The California Air Resources Board recently adopted updates to the state’s Cap-and-Invest Program, which were proposed earlier this year.  

The adopted changes maintain California’s path toward meeting its 2030 and 2045 climate targets "while supporting affordability for Californians by managing costs and maintaining a clear long-term signal for clean energy investment in the state," it said.

"The Board’s action comes during a period of heightened economic uncertainty, caused by federal disruption and termination of incentives, global events, and volatile market conditions. Due to these conditions and in response to stakeholder input, CARB staff made additional changes to the updates in April that maintain environmental ambition while easing near-term financial pressures and helping avoid additional costs for consumers," it said.

CARB listed the following as major outcomes of the adopted updates:
•    Establishes more stringent allowance budgets to align with the 2030 and 2045 climate targets: Guarantees the removal of 118 million allowances from allowance budgets, resulting in an 11% cap decline year-over-year for this decade and an average of 7% from 2031 to 2045.
•    Dedicates 80% of allowances to directly benefit Californians: Provides $10 billion for electricity bill credits and maintains an estimated $8 billion for the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund.
•    Stronger support for California businesses and jobs: Doubles the Manufacturing Decarbonization Incentive Fund to $4 billionto support investment in California and help make up for the loss of federal incentives. Eligible entities include manufacturers – food processors, cement plants, and refiners that make large investment upgrades that reduce emissions at their facilities and reduce future compliance costs.
•    $800 million in added compliance support for industry: Enhances near-term stability, supports California businesses and jobs, and ensures no additional cost passthrough at the pump for consumers.

The Cap-and-Invest Program was first authorized by AB 32 in 2006, extended in 2017 when the legislature passed AB 398 with a two-thirds vote, and extended again in 2025 through 2045 by AB 1207 with another two-thirds vote. 

Over its 13 years of implementation, the program has undergone eight regulatory updates and has achieved nearly 100% compliance.

In January 2026, CARB staff released a draft proposal to align the program with new legislative direction extending the program through 2045 and to ensure California stays on track to achieve its climate goals.

The agency said it received extensive input from members of the public, businesses, environmental groups, utilities, legislators, and community members. 

"In response, staff proposed additional revisions in April 2026 to strengthen affordability, support economic stability, enhance industry assistance, and incorporate public feedback, while maintaining program ambition and integrity," CARB said.

These refinements were presented to the Board at its May 2026 hearing for adoption.

Following the May 29 adoption, the updates are expected to take effect on September 1, "providing regulatory certainty to continue investment in clean energy and technology."

CARB will also host a workshop this summer to begin updating compliance offset protocols, as required under SB 840.
 

Topics