BDC team at May 30th California Heat Pump Partnership meeting
(photo: California Energy Commission)
Hello Fellow Decarbonizers,
My calendar officially says it’s June, but I’ve been dreaming about cooling heat pumps instead of warm summer days. Last week, I traveled to Sacramento, CA where members of our team facilitated the first convening of the California Heat Pump Partnership. The partnership combines the vision of California Energy Commission Chairman David Hochschild with Governor Gavin Newsom’s goal of installing 6 million heat pumps (air, water, clothes, hot tubs - we’ll take them all!) by 2030. The energy in the room to move forward swiftly and reach this audacious goal was incredible. I can’t wait to see what comes of this partnership. Stay tuned and follow along here!
Also, last week our Chefluencer team trained another cohort of chefs who are excited to embrace the joys of induction cooking. This cohort was our largest yet and was a wonderful group of culinary experts, mostly from the state of Washington. Fantastic conversations and learnings took place, and by the end, we came away very excited about this new community of electric cooking advocates that will usher Washington into a new era of decarbonized buildings. If you want a chef for an event in WA, let us know!
As legislative seasons around the country start coming to an end, we will be doing wrap-ups, analysis and lessons learned. As a teaser though, our movement saw some great thermal energy network wins in Minnesota and Colorado.
Summer is here and so is the heat. Stay cool, friends. Preferably with a high efficiency heat pump in a well insulated building.
Yours in decarbonizing, Panama
New Public-Private Partnership in CA
Last week we officially launched the California Heat Pump Partnership (CAHPP) with the first board meeting in Sacramento! The partnership brings together leading state energy agencies, heat pump manufacturers, utilities, and other key stakeholders to move California toward Governor Newsom’s goal of installing 6 million heat pumps by 2030. BDC will manage the partnership and oversee the two primary workstreams: a statewide consumer marketing/education campaign, and a blueprint that outlines strategies to overcome key barriers and chart a path to bring heat pumps into the mainstream.
Non-Energy Impacts in Home Electrification and Decarbonization
June 12, 2024 at 9 am PT / 12 pm ET
This seminar will explore the multifaceted advantages of home electrification and decarbonization beyond energy savings with a special focus on health improvements. Retrofitting homes for reduced carbon emissions not only advances environmental sustainability, but also enhances indoor air quality and thermal comfort, leading to potential health benefits and enhancing overall well-being. Through interdisciplinary research and case studies, participants will learn about the potential improvement in respiratory and cardiovascular diseases resulting from decreased indoor pollutants, improved ventilation, and better indoor thermal comfort.
The 2024 NY Thermal Energy Networks Summit examined how thermal energy networks function, where and how they can be deployed in New York, and why this type of neighborhood decarbonization solution will play an important role in helping the state meet its Climate Act mandate to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by no less than 85 percent from 1990 levels by 2050. Watch the keynote addresses.
Improvements to New York's multi-billion dollar building electrification and energy efficiency incentive programs would increase program participation and grow the state’s heat pump market.
On June 4, Eversource Gas flipped the switch on the nation’s first utility-owned geothermal network pilot in Framingham, MA. BDC celebrates with the residents of Framingham who will now receive healthy, affordable heating and cooling, and congratulates Eversource Gas and HEET on their collaborative achievement in pioneering utility-owned thermal energy networks.
The Switch Is On
“Many people misunderstand what creates ‘wok hei.’ It’s about cooking at a high temperature. What you’re smelling is the caramelization of proteins as they cook and char, creating that unique aroma. It doesn’t matter whether you use gas or induction.”- Chef Martin Yan
Discover the Power of Wok Induction Cooking with Chef Martin Yan
Last month, over 200 residents of Santa Clara County had the unique opportunity to join Chef Martin Yan and Chef Rachelle Boucher for a free cooking experience. This event, filled with delightful tastes and live demonstrations, highlighted the incredible capabilities of induction cooking.
Furthering our commitment to knowledge sharing, we are excited to introduce a new seasonal ‘Report Roundup’ segment to highlight insightful reports from other organizations across the building decarbonization movement and share the latest developments, best practices, and strategies.
This report argues that our current regulatory frameworks and utility business models encourage an over investment in pipeline replacement and gas utility capital spending and discourage utilizing leak detection and repair technologies, which are operation and maintenance expenses. The report finds that spending on new gas infrastructure across the U.S. has tripled in the past decade alone and projects that gas infrastructure spending may reach 1.4 trillion by 2050.
This report concludes that in Washington a managed and timely transition (starting by 2025) would allow gas utilities to plan for the energy transition, cut climate pollution significantly, and protect low-income ratepayers. The report provides content for gas utility transition actions, compares the scenarios in their cost impacts on consumers, and includes policy evaluation to enable the energy transition.
