California Today: The Year in Energy News

A conversation with Ivan Penn, who covers alternative energy for The Times.
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By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Monday. A conversation with Ivan Penn, who covers alternative energy for The Times. Plus, the University of California and academic workers announced a tentative labor agreement.

Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images

In a closely watched decision last week, California regulators voted to significantly reduce subsidies for homeowners with rooftop solar panels.

California is the nation's biggest solar market, so the change could harm the growing renewable energy business and have ramifications across the country. Debates about how far states should go to encourage the use of renewable energy have already been simmering nationwide because of the severity of the climate crisis.

My colleague Ivan Penn has been covering many of these issues as a business reporter focused on alternative energy. Ivan is based in Los Angeles, where energy issues are always front of mind.

I spoke with Ivan about the debate over the rooftop solar payments and some of the other big stories on his beat this year, including Gov. Gavin Newsom's surprising push to keep California's last nuclear plant open and how the state managed to avoid blackouts during a historic heat wave this summer. Here's our conversation, lightly edited:

So what's going on with rooftop solar?

California is the leader in the country when it comes to rooftop solar, driven by the Million Solar Roofs program that former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger pushed. We have 1.5 million rooftop solar installations in the state. Now, how do you compensate rooftop solar owners?

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What they're currently being compensated for is the excess electricity that their systems produce and send to the grid. I think most people agree that they should be compensated something, but the question is how much. Because if they're not contributing to the cost of the grid, then that means those who don't have solar systems and batteries are paying a larger share of the cost of the grid. And critics argue that that puts more pressure on those who can least afford it. Those in disadvantaged communities would have to contribute more of their income for electricity to cover the costs.

Regulators voted on Thursday to reduce the payments starting in April. What potential impacts will you be watching for next year?

Whether the drop in compensation slows rooftop solar growth, and what does that mean for consumers. Maybe it hastens consumers' decision to buy batteries. Does that increase the battery market? It's going to change things dramatically.

Let's talk about heat waves. There have been awful ones in the past few years, and that feels like a driving force for many of California's energy conversations.

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Climate change is affecting us in many different ways. And, of course, this year we had this enormous heat dome over the entire West. California, with its large population and outsize needs, also had outsize demand. So we got to a place where we had demand levels that were the highest that we had seen, and that put a lot of pressure on the system.

Related to that have been some pushes by the governor and the regulators, the California Public Utilities Commission and the California Energy Commission, to ensure that there's ample power to meet the demand that Californians have for electricity. Some of that led the governor to push for the extension of the life of the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant as the last nuclear facility within California.

What was your reaction to that decision from Newsom?

There was a lot of surprise because historically Democrats haven't been the ones embracing the continuation of the life of existing nuclear plants. But because we're dealing with the energy transition away from fossil fuels, everyone is looking at how we meet the increasing demand not only of today, but also of the future, as we increasingly electrify everything. (California this year announced a ban on gasoline-powered cars and committed to a plan to phase out gas-fueled furnaces and water heaters.)

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And it's not just Newsom. You're getting this from President Biden and his administration, too. Of course, there's still a concern about the waste and what you do with the waste. But the president and Governor Newsom see nuclear, even from the Democratic position, as a viable way of addressing our clean energy needs right now.

For more:

A remote camera photo of P-22 in 2013. The animal, which was euthanized on Saturday, had amassed more than 10,000 followers on Instagram.Steve Winter/National Geographic

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Hundreds of University of California graduate workers and supporters rallied outside the State Capitol in Sacramento this month to decry the university's treatment of students and employees.Brontë Wittpenn/San Francisco Chronicle, via Associated Press

The rest of the news

  • Strike deal: The University of California and academic workers announced a tentative labor agreement, signaling a potential end to the strike.
  • Internal dissension: Some U.C. academic workers say the tentative deal isn't good enough and are urging their peers to reject ratification, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Gun suits: A federal judge said he would block a provision in a new California law to take effect next year that gun advocates argued was intended to hinder anyone from challenging the state's restrictive gun laws, The Associated Press reports.
  • Retiring: The first woman to lead California's highway patrol will retire on Dec. 30, two years after she was appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, The Associated Press reports.
  • Ghost guns: A new federal rule has done little to stem the spread of "ghost guns." The problem has reached epidemic proportions in California.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Car plummets down canyon: A couple driving in the Angeles National Forest survived a 300-foot fall into a canyon without any major injuries.
  • Homelessness program: Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles announced a city program to move people living in tents on city streets into hotel and motel rooms, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • San Bernardino secession: A ballot measure directing officials to review how to secure more funding — "up to and including secession from the State of California" — passed with 50.6 percent in San Bernardino County, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Dry riverbed: Conservation groups are going to court to try to bring back a flowing river in Bakersfield, The Los Angeles Times reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • America's most empty downtown: Tech workers are still at home. The $17 salad place is expanding into the suburbs. So what is left in San Francisco?
  • Rival socials: Twitter said on Sunday that it would ban accounts that promote rival social media platforms.
  • Secret stakeouts: Over the past month, San Francisco police officers have been installed at various stores across the city in an effort to crack down on retail theft as it happens, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
David Malosh for The New York Times

What we're eating

The Golden Gate Bridge at Fort Point.Eric Risberg/Associated Press

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Savannah Gwynn:

"When it comes to traveling in California, one of the best things about the Golden State is that everything is only a few hours' drive away. You want a beach? Forest? Mountains? Valleys? Lakes? California has it all. For me, I'm a Bay Area girl. There is nothing the Bay can't offer me. And my favorite place to visit is Fort Point, right under the Golden Gate. This quiet part of the city offers unique views of the bridge, a lovely glimpse of the skyline, a peek at Alcatraz, and is steeped in history. Watching the waves go by, catching a surfer here and there, witnessing the ships bringing in their cargo and even feeling the icy breeze as Karl comes rolling in — this place is so peaceful."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

Andrea Mingo, left, and Danielle Robinson.Aurelia Baca Photography

And before you go, some good news

Andrea LeGrace Mingo and Danielle Robinson have known each other since 2004, when they were 15 and competing in the trials for the under-16 U.S.A. National Team in women's basketball.

Mingo was friendly with everyone. Robinson was all business.

The two became good friends anyway. They stayed in contact through high school and saw each other on the road at various travel basketball tournaments. Mingo played for Marist School in Atlanta, while Robinson was on the team at Archbishop Mitty High School in San Jose.

Twelve years later, in 2016, they went on their first date. "I realized that I was in love with Danielle when I felt safe to tell her all my deepest, darkest secrets," Mingo said. "She became the friend I didn't want to go anywhere without. If there was one person I wanted to share an experience with, it was always her."

Six years after that first date, the two got married in front of 150 friends and family last month.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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