California Air Resources Board: Emissions Regulation and Climate Policy

The California Air Resources Board (CARB) is the state's primary regulatory authority for air quality and greenhouse gas emissions. Established under the Mulford-Carrell Act of 1967, CARB operates within the California Natural Resources Agency and holds enforcement jurisdiction over both stationary and mobile emission sources. Its mandates extend to climate policy through the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Assembly Bill 32), making it one of the most expansive sub-federal environmental regulatory bodies in the United States.

Definition and scope

CARB functions as a department-level agency under California state government, with jurisdiction over air pollutants and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions throughout the state. Its authority derives from the California Health and Safety Code, Division 26, which grants rule-making, enforcement, and permitting powers. The board consists of 16 members: 11 appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate, plus 5 ex officio members representing other state agencies.

CARB's regulatory coverage extends to:

Scope boundaries and limitations: CARB's authority is confined to California. Federal air quality standards under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq.) set a national floor, but California holds a unique federal waiver — granted under Clean Air Act Section 209(b) — permitting the state to set vehicle emission standards more stringent than federal benchmarks. Other states may adopt California's standards under Section 177, but CARB rules do not apply outside California's borders. Interstate transport of air pollution, federal fleet standards, and EPA-regulated hazardous air pollutants under National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) fall outside CARB's exclusive jurisdiction. For broader context on how this agency fits within California's governmental structure, see the California Government Authority index.

How it works

CARB's operational framework divides into three primary mechanisms: rulemaking, market-based compliance programs, and enforcement.

Rulemaking follows the Administrative Procedure Act process. CARB staff develop proposed regulations, publish them in the California Regulatory Notice Register, hold public hearings, and present final rules to the full board for adoption. Rules affecting GHG emissions are additionally reviewed against AB 32 scoping plan targets.

Market-based programs include:

  1. Cap-and-Trade Program — Established in 2012 under AB 32, this program sets a declining annual cap on GHG emissions from covered sectors. Facilities emitting 25,000 metric tons of CO₂-equivalent (CO₂e) or more annually must hold allowances matching their emissions. The program is linked with Quebec's carbon market under a 2013 linkage agreement (Western Climate Initiative).
  2. Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) — Fuel producers and importers must reduce the carbon intensity (CI) of transportation fuels. Compliance is measured in grams of CO₂e per megajoule (gCO₂e/MJ). The 2018 LCFS amendments set a target of 20% CI reduction by 2030 below 2010 baseline levels (CARB LCFS regulation).
  3. Advanced Clean Cars II — Adopted in 2022, this regulation requires 100% of new passenger car and light-duty truck sales in California to be zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) by 2035 (CARB Advanced Clean Cars II).

Enforcement authority includes administrative fines, civil penalties up to $10,000 per day per violation under Health and Safety Code Section 42402, and referral to the California Attorney General for injunctive relief or criminal prosecution. CARB's Enforcement Division conducts roadside inspections, facility audits, and laboratory testing of vehicles and fuels.

Common scenarios

CARB regulatory obligations arise across industries in distinct operational contexts:

Decision boundaries

CARB authority intersects with — but is distinct from — the authority of California's 35 local air quality management districts (AQMDs) and air pollution control districts (APCDs). Local districts regulate stationary source permits and nuisance complaints at the facility level; CARB regulates mobile sources statewide and sets emissions standards that local districts cannot weaken.

Key distinctions:

Regulatory Area CARB Authority Local District Authority
Vehicle emissions standards Yes — statewide No
Stationary source permits No (sets standards only) Yes — permit issuance
GHG cap-and-trade compliance Yes No
Local nuisance/odor complaints No Yes
Fuel standards (LCFS) Yes No

When a facility triggers both CARB reporting thresholds and a local district permit requirement, the more stringent standard applies, but the issuing authority remains separate. CARB's California Air Resources Board landing page provides official access to current rulemaking dockets, compliance calendars, and enforcement actions. The California Energy Commission holds complementary jurisdiction over energy supply and efficiency, while the California Public Utilities Commission regulates utility-sector GHG obligations that intersect with CARB's cap-and-trade program.

References