This report argues that, while over 400 cities have climate action plans, few jurisdictions wield the full extent of their power to halt gas system growth, which threatens health, safety, affordability, and equity. The report targets local leaders and offers a “Gas 101” history in the first half of the report and strategies for implementing a transition off the gas system at the local level in the second half.
Earlier this month, the state of California opened its largest office complex, built with an array of sustainability features—including the largest all-electric kitchen in the country!
BDC's Nicole Abene explains how legislation like the NY HEAT Act would empower utilities to decarbonize buildings at neighborhood scale and explores the challenges utilities face as they seek to use thermal energy networks and other non-gas pipeline alternatives to equitably and affordably transition to clean heating and cooling.
The BDC and six major heat pump manufacturers filed comments to the New York State Public Service Commission (PSC) as part of the commission’s interim review of the state’s multi-billion dollar New Efficiency: New York (NE:NY) portfolio of energy-efficiency and building-electrification programs for 2026 through 2030.
In this spotlight on Eversource Gas’s thermal energy network (TEN) demonstration project in Framingham, Massachusetts—the nation’s first utility-led TEN pilot—BDC’s Ania Camargo explains why it represents a big advancement for neighborhood-scale building decarbonization.
Ania Camargo spoke to Canary Media for a detailed look at the future of utility-scale networked geothermal pilots as Eversource Gas launches their Framingham demonstration project: “I think the biggest thing is how do we create the possibility for whole-system scale transition…As long as this is done equitably and everyone is allowed to participate, it can be done fairly. Where it becomes a problem is when some people are excluded.”
Policy
Minnesota
May was a banner month for thermal energy networks in Minnesota. The state legislature passed multiple provisions supporting TENs, including $500,000 for a statewide thermal energy network siting suitability study; $39,000 for a thermal energy network working group at the Public Utilities Commission; and $6 million for a community geothermal project in Minneapolis. These policies were supported by a coalition of grassroots racial and economic justice organizations, including 100% MN, ISAIAH, and Unidos MN. Congratulations to this hard-working coalition and to the North Star State!
Colorado
Colorado continues to harness “the heat beneath our feet.” Governor Jared Polis and the Colorado Energy Office (CEO) announced a total of $7.7 million in grant funding through the Geothermal Energy Grant Program, of which $3.57 million is slated for thermal energy network scoping, design, and construction. Awardees plan to use TENs to upgrade snowmelt systems, support affordable housing, and expand clean heating and cooling at university campuses and city neighborhoods. You can read the state’s official press release here.
California
California Air Resources Board
CARB hosted a public workshop to discuss the rulemaking for zero-emission appliance standards on May 29 from 9:00-12:00.
This is one in a series of public workshops CARB is hosting to solicit feedback on the proposed rule.
CALGreen includes voluntary energy efficiency requirements for newly constructed buildings, and additions and alterations to existing buildings. The CEC updates the voluntary residential and nonresidential provisions every three years alongside the rest of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, Parts 1 and 6).
BDC and six leading heat pump manufacturers submitted comments describing how the PSC could update New York's multi-billion dollar New Efficiency: New York (NE:NY) portfolio of Energy Efficiency and Building Electrification programs with cost, payment, and program delivery improvements.
BDC also helped lead the effort to jointly submit with 16 other organizations technical comments to the PSC on how to improve NE:NY’s energy efficiency and building electrification programs, and to submit a letter to the PSC with 156 other organizations on how it can update NE:NY so that it invests 50% of its overall budget in programs for low-and middle income (LMI) households and disadvantaged community (DAC) programs, is easier for people to use, and better incorporates health and other benefits into the calculations that inform its investment decisions.
NY Home Energy Affordable Transition Act
BDC continues to work with environmental, climate justice, and other organizations to urge the NY State Assembly to pass the NY Home Energy Affordable Transition (HEAT) ACT before the end of the legislative session in June.
These efforts include joining more than 150 environmental advocates, residents, and state lawmakers at a rally at the Capitol on May 22nd to demand the Assembly pass the NY HEAT Act and coordinating with other organizations to conduct phone, text, and digital outreach to New York voters asking them to contact their Assemblymembers and tell them to pass the NY HEAT Act.
New York State is the first state to go live with IRA Home Electrification and Appliance Rebates funding:
On May 30th, New York Governor Kathy Hochul joined U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Secretary Granholm and White House Senior Advisor John Podesta to announce that New York is the first state in the nation to offer the first phase of Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) Home Electrification and Appliance Rebates (HEAR) Program funding to consumers.