California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2593 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate June 15, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2593Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner HorvathFebruary 18, 2022 An act to amend Section 30253 of, and to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of, Sections 30100.3 and 30237 to, the Public Resources Code, relating to coastal resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2593, as amended, Boerner Horvath. Coastal resources: coastal development permits: blue carbon demonstration projects: new development: greenhouse gas emissions.Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.This bill would require authorize the commission to authorize blue carbon demonstration projects, as defined, in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies. The bill would, among other things, authorize the commission to require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to build or contribute to a blue carbon project, as defined. demonstration project.The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate minimize greenhouse gas emissions.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands in some instances capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e)Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.(e) However, according to the State Air Resources Boards draft 2022 scoping plan update, blue carbon is not currently included in the states natural and working lands inventory due, in part, to the limited availability of data and methodologies to inventory the stored carbon.(f) Given the potential of blue carbon sequestration, it is critically important to conduct blue carbon demonstration projects in California to help generate the data and knowledge to understand how blue carbon may contribute to the state achieving its carbon neutrality and climate resilience goals.SEC. 2. Section 30100.3 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.(c) The use of diverse native species.SEC. 3. Section 30237 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.SEC. 2.SEC. 4. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.SEC. 3.Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of the Public Resources Code, to read:9.Blue Carbon Projects30275.For purposes of this article,Blue carbon project means the creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.30276.(a)(1)The commission shall require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2)This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
1+Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2593Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner HorvathFebruary 18, 2022 An act to amend Section 30253 of, and to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of of, the Public Resources Code, relating to coastal resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2593, as amended, Boerner Horvath. Coastal resources: coastal development permits: blue carbon projects. projects: new development: greenhouse gas emissions.Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.This bill would require the commission to require an applicant with a public project, as defined, project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to a blue carbon project, as defined. The bill would provide that, when possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program, as provided.The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e) Public agencies, with the assistance of existing grant funds, Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.SEC. 2. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.SEC. 2.SEC. 3. Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of the Public Resources Code, to read: Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. (d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
22
3- Amended IN Senate June 15, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2593Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner HorvathFebruary 18, 2022 An act to amend Section 30253 of, and to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of, Sections 30100.3 and 30237 to, the Public Resources Code, relating to coastal resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2593, as amended, Boerner Horvath. Coastal resources: coastal development permits: blue carbon demonstration projects: new development: greenhouse gas emissions.Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.This bill would require authorize the commission to authorize blue carbon demonstration projects, as defined, in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies. The bill would, among other things, authorize the commission to require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to build or contribute to a blue carbon project, as defined. demonstration project.The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate minimize greenhouse gas emissions.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2593Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner HorvathFebruary 18, 2022 An act to amend Section 30253 of, and to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of of, the Public Resources Code, relating to coastal resources. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2593, as amended, Boerner Horvath. Coastal resources: coastal development permits: blue carbon projects. projects: new development: greenhouse gas emissions.Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.This bill would require the commission to require an applicant with a public project, as defined, project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to a blue carbon project, as defined. The bill would provide that, when possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program, as provided.The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Senate June 15, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022
5+ Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022
66
7-Amended IN Senate June 15, 2022
87 Amended IN Assembly April 18, 2022
98
109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
1110
1211 Assembly Bill
1312
1413 No. 2593
1514
1615 Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner HorvathFebruary 18, 2022
1716
1817 Introduced by Assembly Member Boerner Horvath
1918 February 18, 2022
2019
21- An act to amend Section 30253 of, and to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of, Sections 30100.3 and 30237 to, the Public Resources Code, relating to coastal resources.
20+ An act to amend Section 30253 of, and to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of of, the Public Resources Code, relating to coastal resources.
2221
2322 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2423
2524 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
27-AB 2593, as amended, Boerner Horvath. Coastal resources: coastal development permits: blue carbon demonstration projects: new development: greenhouse gas emissions.
26+AB 2593, as amended, Boerner Horvath. Coastal resources: coastal development permits: blue carbon projects. projects: new development: greenhouse gas emissions.
2827
29-Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.This bill would require authorize the commission to authorize blue carbon demonstration projects, as defined, in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies. The bill would, among other things, authorize the commission to require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to build or contribute to a blue carbon project, as defined. demonstration project.The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate minimize greenhouse gas emissions.
28+Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.This bill would require the commission to require an applicant with a public project, as defined, project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to a blue carbon project, as defined. The bill would provide that, when possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program, as provided.The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.
3029
3130 Existing law, the California Coastal Act of 1976, among other things, requires anyone wishing to perform or undertake any development in the coastal zone, except as specified, in addition to obtaining any other permit required by law from any local government or from any state, regional, or local agency, to obtain a coastal development permit from the California Coastal Commission, as provided.
