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PG&E agrees: California should go all-electric in new construction

So far, it's the only natural gas utility to formally voice its support on the rising push on statewide mandates for building electrification.

Residential heat humps or air conditioners

Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), California’s largest combined gas and electric utility, became the first dual-fuel utility in the country to formally support ending new gas hookups in buildings. In a letter to the California Energy Commission (CEC) in late June, PG&E endorsed efficient, all-electric new construction as part of the state’s Title 24 energy code process.

California’s building energy efficiency standards govern new construction in California and set a precedent for other states. The California Energy Commission (CEC) updates these codes every three years and is updating codes through the Title 24 process for the 2022 code cycle. This is a critical opportunity for California to ensure its buildings achieve lower energy costs, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and maintain healthy indoor and outdoor air quality.

By publicly supporting an ambitious new building code, PG&E indicates that it is willing to forgo future gas investments on behalf of its customers and the state’s climate goals. In its letter to the CEC, PG&E states it "welcomes the opportunity to avoid investments in new gas assets that might later prove underutilized as local governments and the state work together to realize long-term decarbonization objectives."

California has the second-largest volume of direct building emissions in the United States.

Thus far, PG&E is the only U.S. utility serving gas customers to formally voice its support for a statewide all-electric new construction standard. Electric utilities, such as Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD), have well-established electrification incentive programs and enthusiastically have backed an all-electric new building code.

To meet California’s — and the world’s — climate goals, use of fossil fuels like gas will need to decrease at least 80 percent by 2050. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says that to prevent catastrophic impacts of climate change, we need to stay below 1.5 degree Celsius of global warming, which will require the world to halve emissions by 2030 and fully decarbonize by 2050.

Energy and Environmental Economics (E3) has conducted several important studies for California on this topic, and its modeling shows that the most cost-effective path to achieving these necessary emissions reductions requires rapidly electrifying buildings. These results are supported in a number of other studies across states, showing that electrification of the buildings sector is the least-cost pathway to economy-wide decarbonization.

As recent RMI analysis shows, California has the second-largest volume of direct building emissions in the United States and is responsible for 8 percent of the nation’s onsite building emissions. In addition, California adds more new gas customers than any other state in the country. From 2013 to 2017 the state added nearly 250,000 new gas customers and in 2018 alone, 75,000 new California homes (both single and multi-family) were built with gas infrastructure.

PG&E, one of the largest gas providers in the state, serves about 40 percent of the gas customers in California. Rather than continuing to expand a fossil fuel infrastructure network that is not aligned with California’s climate and air quality goals, the state should require all-electric new construction.

All-electric new construction in California is the right path forward, conferring several key benefits:

  • Reducing building sector emissions. Even with its current climate policies, California is not on track to meet its 2030 emissions reduction target. Electrifying new buildings helps close that gap and avoids making it worse. If the CEC requires new construction to be all-electric in the 2022 energy code, RMI analysis finds that the state would abate over 1 million metric tons of CO2 emissions annually by 2030.
  • Improving health and air quality. Fossil fuel appliances, especially gas stoves, emit pollutants known to harm health and increase asthma risk. One in eight Californians has asthma, and asthma rates are even higher in lower-income communities and communities of color. Furthermore, over 12 million Californians living with a gas stove are breathing levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) that would be illegal outdoors, while 1.7 million are breathing levels of carbon monoxide that exceed outdoor limits. These health risks can be avoided by building all-electric homes.
  • Improving affordability for consumers. Electric space and water heating can reduce costs over the lifetime of the appliances compared to fossil fuels. RMI analysis found that a new single family home in Oakland with electric space and water heating saves customers over $2,000 compared to heating with gas.
  • Reducing utility customer costs and investor risk. All-electric new construction would also help utilities such as PG&E avoid investing in assets that will outlive their useful lives, because such assets are not aligned with the climate goals we need to meet in the next decade. PG&E’s estimated average cost to provide gas service to one single family home is between $7,050 and $9,500. While most of the up-front installation cost for this infrastructure is paid for by the requesting customer, some costs are recovered in rates from all gas customers. These costs would be unnecessarily paid for over decades by customers or would risk becoming stranded for investors.
  • Developing the market for efficient, electric technology. By adopting an all-electric new construction energy code, California would solidify the state’s commitment to move away from fossil fuels in buildings. This would provide critical market certainty for appliance and equipment manufacturers, who then can help to grow the market and bring down costs for electric retrofits.
  • Supporting local governments. 30 cities and counties in California have adopted local building codes and ordinances for all-electric new construction in their jurisdictions, and 50 more across the state are considering following suit. By enacting a statewide all-electric code, the state would alleviate the administrative burden on local governments and show clear support for municipal climate goals.

To stay on track for a 1.5 degrees Celsius climate-aligned future, utilities and their customers cannot afford to invest in more gas assets for new buildings, and California’s largest investor-owned utility agrees.

All-electric buildings are cheaper, cleaner and healthier than buildings with gas, and efficient electric alternatives are readily available today. By supporting this measure, PG&E did the right thing for its customers and the climate.

This story first appeared on:

Rocky Mountain Institute

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