California 2025-2026 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB1243 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1243Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)February 21, 2025An act to add Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, relating to climate change, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1243, as amended, Addis. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund fund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require all interest earned on moneys that have been deposited into the fund to be retained in the fund for use in implementing the program. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are harmed by the climate emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) Existing accounting of climate damage costs is known to be significantly undercounted because scientific modeling to calculate damage amounts is conservative by design and continually being refined, and because certain damages are difficult to monetize, including impacts to culture, health, and communities.(8) The fees imposed by this act represent only a subset of the extraordinary costs from climate-driven harms currently borne by state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(9) The legislative purposes of the fees and the act are designed to have a meaningful impact on the burden borne by taxpayers while being justly and fairly proportional to a fraction of actual historic emissions by the fossil fuel industry. This industry, despite its massive profits of $2,800,000,000 per day for the last 50 years, has thus far externalized its pollution costs on state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(7)(10) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature for this act, the program created by this act, and the programs and projects funded by this act to benefit disadvantaged communities and to do no harm to these communities.SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
1+Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1243Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Garcia and Kalra) Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)February 21, 2025An act to add Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, relating to climate change, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1243, as amended, Addis. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund, Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the fund Polluters Pay Climate Superfund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, including low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are disproportionately harmed by the climate emergency. emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
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3- Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1243Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)February 21, 2025An act to add Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, relating to climate change, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1243, as amended, Addis. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund fund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require all interest earned on moneys that have been deposited into the fund to be retained in the fund for use in implementing the program. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly April 07, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1243Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Garcia and Kalra) Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)February 21, 2025An act to add Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, relating to climate change, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1243, as amended, Addis. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund, Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the fund Polluters Pay Climate Superfund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.Digest Key Vote: 2/3 Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
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109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION
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1211 Assembly Bill
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16-Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)February 21, 2025
15+Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Garcia and Kalra) Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)February 21, 2025
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18-Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)
17+Introduced by Assembly Member Addis(Coauthors: Assembly Members Garcia and Kalra) Connolly, Garcia, Haney, Kalra, Rogers, and Ward)(Coauthors: Senators Allen, Gonzalez, Menjivar, Stern, and Wiener)
1918 February 21, 2025
2019
2120 An act to add Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, relating to climate change, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.
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2726 AB 1243, as amended, Addis. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.
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29-The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund fund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require all interest earned on moneys that have been deposited into the fund to be retained in the fund for use in implementing the program. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
28+The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund, Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the fund Polluters Pay Climate Superfund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
3029
3130 The California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, until January 1, 2031, authorizes the State Air Resources Board to adopt a regulation establishing a system of market-based declining aggregate emissions limits for sources or categories of sources that emit greenhouse gases (market-based compliance mechanism) that meets certain requirements. Existing law establishes the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and requires all moneys, except for fines and penalties, collected by the state board from the auction or sales of allowances as a part of a market-based compliance mechanism to be deposited into the fund and requires the Legislature to appropriate moneys in the fund for the purpose of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the state, as provided.
3231
3332 Existing law, the California Climate Crisis Act, declares that it is the policy of the state both to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, but no later than 2045, and achieve and maintain net-negative greenhouse gas emissions thereafter, and to ensure that by 2045, statewide anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are reduced to at least 85% below the 1990 levels.
3433
3534 This bill would enact the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 and would establish the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the California Environmental Protection Agency to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, which the bill would define as the time period between the 1990 and 2024 calendar years, inclusive, resulting from the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion of fossil fuels or petroleum products, to relieve a portion of the burden to address cost borne by current and future California taxpayers. The bill would require the agency, within 90 days of the effective date of the act, to determine and publish a list of responsible parties, which the bill would define as an entity with a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels that, during the covered period, did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contact with the state, and is determined by the agency to be responsible for more than 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, as defined, in aggregate globally, during the covered period.
3635
37-This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund fund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require all interest earned on moneys that have been deposited into the fund to be retained in the fund for use in implementing the program. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.
