And the idea that you have to entirely fund that through rate paying is a fiction that serves an argument against SF having it's own power system, but has very little other relevance imo
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Replying to @upwithppl @kimmaicutler and
As is the idea that the current contingent geographic boundaries of the pg&e system must be replicated in total, and limit both our imagination of possible systems and how they're funded. Artificial, unproductive constraints
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Replying to @upwithppl @uhshanti and
I’m not saying it has to be the same boundaried system, I’m just saying SF breaking off and forming its own system may not actually be progressive from a regional or state point of view.
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @uhshanti and
But nothing you've said shows that it isn't, without imposing a bunch of constaints on what the other outcomes are
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Replying to @upwithppl @kimmaicutler and
And you're defining progressivism not by either "vs. the current monopoly," nor even by income, but by geography
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Replying to @upwithppl @kimmaicutler and
but if you want to go all david harvey and talk about geographies of inequality, go off
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Replying to @upwithppl @kimmaicutler and
My point is: you're talking about making rich *regions* pay for poorer regions. I want rich *people,* statwide (or wherever) to pay for poor *people.* That's progressive
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Replying to @upwithppl @uhshanti and
Undergrounding every PG&E power line in CA is at least $375B, which you’d need five Mark Zuckerbergs for. And that number is still less than the CA’s unfunded pension liability.
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Replying to @kimmaicutler @uhshanti and
Do we need to underground every line? Seems like a cost/benefit analysis is needed to identify prioritize, eg transmission lines in high fire risk areas.
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No we don’t. But either way changing our grid = expensive. We also have to do vegetation management and explore new technologies like micro gridding, solar, etc.
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If PG&E files for bankruptcy and has to renegotiate all of its energy contracts, may negatively impact California’s climate goals.
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