Appeals court to decide future of California carbon auctions
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Businesses looking to invalidate California’s fee for carbon pollution took their arguments to a state appeals court Tuesday in a case that could determine the future of one of California’s signature efforts to combat climate change.
With a central piece of Gov. Jerry Brown’s legacy on the line, lawyers for the state and for environmental advocacy groups defended a program that has been closely watched around the world as a potential model for controlling carbon emissions.
“This case represents a direct assault on that leadership,” Matthew Zinn, a lawyer for the Natural Resources Defence Council and the Environmental Defence Fund told a panel of three appellate judges.
Uncertainty surrounding the case has already been a major factor in upending the market for pollution permits, which consistently raised hundreds of millions of dollars a year until demand plummeted in 2016.