36+This bill would require the agency, within one year of the effective date of the act, to conduct and complete a climate cost study to, among other things, quantify the total damage amount, which the bill would define as all past and future climate harms and damages to the state from January 1, 1990, through December 31, 2045, inclusive. The bill would require the agency to update the climate cost study, not less frequently than every 5 years, through January 1, 2045, as provided. The bill would require the agency, within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, to determine and assess, as provided, a cost recovery demand for each responsible party listed, which represents the responsible partys proportionate share of the total damage amount. The bill would require responsible parties to pay their cost recovery demand, as provided. The bill would require the collected cost recovery demands to be deposited in the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund, Superfund, which the bill would create in the State Treasury. The bill would, upon appropriation by the Legislature, require moneys in the fund Polluters Pay Climate Superfund be expended for, among other things, qualifying expenditures, which the bill would define to include expenditures for projects and programs to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and costs caused to the state from climate change. The bill would require the agency to determine the initial implementation costs for the act, as provided, and would require the agency to assess an amount allocated equitably among responsible parties to cover those costs.
3837
3938 This bill would require the Director of Finance, within 45 days of the effective date of the act, to perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs that will be incurred by the agency.
4039
4140 This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
4241
4342 ## Digest Key
4443
4544 ## Bill Text
4645
47-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are harmed by the climate emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) Existing accounting of climate damage costs is known to be significantly undercounted because scientific modeling to calculate damage amounts is conservative by design and continually being refined, and because certain damages are difficult to monetize, including impacts to culture, health, and communities.(8) The fees imposed by this act represent only a subset of the extraordinary costs from climate-driven harms currently borne by state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(9) The legislative purposes of the fees and the act are designed to have a meaningful impact on the burden borne by taxpayers while being justly and fairly proportional to a fraction of actual historic emissions by the fossil fuel industry. This industry, despite its massive profits of $2,800,000,000 per day for the last 50 years, has thus far externalized its pollution costs on state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(7)(10) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature for this act, the program created by this act, and the programs and projects funded by this act to benefit disadvantaged communities and to do no harm to these communities.SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
46+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, including low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are disproportionately harmed by the climate emergency. emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
4847
4948 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5049
5150 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5251
5352 SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.
5453
5554 SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.
5655
5756 SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025.
5857
5958 ### SECTION 1.
6059
61-SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are harmed by the climate emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) Existing accounting of climate damage costs is known to be significantly undercounted because scientific modeling to calculate damage amounts is conservative by design and continually being refined, and because certain damages are difficult to monetize, including impacts to culture, health, and communities.(8) The fees imposed by this act represent only a subset of the extraordinary costs from climate-driven harms currently borne by state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(9) The legislative purposes of the fees and the act are designed to have a meaningful impact on the burden borne by taxpayers while being justly and fairly proportional to a fraction of actual historic emissions by the fossil fuel industry. This industry, despite its massive profits of $2,800,000,000 per day for the last 50 years, has thus far externalized its pollution costs on state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(7)(10) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature for this act, the program created by this act, and the programs and projects funded by this act to benefit disadvantaged communities and to do no harm to these communities.
60+SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, including low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are disproportionately harmed by the climate emergency. emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.
6261
63-SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are harmed by the climate emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) Existing accounting of climate damage costs is known to be significantly undercounted because scientific modeling to calculate damage amounts is conservative by design and continually being refined, and because certain damages are difficult to monetize, including impacts to culture, health, and communities.(8) The fees imposed by this act represent only a subset of the extraordinary costs from climate-driven harms currently borne by state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(9) The legislative purposes of the fees and the act are designed to have a meaningful impact on the burden borne by taxpayers while being justly and fairly proportional to a fraction of actual historic emissions by the fossil fuel industry. This industry, despite its massive profits of $2,800,000,000 per day for the last 50 years, has thus far externalized its pollution costs on state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.(7)(10) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.(c) It is the intent of the Legislature for this act, the program created by this act, and the programs and projects funded by this act to benefit disadvantaged communities and to do no harm to these communities.
