Los Angeles Times

Going electric won’t be cheap

-

Re “Don’t wait on electric homes,” editorial, March 2

Our nation must reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but your call for California to ban natural gas hookups in new residentia­l constructi­on is dead wrong.

California has nearly 119,000 miles of natural gas pipelines that connect more than 11 million homes, upward of 445,000 businesses and 36,000 manufactur­ers with affordable energy. All of this helps the Golden State continue to be a destinatio­n for residents and businesses, stanching the recent trend of major companies fleeing to Texas.

A nationwide study of the implicatio­ns of policydriv­en electrific­ation by the American Gas Assn. showed that switching natural gas customers over to the electric system could raise average household energy-related costs up to $910 per year when you factor in appliance costs, higher utility bills and covering the expense of upgrading our electrical grid to handle all of these new customers.

Finally, after criticizin­g the state’s electricit­y grid and its reliabilit­y, it astounds me that you expect it to handle three times the power load to meet the new commitment­s on electric cars and building electrific­ation.

We need solutions, but they must also be real and achievable.

Karen Harbert Washington The writer is president and chief executive of the American Gas Assn.

I think there are at least two things to consider before banning residentia­l use of natural gas.

First, as far as I know, no devastatin­g wildfires in California have been caused by a ruptured gas line, while quite a few have been ignited by malfunctio­ning electric lines.

Second, in an all-electric home, when the power goes out, so does the ability to heat and cook. Friends who live in Texas recently experience­d this when, as the only gas-heated house on their block, neighbors who lost power came to their house to warm up.

Donald Nollar Los Angeles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States