California to Study a Ban on Sales of Cars with Internal Combustion Engines

California Assemblyman Phil Ting has tried unsuccessfully for the last two years to end the sale of new gas and diesel-powered passenger motor vehicles by 2040. He achieved some success by securing funds in an approved budget bill to study a ban.

3 minute read

June 19, 2019, 12:00 PM PDT

By Irvin Dawid


Lombard Street San Francisco

SurangaSL / Shutterstock

"Last year, Assemblyman Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) introduced his Clean Cars 2040 Act, a sweeping bill to require every new passenger car sold in California to be a zero-emission vehicle within a little more than two decades," writes Dustin Gardinera state Capitol reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle.

After that bill died, he came back with a more modest proposal this session. AB 40 would have required the state to develop a strategy to get to the 2040 goal, without putting the ban into law.

However, that bill died as well.

“It’s actually embarrassing that California still hasn’t taken action,” Ting said, noting that countries including China, France and Britain have plans to promote the use of electric cars and other vehicles that don’t emit greenhouse gases. “If you want clean air, you need clean cars.”

[Correspondent's note: Jack Ewing, who reported on the French target on July 6, 2017, for The New York Times, acknowledged that it "is less ambitious than ones set by countries like Norway and India."]

"Ting found another route in the state’s new [$215 billion] budget, which lawmakers passed Thursday, thanks to a little-debated $1.5 million appropriation," adds Gardiner. "It helped that Ting was vice chairman of the conference committee that negotiated a budget deal among the Assembly, Senate and Gov. Gavin Newsom."

If Newsom doesn’t blue-pencil the idea out of the spending plan, state Environmental Protection Agency Secretary Jared Blumenfeld will work with state agencies to conduct the study. The budget doesn’t give a deadline for them to issue a report.

Broad-based study

The study, which won't include the 2040 timeframe for the ban, will not be confined to motor vehicle technology but would look at other strategies to "achieve carbon neutrality [pdf] in the [transportation] sector [...] such as changing land-use planning and increasing transit ridership."

That's good because the state won't meet its climate goals even if were to increase electric vehicle sales ten-fold, reported the Los Angeles Times last November. It would still need to reduce vehicle miles traveled per capita by 25 percent.

As to why AB 40 died this year, Gardiner reports that Sierra Club California, which strongly backed the bill, blamed it on Assemblyman Jim Frazier, D-Discovery Bay, who chairs the Transportation Committee. Frazier, in turn, criticized the Sierra Club for "refus[ing] to compromise on a few words of the bill’s language, which he didn’t specify."

Related in Planetizen:

Hat tip to Jim Stewart.

Saturday, June 15, 2019 in San Francisco Chronicle

portrait of professional woman

I love the variety of courses, many practical, and all richly illustrated. They have inspired many ideas that I've applied in practice, and in my own teaching. Mary G., Urban Planner

I love the variety of courses, many practical, and all richly illustrated. They have inspired many ideas that I've applied in practice, and in my own teaching.

Mary G., Urban Planner

Get top-rated, practical training

Wastewater pouring out from a pipe.

Alabama: Trump Terminates Settlements for Black Communities Harmed By Raw Sewage

Trump deemed the landmark civil rights agreement “illegal DEI and environmental justice policy.”

April 13, 2025 - Inside Climate News

High-rise apartment buildings in Waikiki, Hawaii with steep green mountains in background.

Study: Maui’s Plan to Convert Vacation Rentals to Long-Term Housing Could Cause Nearly $1 Billion Economic Loss

The plan would reduce visitor accommodation by 25% resulting in 1,900 jobs lost.

April 6, 2025 - Honolulu Civil Beat

Logo for Planetizen Federal Action Tracker with black and white image of U.S. Capitol with water ripple overlay.

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker

A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

April 10, 2025 - Diana Ionescu

Streetcar and bus stopped at station on Market Street in San Francisco with Ferry Building visible in background.

Waymo Gets Permission to Map SF’s Market Street

If allowed to operate on the traffic-restricted street, Waymo’s autonomous taxis would have a leg up over ride-hailing competitors — and counter the city’s efforts to grow bike and pedestrian on the thoroughfare.

13 seconds ago - San Francisco Examiner

Parklet with wooden benches and flower boxes on street in Ireland.

Parklet Symposium Highlights the Success of Shared Spaces

Parklets got a boost during the Covid-19 pandemic, when the concept was translated to outdoor dining programs that offered restaurants a lifeline during the shutdown.

1 hour ago - Streetsblog San Francisco

Bronze statue of homeless man (Jesus) with head down and arm outstretched in front of St. Matthew Cathedral in Washington D.C.

Federal Homelessness Agency Places Entire Staff on Leave

The U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness is the only federal agency dedicated to preventing and ending homelessness.

2 hours ago - The New York Times