62+SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.(2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, including low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are disproportionately harmed by the climate emergency. emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance. (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.(5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.(6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.(7) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.(b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:(1) For the act to be a determination of fault.(2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.
6463
6564 SEC. 2. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
6665
6766 ### SEC. 2.
6867
6968 (1) Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the people, communities, biodiversity, environment, and economy of the state.
7069
7170 (2) Severe consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, increasing temperatures, intensifying droughts, wildfires, flooding, heat waves, loss of biodiversity, and other climate change-driven ecosystem threats and extreme weather events, have already materialized, are costing Californians billions of dollars, and constitute an emergency for the state, which must now take urgent action to prevent further damages, protect California residents and communities, and transition to clean renewable energy.
7271
73-(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are harmed by the climate emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance.
72+(3) Californians, especially Californias most vulnerable populations, including low-income communities and communities of color, children, and the elderly, are disproportionately harmed by the climate emergency. emergency and climate-related costs, including escalating costs of utilities, housing, health care, and insurance.
7473
7574 (4) The state must develop and implement protective measures to counteract the adverse effects of climate change.
7675
7776 (5) Protective measures necessary to mitigate climate change, adapt to the adverse effects of climate change, and expedite the transition away from fossil fuels will require significant new investment.
7877
7978 (6) Peer-reviewed research has determined with great accuracy the share of carbon dioxide and methane released into the atmosphere by the operations and products of specific fossil fuel companies.
8079
81-(7) Existing accounting of climate damage costs is known to be significantly undercounted because scientific modeling to calculate damage amounts is conservative by design and continually being refined, and because certain damages are difficult to monetize, including impacts to culture, health, and communities.
82-
83-(8) The fees imposed by this act represent only a subset of the extraordinary costs from climate-driven harms currently borne by state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.
84-
85-(9) The legislative purposes of the fees and the act are designed to have a meaningful impact on the burden borne by taxpayers while being justly and fairly proportional to a fraction of actual historic emissions by the fossil fuel industry. This industry, despite its massive profits of $2,800,000,000 per day for the last 50 years, has thus far externalized its pollution costs on state, local, and tribal governments and California residents.
86-
87-(7)
88-
89-
90-
91-(10) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.
80+(7) The fossil fuel industry should now contribute its fair share to government expenditures to protect the state from climate disaster.
9281
9382 (b) In enacting this act, it is not the intent of the Legislature for either of the following:
9483
9584 (1) For the act to be a determination of fault.
9685
9786 (2) For the act to have any impact on the ability of any person or entity to hold polluters accountable for harms caused.
9887
99-(c) It is the intent of the Legislature for this act, the program created by this act, and the programs and projects funded by this act to benefit disadvantaged communities and to do no harm to these communities.
100-
101-SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
88+SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
10289
10390 SEC. 3. Part 4.8 (commencing with Section 71370) is added to Division 34 of the Public Resources Code, to read:
10491
10592 ### SEC. 3.
10693
107-PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
94+PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
10895
109-PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
96+PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025 CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions. CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration. CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality. CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
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113100 PART 4.8. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Act of 2025
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115- CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions.
102+ CHAPTER 1. Definitions71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions.
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119106 CHAPTER 1. Definitions
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121-71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions.
108+71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:(a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.(b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.(c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.(d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions. (f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.(g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.(h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.(i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.(k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.(l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.(m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.(n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.(o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.(2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:(i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.(ii) Evacuation planning and design.(iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.(D) Regenerative agricultural practices.(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects. (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:(1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.(2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions.
122109
123110
124111
125112 71370. For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
126113
127114 (a) Agency means the California Environmental Protection Agency.
128115
129116 (b) Annual payment date means the date, as determined by the agency, not later than October 1 of each calendar year, by which a responsible party shall pay its cost recovery demand.
130117
131118 (c) Climate cost study means a study conducted pursuant to Section 71371.3.
132119
133120 (d) Cost recovery demand means a charge assessed against a responsible party for compensatory cost recovery payments, as determined pursuant to Section 71371.4.
