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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
California Senate Bill 100, or The 100 Percent Clean Energy Act of 2018, is a California state law which speeds up existing renewable portfolio standard requirements and sets a soft target which aims to generate 100% of California's retail-sold electricity from zero-carbon resources by 2045 (includes non-"renewable eligible" resources such as large hydro and nuclear power).[1]
Quick Facts Copulative, California State Legislature ...
Copulative | |
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California State Legislature | |
Full name | 100 Percent Clean Energy Act of 2018 |
Introduced | May 1, 2017 (current form) |
Assembly voted | - |
Senate voted | - |
Signed into law | - |
Sponsor(s) | Kevin de León (author) |
Governor | Jerry Brown |
Code | Public Utilities Code |
Section | 399, 454 |
Resolution | SB 100 (2017-2018 Session) |
Associated bills | Clean Energy and Pollution Reduction Act of 2015 |
Website | Full Text |
Status: Invalid Status "Passed" |
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As of 2017, California and Hawaii are the only states with statewide 100% clean energy goals.[2][3] However, Hawaii mandates 100% renewable energy, whereas California mandates 100% clean energy.[4]