Here are the morning’s top stories on Friday, February 7, 2025…
- After three straight years of growth, the rate at which Californians are buying electric vehicles is flattening. That’s according to data from the California Energy Commission. Slowing demand for EVs could be a big barrier to California reaching its ambitious EV goals.
- A major lithium project in Imperial County is moving forward again, after a judge rejected a legal challenge by two environmental justice groups.
- Does the state of California stop many of its residents from spelling and pronouncing their names correctly? It does. Because in California, diacritical marks can’t be used to spell names on many official documents.
California’s Surge In EV Sales Has Stalled — So What Happens To Its Landmark Mandate?
California’s push to electrify its cars is facing a potentially serious problem: People aren’t buying electric cars fast enough. After three straight years of strong growth, sales have stabilized in California, raising questions about whether the state will fail to meet its groundbreaking mandate banning sales of gas-powered vehicles.
About a quarter — 25.3% — of all new cars registered in California in 2024 were zero emissions, just slightly more than 25% in 2023, according to new California Energy Commission data. The flat sales follow several years of rapid growth — in 2020, only one in 13 cars sold was zero-emissions. Their share of California’s market is now three times larger than four years ago.
But the slowed pace of growth in the market puts the state’s climate and air pollution goals at risk. Under California’s mandate, approved in 2022, 35% of new 2026 car models sold by automakers must be zero emissions. That leaves considerable ground to make up as some 2026 models begin rolling out later this year.
Imperial Valley’s First Lithium Project Moving Forward Again
Development of a major lithium project in northern Imperial County is lurching ahead after a county judge threw out a lawsuit that had frozen construction for close to a year.