134121
135-(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions.
122+(e) Costs means direct and indirect costs in current dollars to the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents incurred and projected to be incurred into the future to prepare for, prevent, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms associated with the impacts of covered fossil fuel emissions.
136123
137-(f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.
124+(f) Covered fossil fuel emissions means the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from attributable to the extraction, production, refining, sale, or combustion combustion, including by third parties, of fossil fuels or petroleum products.
138125
139126 (g) Covered period means the time period between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2024, inclusive.
140127
141128 (h) Fossil fuel means coal, crude oil, petroleum products, or fuel gases, or their byproducts.
142129
143130 (i) Fuel gas includes, but is not limited to, methane, natural gas, liquefied natural gas, and manufactured fuel gas.
144131
145-(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund established pursuant to Section 71372.
132+(j) Fund means the Polluters Pay Superfund Fund established pursuant to Section 71372.
146133
147134 (k) Greenhouse gas has the same meaning as set forth in Section 38505 of the Health and Safety Code.
148135
149136 (l) Notice of cost recovery demand means a written or electronic communication informing a responsible party of the amount of cost recovery demand due, payable to the fund.
150137
151138 (m) Petroleum products means a liquid hydrocarbon at atmospheric temperature and pressure that is the product of the fractionation, distillation, or other refining or processing of crude oil and that is used as, useable as, or may be refined as, a fuel or fuel blendstock, including, but not limited to, gasoline, diesel fuel, aviation fuel, bunker fuel, and renewable fuels containing more than 5 percent petroleum products.
152139
153140 (n) Program means the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program established pursuant to Section 71371.
154141
155142 (o) (1) Qualifying expenditures means expenditures for projects and programs within the state to mitigate, adapt, or respond to the damages and harms from climate change, as well as ongoing operation and maintenance for those projects or programs that satisfy the regulations adopted pursuant to Section 71373.2.
156143
157144 (2) Qualifying expenditures shall include all reasonable costs incurred by the agency and other public agencies for administering and implementing projects or programs financed by the fund. Administrative costs shall not exceed 10 percent for any project or program financed by the fund.
158145
159-(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include expenditures for projects and programs that mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures may include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:
146+(3) Qualifying expenditures shall include, but are not limited to, include expenditures for projects and programs that do mitigate or adapt to climate change and its impact to the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents. Qualifying expenditures include, but are not limited to, investments in any of the following:
160147
161-(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes including, but not limited to, any of the following:
148+(A)Mitigate climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through energy efficiency, natural systems climate resilience, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, distributed energy generation and storage, or zero-emission transportation and infrastructure, including public transit.
149+
150+
151+
152+(B)Adapt to climate change and its impacts to state, local, and tribal governments and California residents, such as through sustainable community infrastructure, green workforce development, sustainable agricultural practices, or financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change, or job training and support for workers who provide essential services during climate disaster.
153+
154+
155+
156+(C)Address climate-fueled disaster response and climate-resilient recovery.
157+
158+
159+
160+(A) Community disaster preparedness, response, and recovery, that includes any of the following:
162161
163162 (i) Hardening of structures in existing, at-risk, and recovering communities.
164163
165164 (ii) Evacuation planning and design.
166165
167166 (iii) Postdisaster soil and water remediation.
168167
169-(iv) Emergency housing, health, transportation, and medical response.
168+(iv) Emergency housing, health, and medical response.
170169
171-(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response. response, including support for local and tribal governments and public agency operational continuity during and after climate-related events.
170+(v) Sustainable community planning and infrastructure, including community resilience centers, affordable infill housing, and public services funding to support emergency services and disaster response.
172171
173-(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, but not limited to, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, building and infrastructure decarbonization, and maintaining, enhancing, and expanding zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization. transit operations, to increase ridership and transition to zero-emission fleets.
172+(B) Energy efficiency and resiliency, including, climate-resilient schools, electric school buses, vehicle-to-grid bidirectionality, microgrids, community solar, accelerating the transition to clean energy sources, zero-emission infrastructure, including public transit, or building and infrastructure decarbonization.
