San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DEL MAR TO CONSIDER BUILDING ELECTRIFIC­ATION ORDINANCE

- BY LUKE HAROLD Harold writes for the U-T Community Press.

Del Mar will consider a building electrific­ation ordinance, following cities including Encinitas and Solana Beach that have enacted their own ordinances.

Council members decided during a meeting Monday to see whether they would be able to consider the ordinance during the city’s work plan in the current fiscal year, or if they should defer to the next year.

“The climate crisis is now, it’s not in calendar year 202324,” Del Mar Mayor Dwight Worden said.

The idea originated in January 2020, when the city’s Sustainabi­lity Advisory Committee recommende­d the electrific­ation of all new residentia­l and commercial constructi­on in Del Mar, according to a city staff report. The committee again made the recommenda­tion this past January, but council members did not include new building electrific­ation in the city work plan. But committee members continued to hash out the parameters of a potential ordinance.

“That proposal included the requiremen­t that all new constructi­on and major remodels be all-electric with no gas infrastruc­ture installed and was based on the ordinance recently passed by the City of Encinitas,” said a staff report by Worden and City Councilmem­ber Dave Druker, who serve as liaisons to the Sustainabi­lity Advisory Committee.

Their report added that a building electrific­ation ordinance would contribute to the city’s Climate Action Plan and help reduce greenhouse gas emissions, among other environmen­tal goals.

The Encinitas ordinance, approved by City Council members in September 2021, banned the installati­on of natural gas infrastruc­ture on new residentia­l and commercial constructi­on within the city. Exceptions were included for emergency buildings that are considered essential by California Health and Safety Code, as well as restaurant­s that need to cook with a flame.

About two months after Encinitas, Solana Beach council members approved an ordinance that requires newly built commercial properties to have photovolta­ic systems, and new residentia­l and commercial constructi­on to use electric-only space conditioni­ng, water heating and clothes dryer systems.

Over 60 cities, mostly in Norcal, have passed building electrific­ation ordinances, according to a Sierra Club list. Encinitas, Solana Beach, Santa Monica, Los Angeles and Pasadena are part of a recent surge of Socal cities to follow suit.

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