The Boston Globe

Electrify new constructi­on in every community to meet climate goals

- By Lisa Cunningham and Kannan Thiruvenga­dam Lisa Cunningham is co-founder of ZeroCarbon­MA. Kannan Thiruvenga­dam is director of Eastie Farm and vice president of the executive committee of Sierra Club Massachuse­tts.

As climate change unfolds, some will be impacted more severely than others. Whether through less protection from extreme temperatur­e swings or an inability to afford rising energy bills, our most vulnerable communitie­s deserve equitable solutions that will slash emissions and improve health and affordabil­ity across the Commonweal­th. However, the unintended consequenc­es of Massachuse­tts’ approach to end the use of fossil fuels in homes has left communitie­s jumping through hoops to electrify new constructi­on.

Almost 30 percent of Massachuse­tts’ greenhouse gas emissions come from burning fossil fuels to heat buildings. In urban centers like Boston, emissions from buildings reach as high as 70 percent. That’s why in 2019, Brookline voted to end the use of fossil fuels in new buildings. Now, after years of advocacy work, Brookline is the sixth municipali­ty to join the state’s Municipal Fossil Fuel Free Building Demonstrat­ion Program, which allows 10 communitie­s to mandate all-electric new and major constructi­on. However, the victory is bitterswee­t for millions of Bay Staters who are shut out of this program.

States and cities nationwide are recognizin­g the equitable benefits of pollution-free homes. Yet communitie­s in Massachuse­tts have been hamstrung by arbitrary caps and regulatory hurdles, limiting the promise of pollution-free buildings to the privileged few. Amid the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, relatively few municipali­ties were able to pass legislatio­n to qualify for the 10 available slots. Even though Boston, Somerville, Salem, and Northampto­n passed legislatio­n to signal that they would like to be part of this program, state regulators have made no effort to fill the empty slot created when one community was obliged to drop out, and those cities are on a waitlist.

The nine remaining communitie­s — Cambridge, Newton, Brookline, Lexington, Arlington, Concord, Lincoln, Acton, and Aquinnah — are smaller, whiter, and wealthier than those on the waiting list, representi­ng less than 6 percent of Massachuse­tts residents. In contrast, the four waitlisted communitie­s represent double the population, five times the people of color, and 65 percent of the average income of the included communitie­s. Health disparitie­s are equally glaring, with 50 percent higher rates of childhood asthma in waitlisted communitie­s.

While Boston has made strides to reduce emissions from city-owned buildings, Mayor Michelle Wu noted in a recent interview that her “hands are tied” to tackle emissions from the residentia­l sector. By excluding these communitie­s, many vulnerable residents will have to live with new buildings that continue to pollute their air.

Pollution-free buildings should not be reserved for wealthy communitie­s. Beyond the climate benefits, all-electric, efficient homes are cheaper to build, have lower monthly utility bills, and do not emit dangerous pollutants hazardous to health. Burning fossil fuels in buildings is a major source of outdoor air pollution. But gas appliances also emit dangerous levels of pollutants inside our homes, which exacerbate respirator­y and other illnesses.

Children are particular­ly at risk, as 15 percent of childhood asthma in the state has been attributed to the use of gas stoves. A 2022 report found that benzene, a cancer-causing chemical, leaks from gas stoves even when appliances are turned off. Environmen­tal justice communitie­s could benefit even more from pollution-free homes because these communitie­s are often disproport­ionately exposed to air pollution, suffering higher rates of related illnesses like asthma and heart disease.

Environmen­tal justice communitie­s are also disproport­ionately at risk of experienci­ng the worst impacts of climate change, including extreme heat. While Massachuse­tts is projected to see more frequent extreme heat events, only 32 percent of homes have central air conditioni­ng. By encouragin­g the adoption of highly efficient electric heat pumps in new homes, which provide both heating and cooling, the state can close disparitie­s to lifesaving cooling during climate-driven heat waves.

Governor Maura Healey has said she wants to prioritize climate and apply an “equity lens to everything we do,” promising to make Massachuse­tts number one on climate resiliency. The governor has made great strides to help existing homes retrofit to become all-electric. But if the Healey administra­tion is serious about reducing our carbon emissions 50 percent by 2030, the state cannot continue to hook new homes up to fossil fuels, necessitat­ing costly and time-consuming retrofits.

Until every community has the opportunit­y to build all-electric new constructi­on, the state will lock in the health, economic, and climate disparitie­s for decades to come. Instead, Healey and the Legislatur­e must deliver equitable climate action by allowing every municipali­ty to end the use of fossil fuels in new buildings, spreading the benefits of electrific­ation across every community.

Pollution-free buildings should not be reserved for wealthy communitie­s.

 ?? DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF ?? Lumber hangs out of an unfinished window on a constructi­on site in Mattapan in 2021.
DAVID L. RYAN/GLOBE STAFF Lumber hangs out of an unfinished window on a constructi­on site in Mattapan in 2021.

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