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Lessening California’s Energy Regulations Will Help Consumers

July 2, 2025
01:58 PM
5 min read
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energyconsumer staplesmarket cyclesseasonal analysispolicy

Key Takeaways

While regulations that drive up gas costs in California are becoming more stringent, Sacramento is also considering reforms that, while inadequate, are a positive step.

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5 min read

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financial news

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July 2, 2025

01:58 PM

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Forbes

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energyconsumer staplesmarket cyclesseasonal analysispolicy

PolicyLessening California’s Energy Regulations Will Help ConsumersByWayne Winegarden, Contributor

Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights

Wayne Winegarden covers the economic impacts of regulatory policies AuthorJul 02, 2025, 01:58pm EDTExpensive gasoline and fuel

Getty Gas costs too much in the Golden State

Addressing this unaffordable energy blem should be a top priority for state legislators and the governor

California has taken a step backward toward this goal, however; but may be primed to take a step forward too

Stepping backward, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) increased the stringency of the state’s low carbon fuel standards (LCFS)

As of July 1, 2025, the new target reductions in the carbon intensity of transportation fuels are 30 percent below 2010 levels by 2030 and 90 percent below by 2045

The previous benchmarks were a 20 percent cut relative to 2010 by 2030, and an 85 percent cut by 2045

According to Cal-Matters, “the previous fuel standard, which was set in 2011, added 9 cents to the cost of a gallon; a UC Davis reer estimates that the new one could add 5 to 8 cents per gallon. ” According to Politico, prices at the pump could increase by as much as 15 cents per gallon due to the more stringent standards

Piling more environmental gram costs on Californians will surely worsen the state’s affordability crisis

A bill currently under consideration in the legislature – SB 237 – presents an opportunity for the state to take one step forward

While the details are complex, this bill would cap the credit prices for the LCFS at around $75 to $76 per ton, which will help mitigate future price increases

The bill also encourages the state to replace its unique blending standard in favor of a unified western state standard and attempts to reduce the regulatory burden refiners must navigate when seeking environmental permits

If passed and faithfully implemented – a far from certain spect – these reforms will help lessen the periodic supply constraints, and resulting price spikes, that too often afflict California

MORE FOR YOU Unfortunately for cash-strapped Californians, SB 237 will not reduce gasoline prices from their currently inflated levels

As measured by the EIA, the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline in March 2025 was $4

Overall, the average cost was a significantly lower $3. 10 – Californians are spending around $1. 39 more per gallon than the average American

The question perplexing Sacramento is, why

The answer is not difficult, simply inconvenient – it’s the state’s significantly more burdensome tax and regulatory policies

In an evaluation titled “Why California usually pays more at the pump for gasoline” the EIA claims the higher costs are due to the state’s taxes, fees, environmental grams, and its isolated petroleum market

In total, the study estimates that California’s environmental grams add $0. 54 to the price of a gallon of gas

Adding in the $0. 90 in gasoline taxes and fees, state policies are adding $1. 44 to the price of every gallon of gasoline

If all these costs were eliminated and replaced with the average state tax on gasoline – around $0. 28 per gallon – then the price of a gallon of gasoline in California would have cost $3. 43 per gallon in March 2025

In other words, the costs in California would be around the U

As the figure below demonstrates, these excessive costs are not a short-term phenomenon

California’s gasoline prices have been significantly more expensive than the national average for the entire 21st century

However, while they were around 12% more expensive between 2000 and 2015 on average, the price premium exploded beginning in 2015 as the state’s cap and trade policy and LCFS became more stringent

For the first five months of 2025, California’s costs have become 44% more expensive than the national average

California price premiumAuthor calculations based on EIA data These excessive costs harm families and es across the state

Looking just at the direct impact on families, the costs are not insignificant

Based on the average annual miles driven in California (11,409) and the average automobile MPG (24. 9), the average Californian purchases around 458 gallons of gas annually

Due to California’s $1. 39 price premium, the average California driver must spend an additional $637 on gasoline

Across all 27 million drivers, the excess burden costs Californian families nearly $17

Restoring a more affordable energy landscape in California requires a more realistic apach to the blem of global climate change

SB 237 is far from a panacea as it still maintains the complicated array of regulatory policies that have been driving up California’s relative price of gasoline

Further, how the bill is implemented (if it is ultimately implemented) is also crucially important

However, SB 237 is a signal that more politicians in Sacramento may be beginning to recognize the causal link between high gas prices and policies such as the state’s low carbon fuel mandates, cap and trade regulations, and high excise taxes

If this is the case, then SB 237 may mark the first step toward restoring the Golden State’s broader energy affordability

For the sake of the many families struggling with California’s unaffordable policies, let’s hope so

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