Oregon Legislates: Our Climate Priorities for 2024

Climate Budget for 2024: Lowering Families’ Housing and Transportation Costs

A Climate Budget brings an equitable and rapid transition from fossil fuels to clean energy closer within reach while increasing the resilience of our communities. Funding to enable urgently needed home repairs and efficiency upgrades and to make new and used electric vehicles more affordable will lower the cost of living, improve health and resilience, and reduce climate pollution. Supporting needed investment in these popular programs was requested during the 2023 legislative session, and needed more than ever.

 Affordable Energy Bills and Resilient Housing: $15M for Healthy Homes Program

  • What is it? The Healthy Homes program, run by the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), helps low-income folks afford the changes needed to keep their home livable. This unique program is focused on health and safety, allowing for home repairs like radon and mold abatement, fixing holes in walls or roofs, and energy efficiency upgrades. Healthy Homes fills in gaps left by other state and federal energy efficiency and weatherization funding. It can be braided together to help pay for home repairs for low-income households that will cut climate pollution, improve health, and lower energy bills.
  • Why it’s a priority now: We’re in a housing and climate crisis. The Healthy Homes program addresses both. Solving Oregon’s housing crisis is about more than building more housing, it’s about keeping vulnerable people from losing their current homes. An estimated 49% of Oregonians live in housing built before 1980. Much of this housing is energy-inefficient and in need of repairs. This leads to higher utility bills, sickness, and lower quality of life, especially for those most vulnerable among us. The Healthy Homes program directly helps address these issues - but it is poised to run out of money without more funding now!

Affordable Access to Clean Transportation: $20M for Charge Ahead EV rebates

  • What is it? Everyone deserves a chance to participate in the green energy transition, but not everyone can afford to do so. The Charge Ahead Rebate program, run by DEQ, is one proven solution to help level the electric vehicle (EV) purchasing field. The Charge Ahead Rebate offers low-and moderate-income Oregonians a $5,000 cash rebate for the purchase of a new or used EV in addition to a standard EV rebate. EV drivers can save thousands of dollars on fuel and maintenance costs compared to gas-powered cars. Increasing equitable access to EVs can improve household budgets and reduce climate and air pollution.
  • Why it’s a priority now:  Electrifying vehicles is a top priority to reduce climate pollution from our biggest source: the transportation sector. Due to unprecedented demand, the Oregon Clean Vehicle Rebate Program, including the Charge Ahead Rebate program, ran out of funds, and the program entered suspension on May 1, 2023. Without more funding now for Charge Ahead rebates, the program will not be able to stay open for more than two months in 2024. Without Charge Ahead rebates available, the gap between those who can afford to go electric and those who currently cannot will widen.

Our Priority Bills to Accelerate our Clean Energy Future and Promote Economic Development:

  • SB 1559: Updating the State’s Greenhouse Gas Goals for Climate Leadership Oregon’s statewide goals for reducing climate pollution have not been updated in 15 years, and it's past time to remedy that. We are out of step with the best available science of limiting warming to 1.5℃ that has guided more recent climate goals for the international community, the U.S. federal government, and our neighbors of Washington and California. These pollution reduction targets are a critical way to demonstrate Oregon’s commitment to climate action and to measure our progress toward achieving those goals.
  • HB 4015: Removing Barriers to Siting Battery Storage Projects We need to update our state’s siting processes to allow for newer technologies like stand-alone battery storage. This bill lessens the barriers for a developer who wants to build a much-needed battery energy storage system by allowing them to use the state Energy Facility Siting Council (EFSC) process to site the project.
  • HB 4112: Attracting Clean Tech Leadership Oregon should be a leader in attracting clean energy businesses and manufacturing. With Inflation Reduction Act incentives available to clean tech manufacturing like battery and heat pump components and other states putting together incentive packages, now is the time for Oregon to grab a slice of this economic development pie.
  • HB 4080: Harnessing the Potential of Offshore Wind Floating offshore wind on the Oregon coast has the potential to add 3 gigawatts of clean energy into our regional grid (enough to power at least one million homes). This bill would authorize the state to develop a “Roadmap” for offshore wind in Oregon. This Roadmap would engage stakeholders more deeply to ensure an inclusive, robust, and transparent process in developing this renewable resource. The bill also mandates fair labor standards for the construction and manufacturing of component parts.

Our Legislative update linked below:

 

Last updated 2/6/2024
 

Read on for the latest updates on Climate Solutions' work in Oregon:

Oregon State Government

Oregon reclaims leadership on bold climate action

by Zach Baker on

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown has fulfilled her long-standing promise to take strong executive action to curb climate pollution. Learn more about what it…

Oregon’s legislature fails again to deliver on climate action

by Jonathan Lee on

Once again, a minority bloc of Republican lawmakers backed by big polluters – this time in both the Senate and the House – chose to break our…

Delay is denial: Oregon's climate emergency needs us all

by Meredith Connolly on

Our #1 priority remains comprehensive statewide climate action. The bill to make this happen, Senate Bill 1530, was just passed by the joint…

Climate Emergency! Meet us in Salem

by Meredith Connolly on

A majority of Oregonians support climate actio

Clean. Electricity. Everywhere.

by Jonathan Lawson on

Climate progress confirmed as a top-tier political issue. Duh!

It's go-time for the Oregon Legislature to pass cap-and-invest

by Zach Baker on

As we head into the 2020 session, we’re doing everything we can to ensure the Legislature passes a strong cap and invest policy. We’re also working…

Oregon Climate Emergency Day of Action

by Jonathan Lee on

This will be the biggest Salem Climate Action in 2020 Show our strength by standing toge

YES: Oregon will lead on climate in 2020

by Meredith Connolly on

Climate and clean energy advocates are determined to make 2020 a year of climate progress in Oregon. Here's how.

Oregon is falling behind on climate action

by Jonathan Lee on

A growing list of states and territories have adopted carbon pricing policies, enacted more robust low-carbon fuel standards, and committed to a…

Maintaining hope in the age of climate change

by Devon Downeysmith on

What it's like to read climate news every day: some days, it’s inspiring. Other days, it weighs heavy on the heart.

Remind AAA of Oregon to #DoBetterOnClimate

by Jonathan Lee on

We need one more big push to make clear to AAA of Oregon and other corporate interests that blocking climate action is bad for business.

FILED: 100% clean air ballot initiatives

by Jonathan Lee on

Earlier this week, our coalition of partners officially filed critical climate protection ballot measures with the Oregon Secretary of State's office…

AAA Gets a Triple "F" on Climate Policy

by Meredith Connolly on

The end of Oregon’s 2019 legislative session exposed some of the egregious corporate lobbying in Salem that blocks climate action – sometimes in…

Oregon's governor calls for a special session, excludes climate action

by Jonathan Lee on

Governor Kate Brown announced today that she supports calling the Oregon State Legislature into a special session, but addressing the climate crisis…

Shifting electric cars and buses into high gear

by Jonathan Lee on

Oregon's legislature just established an ambitious statewide timeline for adopting zero-emission cars, buses, and commercial vehicles.

Give for a brighter future

Connect

Join our email list to learn about what we do and how to get involved. 

Oregon Events

There are no upcoming events posted at this time