3231
33-This bill would require authorize the commission to authorize blue carbon demonstration projects, as defined, in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies. The bill would, among other things, authorize the commission to require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to build or contribute to a blue carbon project, as defined. demonstration project.
32+This bill would require the commission to require an applicant with a public project, as defined, project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions by building or contributing to a blue carbon project, as defined. The bill would provide that, when possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program, as provided.
3433
3534 The act requires that new development in the coastal zone comply with specified requirements, including, among other things, requirements intended to minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled, and, where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
3635
37-This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate minimize greenhouse gas emissions.
36+This bill would additionally require that new development mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.
3837
3938 ## Digest Key
4039
4140 ## Bill Text
4241
43-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands in some instances capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e)Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.(e) However, according to the State Air Resources Boards draft 2022 scoping plan update, blue carbon is not currently included in the states natural and working lands inventory due, in part, to the limited availability of data and methodologies to inventory the stored carbon.(f) Given the potential of blue carbon sequestration, it is critically important to conduct blue carbon demonstration projects in California to help generate the data and knowledge to understand how blue carbon may contribute to the state achieving its carbon neutrality and climate resilience goals.SEC. 2. Section 30100.3 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.(c) The use of diverse native species.SEC. 3. Section 30237 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.SEC. 2.SEC. 4. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.SEC. 3.Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of the Public Resources Code, to read:9.Blue Carbon Projects30275.For purposes of this article,Blue carbon project means the creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.30276.(a)(1)The commission shall require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2)This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
42+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e) Public agencies, with the assistance of existing grant funds, Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.SEC. 2. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.SEC. 2.SEC. 3. Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of the Public Resources Code, to read: Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. (d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
4443
4544 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4645
4746 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4847
49-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands in some instances capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e)Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.(e) However, according to the State Air Resources Boards draft 2022 scoping plan update, blue carbon is not currently included in the states natural and working lands inventory due, in part, to the limited availability of data and methodologies to inventory the stored carbon.(f) Given the potential of blue carbon sequestration, it is critically important to conduct blue carbon demonstration projects in California to help generate the data and knowledge to understand how blue carbon may contribute to the state achieving its carbon neutrality and climate resilience goals.
48+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e) Public agencies, with the assistance of existing grant funds, Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.
5049
51-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands in some instances capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e)Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.(e) However, according to the State Air Resources Boards draft 2022 scoping plan update, blue carbon is not currently included in the states natural and working lands inventory due, in part, to the limited availability of data and methodologies to inventory the stored carbon.(f) Given the potential of blue carbon sequestration, it is critically important to conduct blue carbon demonstration projects in California to help generate the data and knowledge to understand how blue carbon may contribute to the state achieving its carbon neutrality and climate resilience goals.
50+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.(b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.(c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.(e) Public agencies, with the assistance of existing grant funds, Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.
5251
5352 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5453
5554 ### SECTION 1.
5655
5756 (a) California has set the targets to reduce carbon emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.
5857
5958 (b) In 2020, Governor Gavin Newsom signed Executive Order No. N-82-20, directing the Natural Resources Agency, in consultation with other state agencies, to develop a Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy that serves as a framework to advance the states carbon neutrality goal and build climate resilience.
6059
6160 (c) Executive Order No. N-82-20 also set the goal to conserve at least 30 percent of state land and coastal waters by 2030 and a recent Natural Resources Agency report on implementation recognizes the need to restore degraded coastal habitats to capture carbon and mitigate climate change impacts.
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63-(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands in some instances capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.
62+(d) Blue carbon, carbon held and stored in coastal vegetation, such as seagrasses and wetlands, holds great potential to help the state meet its climate goals. Recent studies have found that coastal wetlands capture carbon at a greater rate than tropical forests and store three to five times more carbon per equivalent area than these forests.
6463
65-(e)Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.
64+(e) Public agencies, with the assistance of existing grant funds, Project proponents can help lead the states blue carbon efforts when they are developing projects in the coastal zone.
6665
66+SEC. 2. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
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69-(e) However, according to the State Air Resources Boards draft 2022 scoping plan update, blue carbon is not currently included in the states natural and working lands inventory due, in part, to the limited availability of data and methodologies to inventory the stored carbon.
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71-(f) Given the potential of blue carbon sequestration, it is critically important to conduct blue carbon demonstration projects in California to help generate the data and knowledge to understand how blue carbon may contribute to the state achieving its carbon neutrality and climate resilience goals.
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73-SEC. 2. Section 30100.3 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.(c) The use of diverse native species.
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75-SEC. 2. Section 30100.3 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:
68+SEC. 2. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
7669
7770 ### SEC. 2.
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79-30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.(c) The use of diverse native species.
