Houston Chronicle Sunday

Building electrific­ation not as simple as it seems

Cutting carbon emissions by switching to electric comes with high upfront costs

- By James Osborne | STAFF WRITER

WASHINGTON — In theory, electrific­ation sounds simple. Homes and commercial buildings are responsibl­e for almost 30 percent of annual U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, largely due to the burning of natural gas or fuel oil for heating. Convert furnaces and water heaters to electricit­y to run off a power grid that generates virtually no greenhouse gases — as the Biden administra­tion is pushing — and you’ve just made a substantia­l dent in America’s carbon footprint.

But once it comes to actually constructi­ng or converting buildings to run only on electricit­y, it starts to get complicate­d. Shifting from natural gas or fuel oil not only entails large upfront costs, but it is also likely to require more electricit­y and a significan­t expansion of power grids, making both homebuilde­rs and politician­s increasing­ly wary of electrific­ation.

Eric Larson, a research engineer at Princeton University, recently studied

the costs of electrifyi­ng the U.S. economy. While all-electric homes over time would cost about the same as standard homes — due to lower monthly energy bills — there would be an upfront sticker shock.

“If you look at the costs on an annualized basis, electric homes are not much different than what we’ve spent historical­ly. They might even be less,” he said. “The big difference is a lot of the spending is capital, not operating costs, so you have to have that money mobilized at the start.”

Electrific­ation has come to the forefront of the climate debate. Towns and cities around the country are seeking to shift residentia­l and commercial buildings from the natural gas and fuel oil as heat waves, wildfires and flooding forecast the consequenc­es of global warming.

Officials in New York, Seattle and San Francisco are in the process of enacting mandates requiring new homes and buildings to use electric heating systems, two years after Berkeley, Calif. became the first city in America to ban natural gas hookups on new constructi­on.

Tough pill

For constructi­ons firm or homeowners, the prospect of spending thousands of dollars more on a house on the promise of future energy savings and lower emissions could be a tough pill to swallow, especially in colder regions where those costs are likely to run much higher.

Already, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Arizona have passed law blocking cities from banning natural gas hookups. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said last month he was considerin­g delaying a national ban on gas furnaces, set to begin in 2035, due to cost concerns.

In Washington, not only are oil and gas companies campaignin­g against forced electrific­ation, but also contractor­s. The National Associatio­n of Home Builders, one of the country’s most powerful lobbying groups, said it opposes any mandate that doesn’t include substantia­l subsidies for constructi­on — a prospect that could cost the federal government tens of billions of dollars a year.

The builders’ group estimates the costs of building an electric home run up to $15,000 more than a standard home with gas heating.

“It’s easy to write a paper and say switch A for B, but once you dig in you realize it’s not so simple,” said Vladimir Kochkin, director of codes and standards at the National Associatio­n of

Home Builders. “Our members have to build these houses and ultimately sell them.”

With the United Nations Internatio­nal Panel on Climate Change warning the planet needs to cut emissions to net zero by mid-century to avoid devastatin­g consequenc­es of climate change, higher constructi­on costs could be the least of government’s worries.

“The climate science tells us we have to decarboniz­e half the building stock by 2030. Gas boilers are not an option,” said Stephanie Greene, a senior principal at the

Rocky Mountain Institute, a Colorado organizati­on that advocates for climate action.

Greene recently worked on a study examining the costs of electrific­ation in four American cities, split between warm and cold climates. In Houston, researcher­s reported, switching to an all-electric heating system would save homeowners $2,400 over 15 years compared to replacing existing natural gas or heating oil systems. In Chicago, homeowners would save about $100 over that period.

Seasonal adjustment­s

The dramatic difference in savings underscore­s another challenge to electrific­ation. Most experts agree that electric heating systems are a good option in milder climates like Texas and California, but many are unsure how efficientl­y they work in the colder regions of the Midwest and Northeast.

Mark Griffith, a senior research director with the consulting firm IHS Markit, said with current technology, homes in cold weather regions would consume huge amounts of electricit­y for heating, requiring not only more efficient and expensive home heating equipment but also a greatly expanded power grid to meet the new demand.

“The power grid would have to be reimagined. Right now, electricit­y demand tends to peak late in the afternoon in the summer and now you’re going to move it just before dawn in the winter,” he said. “From a political perspectiv­e, it’s easy to say electricit­y everything, but people will find electrifyi­ng everything is not going to be the optimal strategy.”

One alternativ­e would be to convert gas heating systems to hydrogen, relying on the existing network of natural gas pipelines underlying cities around the world. The British gas firm Northern Gas Networks is setting up a gas to hydrogen demonstrat­ion project in northern England, with hopes of getting its entire system converted by 2034.

But there is fierce debate on whether hydrogen is a cost-effective way to heat homes and buildings. Due to the corrosive properties of hydrogen, existing gas pipelines would need to be replaced. And while hydrogen is relatively cheap, producing it without emitting greenhouse gases is not.

In the Leeds project, for instance, the carbon dioxide from hydrogen production would be piped to the North Sea and stored in depleted offshore oil and gas fields.

Difficult decisions

Part of the challenge of cleanly heating homes and buildings, as with so much of climate adaptation, is the cost of the technology needed to do so is currently prohibitiv­ely expensive.

As the technologi­es enter mass production, costs are expected to come down. In the meantime, politician­s are left to either gamble on which technologi­es hold the most promise, or wait and see which one proves superior, delaying reductions in emissions.

“Twenty years from now, you might have much more efficient electric heating systems or better energy storage. That’s great, but if you trying to look at the future practicall­y, it makes for difficult decisions,” said Griffith. “We don’t know which necessaril­y are going to be the best technologi­es, and that’s hard for the political system.”

 ?? Ken Ellis / Staff artist ??
Ken Ellis / Staff artist
 ?? Alan Warren / Staff file photo ?? A green building in downtown Houston. Making buildings all-electric to cut carbon emissions won’t be as simple as it sounds. Experts say it will come with high upfront costs and require an expanded power grid.
Alan Warren / Staff file photo A green building in downtown Houston. Making buildings all-electric to cut carbon emissions won’t be as simple as it sounds. Experts say it will come with high upfront costs and require an expanded power grid.
 ?? Courtesy file photo ?? The National Associatio­n of Home Builders estimates the cost of building an electric home runs up to $15,000 more than a gas-heated home.
Courtesy file photo The National Associatio­n of Home Builders estimates the cost of building an electric home runs up to $15,000 more than a gas-heated home.

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