174173
175-(C) Green workforce development and development, job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during responding to climate disasters, and financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.
174+(C) Green workforce development and job training, and support for first responders and essential workers during climate disasters, financial support programs for workers whose livelihoods are impacted by climate change.
176175
177176 (D) Regenerative agricultural practices.
178177
179-(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, or groundwater recharge or recharge, storage, or instream flow projects.
178+(E) Natural system protections, such as preservation or nonextractive restoration of shrublands, forests, grasslands, deserts, or riparian areas, groundwater recharge or storage, or instream flow projects.
180179
181180 (p) Responsible party means an entity, including, but not limited to, an individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that satisfies all of the following conditions:
182181
183182 (1) (A) The entity holds or held a majority ownership interest in a business engaged in extracting or refining fossil fuels during the covered period or is a successor in interest to the entity.
184183
185-(B) For purpose purposes of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.
184+(B) For purpose of subparagraph (A), entities in a commonly controlled group, as defined in Section 25105 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, shall be treated as a single entity for purposes of this subdivision and shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the commonly controlled group.
186185
187186 (2) During any part of the covered period, the entity did business in the state or otherwise had sufficient contacts with the state to give the state jurisdiction over the entity pursuant to Section 410.10 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
188187
189-(3) The agency determines that more than one billion 1,000,000,000 metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.
188+(3) The agency determines that the entity is responsible for more than one billion metric tons of covered fossil fuel emissions, in aggregate globally, are attributable to the entity during the covered period.
190189
191-(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions.
190+(q) Total damage amount means the costs determined by the agency in its climate cost study of past and future climate damages and harms from January 1, 1990, up to, and including, December 31, 2045, resulting from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions.
192191
193- CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration.
192+ CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued. 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration.
194193
195194 CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program
196195
197196 CHAPTER 2. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program
198197
199198 71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.(b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.
200199
201200
202201
203202 71371. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be administered by the agency.
204203
205204 (b) The purpose of the program is to require fossil fuel polluters to pay their fair share of the damage caused by covered fossil fuel emissions, thereby relieving a portion of the burden to address costs otherwise borne by current and future California taxpayers.
206205
207206 71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.(b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.
208207
209208
210209
211210 71371.1. (a) A responsible party, as determined by the agency pursuant to Section 71371.2, shall be strictly liable for a cost recovery demand.
212211
213212 (b) Beginning January 1, 2026, each responsible party shall pay to the agency its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.
214213
215214 71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.
216215
217216
218217
219218 71371.2. Within 90 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine and publish on its internet website a list of responsible parties subject to this part. The agency may update the list from time to time, as appropriate.
220219
221-71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.
220+71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.(b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.(C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.(2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.(4) A calculation of the total damage amount.(5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.(c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.(d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.
222221
223222
224223
225224 71371.3. (a) The agency shall conduct or commission a climate cost study and the study shall be completed within one year of the effective date of this part.
226225
227226 (b) The climate cost study shall include, at a minimum, an evaluation of all of the following:
228227
229-(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local and tribal governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.
228+(1) (A) The cost-driving effects of covered fossil fuel emissions on the state, local, local and tribal governments governments, and California residents, including effects on public health and safety, biodiversity and ecosystems, agriculture and food systems, water, wildfire, the built environment, economic development, and any other effects that may be relevant.
230229
231-(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from Californias ongoing Fifth Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.
230+(B) The evaluation shall be based on a review of existing best peer-reviewed and publicly available science on climate impacts and costs, including climate attribution science and methodologies, Californias Fourth Climate Change Assessment, information available from the Californias ongoing Fifth National Climate Change Assessment, and any future relevant assessments.
232231
233232 (C) Climate impacts, including, but not limited to, extreme weather events, such as heat waves, droughts, and flooding, sea level rise, air and water temperature shifts, changes in wildfire, such as to area burned, smoke, air quality, and damage to communities, and related economic impacts, such as agricultural and food system costs, health costs, housing insurability, affordability, and access, shall be considered in the evaluation.
