GET THE FACTS

#ClimateBondNow

Our state has set ambitious goals for fighting climate change, but right now we are not moving fast enough to meet them. To reach the state’s 2030 targets for reducing emissions, California needs to triple the rate it has been cutting greenhouse gases since 2010. On its current path, it will take until almost 2050.

CA’S CLIMATE ACTION NEEDS A BOOST

A PATH
TO SUCCESS

Climate change has clear causes and proven solutions but California’s investments in solutions don’t match the scope of the challenges we face. A strong and equitable climate bond will help change our course and help communities adapt to the impacts of climate change. Without it, our health, lives and livelihoods will be at risk – and millions of Californians will remain vulnerable to more frequent, intense, and destructive impacts of climate change.

GOT CLIMATE
ANXIETY?

You are not alone. A poll found 53% of Californians are “very” or “somewhat” worried about the effect of extreme heat, floods, wildfires, and air quality on their or a family member’s physical/mental health. This figure rises to 65% for people with low incomes and 83% among Spanish speakers. Learn more about how your community faces growing climate risks and the relationship to pre-existing health, social, environmental, and economic conditions through The Climate Vulnerability Index.

COLD, HARD CLIMATE FACTS

Extreme heat 

Boom and bust cycles of rain and drought

Clean water access

  • Millions of Californians already lack access to safe, clean water, especially in the Central Valley. Statewide, nearly 1,000 water systems are failing – meaning water is at high-risk of containing contaminants exceeding safe drinking water standards, is at high-risk of water shortage, and where there is high socioeconomic risk – or at risk. More than 60 percent of these systems serve disadvantaged or seriously disadvantaged communities.

  • Groundwater accounts for 40 percent of our total annual water supply in normal years and almost 60 percent in drought years. It provides a buffer against the boom and bust water cycles fueled by climate change and remains the primary water supply for many communities and ecosystems.

  • When paired with California’s long history of overpumping groundwater supplies, advancing climate change puts wells and water systems at risk of failure. Overdraft causes groundwater aquifers— and the land above them—to collapse, a phenomenon that damages critical water conveyance infrastructure, such as the California aqueduct and the Friant-Kern Canal. Across California, more than 81,000 wells are located in at-risk areas. 

Wildfires

Declining air quality…and declining health for millions of Californians