California Sets Goal Of 1M EVs In Ten Years
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An ambitious bill in California would steer carbon taxes into the lofty goal of putting one million electric vehicles on the road in the coming decade.
The state’s Legislature sent SB-1275, aka the "Charge Ahead California Initiative," to Governor Jerry Brown. The bill was approved in both chambers and contains a suite of incentives to encourage Californians to swap gas-powered vehicles for hybrids and electric vehicles.
The bill includes rebates worth up to $2,500 and other incentives for low- to moderate-income Californians in a bid to overcome critics who call electric vehicles a toy for the wealthy. There are about 100,000 electric vehicles on the road in California, making it the nation's largest market for EVs. Oregon is a close second on hybrid and electric vehicle adoption, on a per capita basis.
California would fund its EV initiative though the state’s "Low Carbon Transportation" programs, which received $200 million out of the estimated $850 million that will be generated in the state’s cap-and-trade program, which puts a tax on carbon emissions.
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