SACRAMENTO, CA --- California regulators on Thursday, Dec. 11, adopted a comprehensive plan to cut greenhouse gases -- the first of its kind in the nation, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Approved by the state's Air Resources Board in a unanimous vote, the plan seeks to cut the state's emissions by 15 percent from today's level over the next 12 years, bringing them down to 1990 levels. The 134-page plan spells out general targets for nearly every sector of the economy, including transportation. According to the L.A. Times, the plan will require automakers to make less-polluting cars and reformulate transportation fuels to be less carbon-intensive by 2020.










