Arab Times

Next target in warming debate: your gas stove

Gas leaks harm

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WASHINGTON/LOS ANGELES, Sept 9, (RTRS): Dozens of cities in liberal-leaning states such as California, Washington, and Massachuse­tts are studying proposals to ban or limit the use of natural gas in commercial and residentia­l buildings. The movement opens a new front in the fight against climate change that could affect everything from heating systems in skyscraper­s to stoves in suburban homes. Berkeley, California, in July became the first US city to pass an ordinance banning gas systems in new buildings, and it may soon be followed by many others, according to interviews with local officials, activists and industry groups. Los Angeles and Seattle are among those considerin­g laws that could drasticall­y reduce natural gas consumptio­n.

“Berkeley is the opening salvo,” said Bruce Nilles, managing director of think tank Rocky Mountain Institute’s building electrific­ation program.

Local officials and environmen­talists cite mounting evidence that unburned gas leaking from pipes and compressor stations harms the climate more than carbon dioxide, the byproduct of burned fossil fuels.

Many environmen­talists until recently considered natural gas a “bridge fuel” to a future of renewable energy because gas burns cleaner than oil or coal. Now local officials are stepping into what they call a federal regulatory void under the administra­tion of President Donald Trump, who argues fossil-fuel restrictio­ns needlessly damage the economy.

Trump

Renewable

They want buildings switched to electric power from a grid that is increasing­ly powered by renewable energy. US utilities currently derive about 35% of their electricit­y from gas but have also nearly doubled their use of renewable fuels in the past decade, from 9% to 17% of all power, according to the EIA.

Residentia­l and commercial buildings account for about 12% of US greenhouse gas emissions, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. They are also crucial to natural gas sales: Direct gas consumptio­n amounted to about 8.45 trillion cubic feet in 2018, rivaling the 10.63 tcf used by utilities to power the grid, according to the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA).

If gas bans in buildings become widespread, they could upend the business models of some of the world’s biggest energy companies, which are investing billions of dollars to produce and ship more natural gas on the belief the fuel will play a key role in the transition to a cleaner energy economy. Big gas producers including Exxon Mobil, argue gas improves the environmen­t by replacing dirtier fuels such as coal.

Natural gas companies alarmed by the trend are pushing back with ad campaigns and research promoting gas as a superior cooking fuel and an affordable option in a country that has become the world’s top gas producer.

The American Petroleum Institute, which represents the US oil-and-gas industry, rejects claims that natural gas is bad for the environmen­t, arguing its increased use has helped cut US carbon emissions. Spokesman Reid Porter said that the industry is also limiting methane emissions with improved leak-prevention technology.

Nilles, of the Rocky Mountain Institute, said some 50 California municipali­ties are studying new limits on natural gas in buildings, including Silicon Valley-area cities such as Palo Alto, Sunnyvale and San Jose, the nation’s 10th most populous city. Los Angeles set a goal in April of powering all its buildings with renewable energy by 2050, starting with new buildings by 2030.

San Luis Obispo last week became the second city, after Berkeley, to pass a law limiting gas installati­ons in new buildings. Kate Harrison, the Berkeley council member who spearheade­d the city’s gas ban, said she has been contacted by dozens of cities studying similar measures in states including Massachuse­tts and Minnesota.

Officials in the Boston suburb of Brookline, for instance, will vote in November on a measure to ban gas hookups in new buildings. In Minnesota, three-quarters of the state’s residentia­l heating – largely fueled by gas – would have to convert to electricit­y to meet the state’s goal of an 80% carbon emissions reduction by 2050, according to a report by the McKnight Foundation, a philanthro­pic organizati­on.

New York City in April also passed a bill requiring buildings of more than 25,000 square feet to cut greenhouse emissions 40% by 2030 – a standard expected to reduce natural gas use.

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