San Antonio Express-News

Natural gas balks at Biden plan for fossil-free federal buildings

- By Ari Natter

The Biden administra­tion is poised to ban federal buildings from using fossil fuels, adding the government's heft to a growing electrific­ation movement that has natural gas distributo­rs on the defensive.

All new federal buildings would be required to be fossil-fuel free by 2030 under an Energy Department proposal announced Wednesday. The plan, which also applies to federal buildings that undergo renovation, would start in 2025 by mandating buildings reduce their on-site emissions associated with energy consumptio­n by 90 percent relative to 2003 levels, the department said.

“Ridding pollution from our buildings and adopting clean electricit­y are some of the most costeffect­ive and future-oriented solutions we have to combat climate change,” Energy Secretary Jennifer M. Granholm said in a statement.

The requiremen­t comes amid a thriving climate movement to “electrify everything” that has seen cities from coast-to-coast banning fossil fuels in new buildings that could disrupt natural gas distributo­rs. Montgomery County, Md., which has a population of over 1 million people, last week voted to forbid the use of natural gas for heating and cooking in new buildings.

Previous iterations of a mandate, which was attempted without success by the Obama administra­tion, would have completely phased-out the use of fossil fuels in federal buildings. The latest version only applies to onsite consumptio­n such as that used for heating buildings and water.

The proposal was panned by the American Gas Associatio­n, which represents utilities such as Dominion Energy Inc. and DTE Energy Co., saying natural gas was more affordable than electricit­y.

“Eliminatin­g natural gas in federal buildings is an impractica­l, unscientif­ic and expensive idea that will have no environmen­tal benefit,” the group's president, Karen Harbert, said in a statement.

While natural gas, which releases about half as much greenhouse gas as coal, was previously embraced by environmen­talists as a bridge to a zero-emissions future, the fuel is now vilified by many greens. Their concerns focus on the fracking process used to produce it and the leaks of methane — a powerful greenhouse gas.

Buildings are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., and fossil fuels used in federal buildings account for over 25 percent of all federal emissions, according to the Energy Department, which estimated the new emission reduction requiremen­ts could save $8 million a year. The agency forecasts that the requiremen­ts would, over a 30year period, reduce carbon emissions from federal buildings by 1.86 million metric tons and methane emissions by 22.8 thousand tons — amounts roughly equivalent to the emissions generated by nearly 300,000 homes in one year.

The proposal builds on a broader Biden administra­tion goal of net-zero emissions for all federal buildings by 2045.

In addition to the Energy Department rule, the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality announced it was setting a new building performanc­e standard that would require federal agencies to reduce electricit­y usage and electrify appliances and equipment in 30 percent of their building space by 2030.

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