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California Climate Change Disclosures Bill Target’s ‘Commercial Development of Fossil Fuels’

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By Chris Micheli

On March 18, Assembly members Jesse Gabriel (D-Woodland Hills)  and Steve Bennett (D-Santa Barbara) amended their Assembly Bill 766 dealing with corporate disclosures of climate change information.

The bill would add Section 38537 to the Health and Safety Code.

The bill would define the following terms: “baseline scenario,” “carbon dioxide equivalent,” “climate change,” “commercial development of fossil fuels,” “covered corporation,” “direct greenhouse gas emissions,” “direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions,” “domestic corporation,” “foreign corporation,” “fossil fuel reserves,” “greenhouse gas,” “greenhouse gas emissions,” “indirect greenhouse gas emissions,” “physical risks,” “social cost of carbon,” “transition risks,” “value chain,” and “well below 1.5 degrees scenario.”

“Climate change” would mean a change in climate that is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and is in addition to natural climate variability observed over comparable time periods.

A “covered corporation” would mean a publicly traded domestic or foreign corporation whose principal executive offices, according to the corporation’s SEC 10-K form, are located in the state and whose annual revenues exceed $100,000,000.

The bill would specify that, on or before January 1, 2024, the California Air Resources Board (CARB), in consultation with the Secretary of State and the Treasurer, would be required to develop and adopt regulations that do all of the following:

In addition, the disclosures required would have to include any other information required to be disclosed by a covered corporation pursuant to the regulations adopted by CARB to implement this section. CARB would establish climate change-related risk disclosure guidance that would have to do all of the following:

In addition, the bill would require a covered corporation to incorporate into the covered corporation’s disclosure all of the following:

Moreover, the bill would require a covered corporation, when preparing any qualitative or quantitative risk analysis statement contained in the covered corporation’s disclosure to consider all of the following:

AB 766 would require a covered corporation, if it engages in the commercial development of fossil fuels, to include in the covered corporation’s disclosure all of the following:

CARB would be authorized to adopt any other regulations it deems necessary to implement this section. It would have to comply with the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act.

On or before January 1, 2024, the Department of Finance, with guidance from the Treasurer and the California Debt and Investment Advisory Commission, would be required to develop climate change disclosure guidance, comparable to the regulations required to be adopted by CARB for issuers of state and local debt.

Finally, the bill contains a severability clause and it provides that, to the extent that any provision of this section is preempted by federal law, that provision, and any corresponding provision of the regulations adopted by CABR and the guidance developed by the Department of Finance pursuant to this section, do not apply and would not be enforced.

Chris Micheli is a lobbyist with Aprea & Micheli, as well as an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law.

Originally published by the California Globe. Republished with permission.

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