234233
235234 (2) A calculation of the costs incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state for effects identified under paragraph (1).
236235
237-(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.
236+(3) A list to identify potential harms and impacts incurred since January 1, 1990, and projected to be incurred into the future up to, and including, December 31, 2045, within the state from attributable to covered fossil fuel emissions, that are not yet quantifiable using current best available scientific methodologies, for consideration in future updates as science and quantification methods evolve.
238237
239238 (4) A calculation of the total damage amount.
240239
241240 (5) An assessment of potential qualifying expenditures meeting the requirements of Section 71371.6.
242-
243-(6) An analysis of climate impacts to local and tribal government budgets, including, but not limited to, increased costs for infrastructure maintenance, emergency services, natural disaster recovery, and public health, and how potential qualifying expenditures could be used to offset those costs.
244241
245242 (c) The agency shall update the climate cost study using the best publicly available peer-reviewed science, data, and methodology, not less frequently than every five years, through January 1, 2045.
246243
247244 (d) The agency shall, in accordance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, submit to the Legislature the climate cost study and update.
248245
249246 71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:(1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.(2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.(3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.(b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).(c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.(2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.(3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:(A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.(B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.(C) The responsible party ceases to do business.(4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.(5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.(6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.
250247
251248
252249
253250 71371.4. (a) Within 60 days of the completion of the climate cost study, the agency shall determine and assess a cost recovery demand upon each responsible party by doing all of the following:
254251
255252 (1) Quantify covered fossil fuel emissions attributable to each responsible party based on publicly reported data on the operations and production of the fossil fuel industry and the best available and most up-to-date Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions factors for greenhouse gas inventories.
256253
257254 (2) Establish the proportionate share percentage of each responsible party as equal to the ratio of the responsible partys covered fossil fuel emissions to covered fossil fuel emissions globally.
258255
259256 (3) Establish a cost recovery demand for each responsible party in an amount equal to the proportionate share percentage of the responsible party as determined pursuant to paragraph (2) multiplied by the total damage amount determined pursuant to the climate study or its update prepared pursuant to Section 71371.3.
260257
261258 (b) Within 60 days of an update of the climate cost study, the agency shall update and adjust, as necessary, the quantification and determinations made pursuant to subdivision (a).
262259
263260 (c) (1) The notice of cost recovery demand shall inform the responsible party of its obligation to remit the cost recovery demand, or any adjustment to the cost recovery demand, in full, on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the notice is issued or the next calendar year if the provided notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date.
264261
265262 (2) A responsible party may elect to pay its cost recovery demand in 20 installments by providing written notice of its election and submission of at least 10 percent of the cost recovery demand on or before the annual payment date of the calendar year in which the initial notice is issued or the next calendar year if the notice is issued less than 60 days before the annual payment date. The remaining balance shall be paid in equal installments that are due on or before the annual payment of each calendar year after the initial payment.
266263
267264 (3) The unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall become due immediately if any of the following occurs:
268265
269266 (A) The responsible party fails to pay any installment by the due date pursuant to this subdivision.
270267
271268 (B) Except as provided in paragraph (4), there is a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of the responsible party.
272269
273270 (C) The responsible party ceases to do business.
274271
275272 (4) In the case of a sale of substantially all the assets of a responsible party, the remaining installments shall not become due immediately if the buyer enters into an agreement with the agency under which the buyer assumes liability for the remaining installments due under paragraph (2) in the same manner as if the buyer was the responsible party.
276273
277274 (5) If an update to the climate cost study results in an adjustment to the responsible partys cost recovery demand, the agency shall, within 60 days, issue a revised written notice of cost recovery demand notifying the responsible party of the adjusted payment due.
278275
279276 (6) Payment of the cost recovery demand may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.
280277
281-71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued.
278+71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.(b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.(c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued.
282279
283280
284281
285282 71371.5. (a) The agency shall establish procedures for an entity to challenge its designation as a responsible party under Section 71371.2 or its cost recovery demand established pursuant to Section 71371.4.
