California Governor Gavin Newsom amended the proposed 2024-2025 state budget to add $22 million to fund the state’s corporate climate disclosure laws and other climate programs.
The amendment shifts the stated amount from the General Fund to the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF), funded by the Greenhouse Cap-and-Trade Program. The program charges industrial polluters for emissions from their establishments.
The revised budget intends to move $3.6 billion from the General Fund and allocate it to the GGRF over the coming five years.
The transferred money will be directed toward implementing disclosure laws and other climate programs. Transit, clean energy, and zero-emission vehicle projects are all set to receive funds from the transferred money.
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Companies with operations in California will be compulsorily asked to disclose emissions and climate-related risks, as per the state’s corporate climate disclosure laws – SB 253 and 261.
SB 253 will require companies grossing $1 billion in revenue to report their emissions. On the other hand, SB 261 will require companies generating $500 million to disclose climate risks to their businesses.
In January, Newsom excluded funding for climate programs from the upcoming budget, which sparked opposition from environmental activists and companies. Last month, 35 companies, such as Grove, Patagonia, REI, and Heirloom, collectively signed a letter urging the governor to guarantee total funding for the prompt execution of two climate disclosure laws.
The signatories desired the news bills to ease their disclosure reporting. The corporations also drew a report containing similar data under the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive and the SEC’s new climate risk disclosure regulations.