In 2022, the Biden administration held an “electrification summit” at the White House. The goal of the meeting, which included top White House officials, as well as leaders of various NGOs, including the American Federation of Teachers, Greenlining Institute, and Rewiring America — a dark-money outfit whose goal is to “electrify everything for everyone” — was to create a “strategy to accelerate affordable, equitable, and efficient electrification of American homes, businesses, and transportation.”
The same day of the summit, the White House published a “rapid innovation agenda” that touted President Biden’s goal of “a carbon pollution-free electricity grid by 2035, and to reach net-zero GHG emissions no later than 2050.” It declared that by “electrifying our homes, businesses, industry, and transportation, the United States can get more than halfway to our goal of a net-zero emissions economy by 2050.” It also claimed that electrifying everything would “lower energy costs.”
That meeting is only one example of the administration’s push to electrify everything. (The EPA’s electric vehicle mandate is another obvious example.) In June, the Department of Energy released a new definition of a “zero emissions” building. That definition stipulates that the building be “free of on-site emissions from energy use.” It doesn’t take a mechanical engineer to understand that the definition precludes using a boiler or furnace that burns hydrocarbons.
The agency claims the new definition is “not a regulatory standard.” However, it goes on to note that“Eight major green building certification programs” have agreed to “embed or align or exceed the zero emissions definition within their certification.” In other words, the DOE has adopted a definition that isn’t a regulation, but the outfits that certify green buildings are treating it like it’s a regulation.
The June move by the DOE provides yet another example of the years-long campaign to ban the direct use of gas in homes and commercial buildings. Rewiring America and other groups that get large amounts of dark money, including the Rocky Mountain Institute, which operates on an annual budget of $139 million, have been pushing the bans at the local, state, and federal levels. A particularly pernicious example of the effort to ban gas is the ballot initiative now underway in Berkeley, California. As you may recall, in 2019, Berkeley became the first city in America to impose a ban on new natural gas connections. In January, that move was declared illegal by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. (See my reporting on that decision here.)
Next month, Berkeley residents will vote on a measure that could impose a draconian tax on large buildings that use natural gas. As Cal-Berkeley energy economist Severin Borenstein noted this summer, “The tax of $2.96 per therm, starting in January, would be larger than the retail price that gas consumers in Berkeley currently pay, about $2.33/therm.”
These proposed bans, mandates, and taxes matter because they directly impact consumers and the prices they pay for energy. Under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, the DOE must publish the representative average costs of five residential energy sources every year, including natural gas and electricity. As I explained three years ago in Forbes and again in August 2023, the DOE’s cost figures show that “the electrify everything push is, in reality, a regressive tax.”
Energy News Beat