Policymakers are realizing that changing how the world’s fifth-largest economy produces and consumes energy is a massively complicated undertaking – and costs a lot of money.
Amid rising prices and a severe affordability crisis, Sacramento should be looking for ways to provide relief to working families. But instead, the state’s energy policies are only making matters worse.
Last year, Governor Newsom signed a law requiring oil companies to disclose costs and profit margins to the California Energy Commission. Here’s what it shows.
California is aggressively shutting down in-state oil and gas production, leading to higher gas prices as Californians are forced to rely on costly oil imports for basic energy needs.
Failing policies have led to a 43% decline in local oil production under Governor Newsom, forcing the state to rely on an expensive foreign oil supply chain for basic energy needs.
Experts agree the governor’s reckless shutdown agenda will extend the state’s reliance on volatile foreign energy markets and harm low-income Californians the most.
The governor has moved aggressively to shut down oil production, but government forecasts show the state will still need 11.5 billion gallons of gas and diesel in 2035.