Ridgway Record

Gov. Wolf vetoes bid to block all-electric building codes

-

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Citing the need to fight climate change, Pennsylvan­ia's Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf on Monday vetoed Republican-penned legislatio­n to stop municipali­ties from adopting building codes that prohibit natural gas hookups.

Wolf, in a veto message to lawmakers, said the legislatio­n takes away "local decisionma­king" from municipali­ties that are looking to address climate change, and treads on the authority of state utility regulators.

The legislatio­n passed the Republican-controlled House and Senate largely along party lines, with a handful of Democrats siding with nearly every Republican.

Republican lawmakers had cast the legislatio­n as protecting the energy choices of consumers, but also to protect the state's natural gas industry. It would have prohibited municipali­ties from writing new building codes that restricted utility service based on the energy source. Pennsylvan­ia is the nation's No. 2 natural gas-producing state, behind Texas.

States, cities and counties elsewhere have begun looking at all-electric building codes that exclude gas infrastruc­ture as a way to accelerate progress toward a carbon-free electricit­y grid.

In December, New York City barred most new building projects submitted for approval as early as 2024 from using natural gas or oil for heating, hot water and cooking.

Combustion of natural gas emits carbon dioxide, a planet-warming greenhouse gas. Natural gas also contains methane, which is far more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States