The goal was to make California a solar powered state.
http://www.aliciapatterson.org/APF0102/Greene/Greene.htmlSigns of an anti-nuclear, pro-alternative-energy direction to Brown's state energy program have been a main mark of the California governor's administration in recent months. Brown proposed and, in late September 1977, signed a bill that gives that state the country's largest tax incentive-a 55 per cent credit- for home solar installations. California now has a more ambitious solar goal, 1.6 million solar homes by 1985, than Carter has proposed for the whole country, 1.3 million. Brown has also pressed the cause of energy conservation, windmills (200-foot ones along the coast and in the mountains), use of biomass (including wood and woodchip burning), tapping the state's geothermal resources.
I wonder how that's working out?
http://energyalmanac.ca.gov/electricity/electricity_generation.htmlUm, let's see...
Um...
Dangerous natural gas, 122,594 GWh.
Solar: 724 GWh, down from 860 GWh in 2000.
Someone should tell the Governor about the biochemistry and epidemiology of wood smoke as compared to tobacco smoke, but, um, science? We don't need no stinking science.
I wonder if this election is going to lead to the revitalization of California's space program. All that perchlorate outside of Vandenburg has certainly helped keep bacterial contamination down.