here’s our plan:

* Take our 14-foot windmill across the state, holding events in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco and finishing up in Sacramento.

* Gather thousands of petition signatures at these events and deliver them to lawmakers in Sacramento.

* Get hundreds of people to call their legislators while at these events.

All of this will cost about $10,000 — and that’s why I need your special support today.

The truth is, we need to up the ante. The opposition — utilities and oil coal companies — is fighting dirty.

Front groups, funded by coal companies have been sending members of Congress forged letters, pretending to be from groups like NAACP, telling them to oppose the global warming bill. Five new such letters were discovered this week.1

It seems that opponents from the fossil fuel industry will stop at nothing to make sure that any attempt to stop global warming and invest in clean energy fails. It’s our future they’re messing with.

That’s where you and I come in. We can show overwhelming support for clean energy.

Whether your donation is $25 or $250, your support brings a new energy future one step closer:

https://www.environmentcalifornia.org/action/energy/windmill-tour?id4=ES

Thanks,

Dan Jacobson
Environment California Legislative Director

http://www.environmentcalifornia.org

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