The text of AB 32 requires the state's Air Resources Board, the agency responsible for implementing the law, to maximize «additional environmental and economic co-benefits for California» and consider «
localized impacts in communities that are already adversely impacted by air pollution» in its plan for cutting carbon dioxide emissions.
Whether it's their pioneering work on decentralized supply chains for charcoal or firewood production, their
localized paper - recycling systems, or their ambitious plans for One - Planet Living
communities around the world, they always seem to be rethinking the way we do things, with dramatic reductions
in ecological
impacts as a result.