Petaluma, California becomes first U.S. city to ban new gas stations

Woody Hastings, co-coordinator of the Coalition Opposing New Gas Stations (CONGAS), joined Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the organizations push to ban the construction of new gas stations.

Video Transcript

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- The move to ban new gas stations. Petaluma, California becoming the first US city to do so. It's a move here aimed at accelerating the adoption of electric vehicles going forward. We want to talk all about this with Woody Hastings. A co-coordinator of CONGAS. This is the coalition opposing new gas stations.

Woody, it's great to speak with you. You're looking to ban, from my understanding, stations across all of Sonoma County. So of course this ruling in the city is a step in that right direction. But talk to us just about this movement and the impact of the ruling in Petaluma, California.

WOODY HASTINGS: Well, thank you very much. Yes, the coalition opposing new gas stations was formed in mid-2019 as a number of Sonoma County residents became aware of a large gas station proposal in a rural area in Sonoma County. And so we rose up to oppose it. And we had an early victory. We stopped the construction of a 16-pump gas station complex that would have included the car wash and mini mart, that sort of typical business model.

We-- we stopped that project. And in the course of addressing that one, we discovered several others and realized, oh, boy, there's-- people are still building new gas stations in the 2020s, when a lot of what's going on here in Sonoma County, and I think all around the country, are towns and cities and states responding to the climate crisis.

And here in Sonoma County, a lot of the cities and the county itself have recently enacted a climate emergency resolution. So our view is that, you know, if you're going to take a climate emergency resolution seriously, you know, the first thing you should stop doing is literally pouring more fuel on the fire. So stop building new fossil fuel infrastructure. Stop building new gas stations. So that's what we're doing.

And, yes, the Petaluma-- the Petaluma prohibition--

- Woody?

WOODY HASTINGS: --on new gas stations-- yes.

- I think a lot of us share the concerns you have to protect the environment. On one hand, though, even with GM and Ford phasing out gasoline-powered vehicles, gasoline is going to be around long after 2030 or 2035, depending which company. So wouldn't it--

WOODY HASTINGS: Absolutely.

- --make more sense to allow a smaller gas station with-- and you've got to have charging stations, electric charging stations. Wouldn't that make more sense? Because a lot of people can't afford the $40,000 to $50,000 electric car yet.