Whatever else the rest of the world is doing, Santa Barbara County is on the way to 60 percent renewable energy by 2025 and 100 percent by 2030, ahead of State of California targets. The statistics were presented to the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday by Judi Young of Central Coast Community Energy (3CE), which the county joined in 2021, a group that buys energy and invests in renewable energy projects. So far, 3CE has saved 18 percent in billing costs on average for PG&E customers, and about 2 percent for SoCal Edison customers; the investor-owned utilities continues to bill customers, and the bills show energy purchases by 3CE.
As to whether energy consortiums could continue to deliver the goods as neighboring states opt for green energy, Young said 3CE had 19 long-term power purchase and storage agreements in hand, five of them new projects in 2022, all of which added up to 22 percent of the annual load.
The flipside of energy creation is energy use — 41 percent was transportation in California, said Young, and gas appliances were 21 percent. Both were targets for consumer rebates to encourage conversion to electricity. Last year, among the five counties that make up 3CE — Monterey, San Benito, Santa Cruz, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Barbara — $2.4 million had gone to customers for electric vehicles, $1.4 million to schools for buses, and $600,000 to affordable housing that is all-electric. Altogether, they keep 2,800 metric tonnes of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere annually. The investments in Santa Barbara County from 2020-2022 totaled $4.8 million.