286283
287284 (b) The agency may adjust a responsible partys cost recovery demand if the responsible party establishes, to the satisfaction of the agency, both of the following:
288285
289-(1) A portion of its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.
286+(1) A portion of the its cost recovery demand amount is attributable to the refining of crude oil fossil fuel extracted by another responsible party.
290287
291-(2) The fossil fuel extracted by the other responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other responsible party.
288+(2) The crude oil fossil fuel extracted by the other entity responsible party was accounted for when the agency determined the cost recovery demand amount for the other entity or the successor in interest of the other entity. responsible party.
292289
293290 (c) This section does not limit a real partys right to seek judicial review of a determination made by the agency, except that no civil action shall be maintained under this part unless it is commenced within 30 days after the claim accrued.
294291
295292 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.
296293
297294
298295
299296 71371.6. The agency shall establish funding criteria and guidelines in accordance with the climate cost study for programs and projects that are eligible as qualifying expenditures funded from moneys collected pursuant to this chapter.
300297
301298 71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration.
302299
303300
304301
305302 71371.7. Until December 31, 2045, every five years after the effective date of this part, the Legislative Analysts Office shall conduct an independent evaluation of the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program to be provided to the Governor, the President pro Tempore of the Senate, and the Speaker of the Assembly. The purpose of this evaluation shall be to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving its purposes as described in this chapter and to provide recommendations for improving program administration.
306303
307- CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination.
304+ CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.
308305
309- CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund
306+ CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund
310307
311- CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund
308+ CHAPTER 3. Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund
312309
313-71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.
310+71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.(b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.
314311
315312
316313
317-71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.
314+71372. (a) There is hereby established the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Fund in the State Treasury. Moneys in the fund shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, be used to implement the program pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371), including qualifying expenditures, and to reimburse any outstanding loan made from other funds used to finance the initial costs of the agencys activities in implementing this part. Moneys in the fund shall not be expended for any purposes not specified in this part.
318315
319316 (b) Moneys collected pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 71373) shall be deposited into the fund.
320317
321-(c) All interest earned on the moneys that have been deposited into the fund shall be retained in the fund for use in implementing the Polluters Pay Climate Superfund Program.
322-
323-71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.
318+71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.(b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.
324319
325320
326321
327322 71372.1. Moneys in the fund shall be expended on qualifying expenditures in accordance with the findings of the climate cost study and updates to the study and guidelines and criteria established pursuant to Section 71371.6 so that both of the following occur:
328323
329-(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, agency pursuant to Section 39711 of the Health and Safety Code, facing climate impacts.
324+(a) Not less than 40 percent of the moneys are expended for projects and programs that directly benefit disadvantaged communities, as defined by the agency, facing climate impacts.
330325
331326 (b) Programs and projects funded by the fund include the assessment and implementation of strategies to increase employment opportunities and improve job quality.
332-
333-71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination.
334-
335-
336-
337-71372.2. If any expenditure of moneys from the fund for any project or program is determined by a court to be inconsistent with law, the funding for the remaining projects or programs shall be severable and shall not be affected by the determination.
338327
339328 CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part. 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
340329
341330 CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions
342331
343332 CHAPTER 4. Miscellaneous Provisions
344333
345334 71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.
346335
347336
348337
349338 71373. Within 45 days of the effective date of this part, the Director of Finance shall perform an initial assessment of the reasonable and appropriate initial implementation costs as described in Section 71373.3.
350339
351340 71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.
352341
353342
354343
355344 71373.1. In implementing this part, the agency shall conduct regular consultations with the Integrated Climate Adaptation and Resiliency Program, the State Air Resources Board and the Environmental Justice Advisory Committee of that state board, the State Water Resources Control Board, the Natural Resources Agency, the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, the Office of Emergency Services, the Strategic Growth Council, the State Department of Public Health, the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, the California Coastal Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Attorney General, and other appropriate public agencies and nongovernmental entities.
