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                           For Immediate Release, July 12, 2018 
                          Contact: Shaye Wolf, (415) 385-5746, [email protected]  
                          26  Climate Scientists Urge Gov. Brown to Phase Out California Oil Extraction 
                         
                          SACRAMENTO, Calif.— Twenty-six prominent climate and environmental scientists sent  a letter to California  Gov. Jerry Brown today calling for a halt to new oil and gas projects and a  fair plan to phase out all fossil fuel extraction in the state.  
                          Today’s letter warns that these actions  are urgently necessary to meet the Paris climate targets and protect millions of  Californians living near oil and gas wells. Limiting global warming to “well  below” 2 degrees Celsius and striving for below 1.5 degrees, in line with the  Paris agreement, will be the focus of a global climate summit convened by Brown  in September.   
                          “The science shows that ending the  approval of new fossil fuel projects is absolutely necessary to meet the Paris  climate goals,” said Dr. Aradhna Tripati, a professor in the Institute of the  Environment and Sustainability at the University of California, Los Angeles,  who signed the letter. “We urge Governor Brown to show science-based climate  leadership and protect California communities by addressing California’s own  dirty oil extraction.”   
                          California is one of the nation’s top  oil-producing states, extracting among the dirtiest and most carbon-intensive crude  in the world. Three-quarters of  the oil produced in California is as at least as carbon-intensive as Canada’s  tar sands crude. Yet Brown’s regulators have issued more than 20,000 permits for  new oil and gas wells since Brown took office in 2011. 
                          “The accumulation of past emissions is  already causing impacts in California, across the U.S., and around the world,”  said Dr. Michael MacCracken, chief scientist for climate change programs at the  Climate Institute in Washington, D.C., and former climate and air-quality  researcher at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. “The emissions from every  barrel of California’s oil that is burned contribute to the increasing pace of  sea-level rise and amount of wildfire in California — keeping the oil  underground is by far the most effective and most cost-effective policy.”  
                          The letter also  points to scientific research showing that living near oil and gas wells is  associated with a higher risk of cancer, respiratory diseases and reproductive  problems. In California 8,500 active oil and gas wells are within 2,500 feet of  homes, schools and hospitals; these wells are disproportionately located in  low-income neighborhoods and communities of color.  
                          Ending permitting  for new wells, combined with the phaseout of those 8,500 wells, would protect  communities and avoid the emission of an estimated 425 million metric tons of carbon dioxide between 2019 and 2030. This figure is similar to California’s  economy-wide emissions in 2015.  
                             
                          These scientists join a growing chorus  urging Gov. Brown to confront California’s oil and gas production prior to  hosting the Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco this September. 
                          On April 11 a diverse array of  environmental, public-health, faith, labor and community groups launched the Brown’s  Last Chance campaign to demand that Gov. Brown halt  new oil and gas extraction and devise a just transition plan to phase it out  entirely. To date more than 800 organizations have signed on.  
                          On June 26 more than 100 local  elected officials across California sent a letter to  Gov. Brown echoing the groups’ call for a statewide plan to phase out fossil  fuel production.  
                           “As a scientist  and Californian, I stand with communities harmed by oil extraction in demanding  an end to the drilling free-for-all,” said Dr. Shaye Wolf, climate science  director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “If the governor wants to put our  state on the road to a clean energy future before leaving office, he needs to stop  letting the oil industry take the wheel.”  
						  
                                      
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