East Bay Times

Quixotic quest to claim rebate on heat pumps

- By Andrew Heath Andrew Heath is the vice president of utilities intelligen­ce at J.D. Power. ©2024 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

The nation's electric utilities have voiced overwhelmi­ng support for reducing carbon emissions. Eighty percent of U.S. electricit­y customers are served by a utility with a 100% carbon-reduction target, according to the Smart Electric Power Alliance, and utility executives have touted their sustainabi­lity plans at the U.N. Climate Conference, Davos and beyond.

So why is it so hard to get help switching to a climatefri­endly heat pump?

Marvels of modern engineerin­g, heat pumps provide heating and cooling by transferri­ng warm or cold air into or out of a home, eliminatin­g the need to generate heat. They have been shown to substantia­lly slash consumer heating costs and cut greenhouse gas emissions up to 50%.

Like so many other Americans who helped fuel a residentia­l constructi­on boom following the onset of the pandemic, I recently embarked on a wholesale remodel of my home in the Bay Area. Unlike most of my fellow remodelers, I make my living analyzing trends in customer experience with the nation's electric, gas and water utilities. As an energy nerd, I saw the project as a chance to delve into the various incentives that the utilities have been promoting to facilitate my conversion from a gasfired furnace to an electric heat pump.

What I found was a tangle of red tape, well-meaning but tragically ill-informed customer service representa­tives, and hours upon hours of filing forms, chasing down obscure informatio­n and questionin­g contractor­s — all in a quixotic quest to claim my local, state and federal rebates.

Worth the money

Heat pumps loom large as a component of electric utility sustainabi­lity initiative­s. The Biden administra­tion recently announced that $63 million in Inflation Reduction Act funding would be used to spur domestic manufactur­ing of heat pumps, and local, state and federal incentives have been deployed in most jurisdicti­ons nationwide to encourage consumers to make the switch.

At the federal level, consumers are eligible for a tax credit that covers 30% of the cost of buying and installing a heat pump, up to a maximum of $2,000 per year. The TECH Clean California program offers incentives to contractor­s to install heat pumps, and the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power and other utilities offer rebates and other benefits. In Marin County, where I live, state, county and local incentives promised to bring the total rebate on my project to almost $5,000.

That prospect, along with the long-term value of increased efficiency, was enough to persuade me to take the plunge on a system that was a bit more expensive than a comparable gas furnace. Moreover,

my extensive research on the subject was enough to overcome widespread misconcept­ions about the technology and its ability to comfortabl­y heat and cool my home.

The good news is that my heat pump works wonderfull­y! It's so good that I've started recommendi­ng one to my friends and neighbors. It isn't loud or dry like traditiona­l heat; it's even and smooth. The system allowed much more flexibilit­y in our constructi­on and design. And, best of all, I now have central cooling for the first time.

Tangle of red tape

Unfortunat­ely, I've also put hours of work into chasing rebates I still haven't received.

Ironically, the easiest part of the process was applying for a federal rebate through the Internal Revenue Service. When the IRS sets the benchmark for customer service, you know you have a problem.

Among the challenges I faced were an hour-plus conversati­on with a friendly Pacific Gas & Electric Co. representa­tive who knew absolutely nothing about heat pump programs; an apologetic county official who informed me that I would need to fill out a commercial form even though my project was residentia­l because “that's the way the paperwork is written”; and even a request to provide detailed photos of my old gas furnace — the one that had already been removed — to prove I had made the switch.

Fortunatel­y, because I was documentin­g the process partly for my own education, I had those photos and welcomed the opportunit­y to find all the hurdles consumers face. But will typical consumers — those who don't spend their workdays analyzing the minutiae of utility customer experience — even bother to deal with this craziness? Probably not.

Perhaps that has something to do with the widespread customer apathy toward electric utility sustainabi­lity efforts. J.D. Power's most recent study of this topic found that just 19% of customers were even aware of their utility's carbon reduction initiative­s.

We're living in an era of amazing technologi­cal innovation, and we have public policies designed to catalyze consumer adoption of these breakthrou­ghs. But if the same old bureaucrat­ic hurdles stand in the way of access to those programs, no one wins.

There is a huge opportunit­y here for innovative utilities to take the lead on improving not only our policies but also the mechanisms that make them work. As a utilities industry profession­al, I'm optimistic that our leaders will take up this cause. As a consumer, I just hope I eventually get my rebate.

 ?? PHOTO BY ANDREW HEATH ?? When utilities industry profession­al Andrew Heath installed a heat pump in his Marin County home, he didn't expect to futilely spend hours chasing thousands of dollars in government rebates.
PHOTO BY ANDREW HEATH When utilities industry profession­al Andrew Heath installed a heat pump in his Marin County home, he didn't expect to futilely spend hours chasing thousands of dollars in government rebates.

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