The Los Angeles City Council took a major step Friday toward
making the city run on clean energy alone.
The Council directed the Los Angeles Department of Water and
Power (LADWP) to develop a plan for going 100 percent renewable, including
looking at where, when, and how the city should allocate resources to achieve
that goal.
In the motion, Councilmembers Paul Krekorian and Mike Bonin
wrote that “the city has an opportunity to re-create its utility in a way that
recognizes the potential for a fossil-free future, demonstrates global
leadership in its commitment to clean energy, and protects ratepayers from the
increasing costs of carbon-based fuels.” It passed unanimously, 12–0, on
Friday. (Three council members were not in attendance.)
Before the vote, Krekorian told the council it was an
important step for the city in its efforts to help combat climate change. An
effort, he added, that can be successful — comparing it to Los Angeles’ efforts
to reduce smog when he was a kid in the 1970s.
“During the summer, we would have to curtail outdoor
activities because of secondhand smog alerts. It is really noteworthy that we
have made a lot of progress by then,” Krekorian said.
He also praised Los Angeles’ previous efforts to combat
climate change, including switching to LED lighting, cleaning up the Port of
Los Angeles, expanding electric vehicle use, investing in efficiency, and
committing to eliminating the use of coal for electricity by 2025.
“Those were all great steps, but the biggest, boldest, most
important thing this city can do to improve local air quality and reduce our
carbon footprint… is to entirely eliminate fossil fuels as a source of
electricity generation in this city,” he said.
Although some speakers during the public comment period of
the meeting said the council needed to set a firm date on accomplishing the
goal, Krekorian argued moving forward with a plan was more effective than
setting arbitrary timelines.
“What this motion does is set this city on a path not just
towards setting that goal but toward achieving that goal,” he said.
LADWP will now officially undertake a research partnership
with the Department of Energy, local utilities and regulators, and area
universities — although work has already begun on the project, city officials
said.
Councilman Bonin added that addressing climate change is an
urgent issue.
“Global warming is happening at such a rapid rate — and I
represent coastal areas. Part of my district will be underwater by the end of
the century” if we do not reduce greenhouse gas emissions, he said.
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