72+30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
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81-30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.(c) The use of diverse native species.
74+30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
8275
83-30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.(c) The use of diverse native species.
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87-30100.3. Blue carbon demonstration project means the restoration of coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, wetlands and seagrasses, that can take up and sequester carbon. A blue carbon demonstration project is limited to all of the following:
88-
89-(a) Ecologically appropriate locations where the habitat or ecosystem had historically occurred and subsequently become degraded or removed.
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91-(b) The restoration of the habitat or ecosystem to its historical state to provide ecosystem services and habitat values, to the extent feasible.
92-
93-(c) The use of diverse native species.
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95-SEC. 3. Section 30237 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.
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97-SEC. 3. Section 30237 is added to the Public Resources Code, to read:
98-
99-### SEC. 3.
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101-30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.
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103-30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.
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105-30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.
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109-30237. (a) The commission may authorize blue carbon demonstration projects in order to demonstrate and quantify the carbon sequestration potential of these projects to help inform the states natural and working lands and climate resilience strategies.
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111-(b) The commission may require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, subtidal, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems to build or contribute to a blue carbon demonstration project.
112-
113-(c) The commission shall consult with the State Air Resources Board, the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Coastal Conservancy, the State Lands Commission, and other public entities, and seek consultation with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in developing the blue carbon demonstration project program.
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115-(d) Each blue carbon demonstration project shall be designed, monitored, and have sufficient data collected in order to demonstrate the carbon uptake and sequestration achieved. This shall include an evaluation of relevant factors affecting the permanence of the sequestration. The results shall be presented to the commission in a public hearing.
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117-SEC. 2.SEC. 4. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
118-
119-SEC. 2.SEC. 4. Section 30253 of the Public Resources Code is amended to read:
120-
121-### SEC. 2.SEC. 4.
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123-30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
124-
125-30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
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127-30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
76+30253. New development shall do all of the following:(a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.(b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.(c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.(e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
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13180 30253. New development shall do all of the following:
13281
13382 (a) Minimize risks to life and property in areas of high geologic, flood, and fire hazard.
13483
13584 (b) Assure stability and structural integrity, and neither create nor contribute significantly to erosion, geologic instability, or destruction of the site or surrounding area or in any way require the construction of protective devices that would substantially alter natural landforms along bluffs and cliffs.
13685
13786 (c) Be consistent with requirements imposed by an air pollution control district or the State Air Resources Board as to each particular development.
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139-(d) Minimize energy consumption consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and vehicle miles traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. traveled.
88+(d) Minimize energy consumption and vehicle miles traveled. traveled, and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.
14089
14190 (e) Where appropriate, protect special communities and neighborhoods that, because of their unique characteristics, are popular visitor destination points for recreational uses.
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92+SEC. 2.SEC. 3. Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of the Public Resources Code, to read: Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. (d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
93+
94+SEC. 2.SEC. 3. Article 9 (commencing with Section 30275) is added to Chapter 3 of Division 20 of the Public Resources Code, to read:
95+
96+### SEC. 2.SEC. 3.
97+
98+ Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. (d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
99+
100+ Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. (d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
101+
102+ Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects
103+
104+ Article 9. Blue Carbon Projects
105+
106+30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.
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110+30275. For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: article,
111+
112+(a)Blue carbon project means the conservation, restoration, or creation of coastal ecosystems and vegetation, creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, seagrasses and wetlands, which capture and store carbon. kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.
113+
114+(b)Public project means a project applied for or funded by any district, county, city and county, city, or town or the state, or any of the agencies and political subdivisions of those entities.
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149-For purposes of this article,Blue carbon project means the creation or restoration of coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems, including, but not limited to, kelp forests, seagrasses, and wetlands, that capture carbon.
118+30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife. (d)(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.
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122+30276. (a) (1) The commission shall require an applicant with a public project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to, where feasible, also build or contribute to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.
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124+(2) This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.
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155-(a)(1)The commission shall require an applicant with a project that impacts coastal wetland, intertidal, or marine habitats or ecosystems seeking a coastal development permit pursuant to Section 30600 to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as required pursuant to Section 30253, by building or contributing to a blue carbon project.
126+(b)The public project applicant shall identify the blue carbon projects expected carbon capture as part of the permitting process.
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158129
159-(2)This subdivision shall not be construed to apply only to new development.
130+(c)When possible, existing state grant programs may be used to fund, and give funding priority to, blue carbon projects to the extent not in conflict with the grant program. State grant programs may include, but are not limited to, grant programs established by the commission, the State Coastal Conservancy, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife.
131+
132+
133+
134+(d)
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162137
163138 (b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to restrict the commission from requiring other existing mitigation requirements for an applicant with a public project that is seeking a coastal development permit.