CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHEN IDEOLOGY COLLIDES WITH
REALITY”
There can be few better examples of ideologically convinced
politicians running head-on into reality than a new California law known in the
Legislature as AB 1346.
This bill, signed into law in September by Gov. Gavin Newsom,
is the personification of today’s faddish hostility to everything fossil fuel
by the Democrats who dominate California government.
These ideologues want to ban natural gas appliances from new
construction. They want new cars to be all electric before 2040, even if few
have the range to travel from one end of California to another without long
stops for recharging. And they are getting their way.
Their latest step in this direction is so extreme that
even the new law’s backers
weren’t quite sure it could be accomplished in the two-year time frame they called
for. So they included an almost unprecedented “out” for some of the gasoline-
or natural gas-powered devices they seek to ban: If the technology doesn’t
exist to replace the affected machines with all-electric ones by 2024, the old
types can be used and sold until such technology appears.
News reports on this bill said it bans new gas-fueled lawn
mowers, leaf blowers, off-road engines, pressure washers, chain saws, weed
trimmers and even golf carts. Few mentioned it also bans gas-powered
generators.
Some of that technology exists right now. Electric lawn
mowers have been around for a generation or more. Electric leaf blowers exist
in brands as well-known as Toro and Ace Hardware, for just two examples. They
are not as powerful as their gasoline-powered counterparts, but make far less
noise.
So don’t expect lawn and garden shops to carry gasoline
mowers or leaf blowers beyond the next two years. But do expect runs on them
during the last few months of 2023, as homeowners and contractors seek to stock
up before the ban takes effect.
One form of irony here is that especially in times of
electricity shortage, “peaker” power plants, most running on fossil fuel
natural gas, will be producing much of the juice powering all the allegedly emission-free
electric machines now mandated.
But the biggest irony and lack of realism in this
one-size-fits-all law comes with generators. These machines produce electric
power that’s more vital today than ever before, in part because of
unpredictable, inevitable “public safety power shutoffs” in the state’s many
fire-prone regions.
While there are a few solar-powered generators on the market,
they are not very useful after sundown.
That’s one reason many hospitals, homes and businesses in potential
wildfire areas have stocked up on gasoline-powered generators. Even if an
electric-powered generator existed today, to be useful it would have to produce
far more power than it burns. If there were such a machine on a large scale, it
might be the solution to every energy shortage in the world.
Meanwhile, gasoline-run generators are right on the list with
the other banned items. It’s a pretty solid bet that the “until technology
exists” exception in this law will have to apply to generators.
The plain intent of the new law is to push technology to new
horizons. California has done that before, establishing cleaner-car standards
that produced the catalytic converter, electric cars and more even when
manufacturers insisted it was impossible. Once they realized that if they
didn’t produce these things, new companies would and existing brands would lose
out on the California car market, companies like General Motors, Toyota and
Honda came up with vehicles that met California standards in a timely way.
But what about generators? One reader from Hanford, a contractor,
noted in a letter that hotels, assisted living homes and other major facilities
are required to maintain existing generators – gasoline or diesel – for fire
safety and to survive power outages.
Said the reader, “Somebody better look at the reliability of
any new technology before jumping on this bandwagon. In these situations (and
in public safety power shutoffs), you are dealing with someone’s life.”
The reader is correct. This new law will clearly work for machines
like lawn mowers and leaf blowers. But ideology drove its authors to make it
too broad for public safety, and their convictions will soon collide with
reality.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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