356345
357346 71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.(b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.
358347
359348
360349
361350 71373.2. (a) Within 180 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall adopt all regulations, including those establishing requirements for projects and programs eligible for funding from the fund, necessary to carry out this part.
362351
363352 (b) The agency may prescribe, adopt, and enforce any emergency regulations as necessary to implement, administer, and enforce its duties under this part. Emergency regulations prescribed, adopted, or enforced pursuant to this part shall be adopted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and, for purposes of that chapter, including Sections 11349.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, the adoption of the regulation is an emergency and shall be considered by the Office of Administrative Law as necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, and general welfare. Notwithstanding any other law, the emergency regulations adopted by the California Environmental Protection Agency may remain in effect for two years from adoption.
364353
365354 71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.(b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.(c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.(d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.
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369358 71373.3. (a) Within 120 days of the effective date of this part, the agency shall determine the initial implementation costs, including the costs of the initial climate cost study, the development and adoption of regulations to implement this part, and other appropriate initial program implementation costs.
370359
371360 (b) The agency shall equitably assess a charge on the responsible parties for the full amount of the agencys initial implementation costs determined pursuant to subdivision (a). The agency shall notify responsible parties of the charge.
372361
373362 (c) Within 60 days of the notification, each responsible party shall remit the charge to the agency for deposit into the fund.
374363
375364 (d) A responsible partys payment of the charge may be stayed by the agency or a court pending administrative or judicial resolution, as applicable, of a challenge filed under Section 71371.5.
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377366 71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.
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381370 71373.4. The agency and the Attorney General shall have the authority to enforce the requirements of this part and to assess fees for late payments of cost recovery demands pursuant to Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 71371) or the charge assessed under Section 71373.3. The late fees shall accrue daily, assessed at the rate of 10 percent per annum, on amounts remaining due.
382371
383372 71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.
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385374
386375
387376 71373.5. The Secretary of State shall have the authority to revoke or suspend the business license of a responsible party that fails to comply with this part.
388377
389378 71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:(1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.(2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:(A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.(B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.(C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.(b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:(1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.(2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.(3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.(4) Conduct or support investigations.
390379
391380
392381
393382 71373.6. (a) This part does not do either of the following:
394383
395384 (1) Relieve the liability of an entity for damages resulting from climate change, as provided by law.
396385
397386 (2) Preempt, displace, or restrict any rights or remedies of a person, the state, units of local government, or tribal government under law relating to a past, present, or future allegation of any of the following:
398387
399388 (A) Deception concerning the effects of fossil fuels on climate change.
400389
401390 (B) Damage or injury resulting from the role of fossil fuels in contributing to climate change.
402391
403392 (C) Failure to avoid damage or injury related to climate change, including claims for nuisance, trespass, battery, design defect, negligence, failure to warn, or deceptive or unfair practices and claims for injunctive, declaratory, monetary, or other relief.
404393
405394 (b) This part does not preempt or supersede any state law or local ordinance, regulation, policy, or program, including, but not limited to, those that do any of the following:
406395
407396 (1) Limit, set, or enforce standards for emissions of greenhouse gases.
408397
409398 (2) Monitor, report, or keep records of emissions of greenhouse gases.
410399
411400 (3) Collect revenue through fees or levy taxes.
412401
413402 (4) Conduct or support investigations.
414403
415404 71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part.
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417406
418407
419408 71373.7. The remedies provided in this part are in addition to other remedies provided by law. This part does not limit a partys right, including the agency, other governmental bodies, or private individuals, from pursuing civil action or other remedies provided by law, or to capture additional costs not recovered by this part.
420409
421410 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
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423412
424413
425414 71374. The provisions of this part are severable. If any provision of this part or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
426415
427416 SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
428417
429418 SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.
430419
431420 SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the California Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
432421
433422 ### SEC. 4.
434423
435424 To fund and implement measures to address the immediate, ongoing threats to public safety, and the health and welfare of the people, the environment, and the State of California from climate change, it is necessary for this act to take effect immediately.