Archives 2022

Transportation and Utilities Decarbonization Are The Key

62% of our carbon footprint in the US comes from the transportation and electric generation industries. Electrifying and decarbonizing commercial and residential buildings is a great step towards meeting our climate goals, but if 60% of the electricity generated to power these buildings is still coming from burning fossil fuels, we will not accomplish much in the way of carbon reduction. If public utilities aren’t incentivized to make the switch to solar, wind, hydro and nuclear, we won’t accomplish enough by decarbonizing buildings. If combustion engines aren’t eliminated in the commercial transportation sector, our supply chain will still represent a major source of carbon emissions.

Visualizing U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Sector (visualcapitalist.com)

US Carbon Neutral Power Generation Hits Record 46%

Yes, you read that right. For all the naysayers out there, US electric generation from non-carbon sources hit 46% in April. That’s a combination of the generation capacity of wind, solar, hydroelectric and nuclear plants. Nearly half of our electrical power generation is now fossil fuel free. Why now? Because it has actually become cheaper. For instance, generation of a MWh of from wind is now $26 to $50 as opposed to natural gas which is $45 to $74. I currently live on a hydroelectric reservoir in Vermont with wind turbines on the mountain ridge above in an electrified home heated and cooled with heat pumps powered by decarbonized energy sources. We are now all on the path to a new carbon free future!

Solar, wind power push renewable energy to record level in US in April (usatoday.com)

Urban Green Council

The Urban Green Council’s mission is to “transform buildings for a sustainable future in New York City and around the world”. As a non-profit whose focus is to minimize the effects of climate change by driving the push towards decarbonization via increasing the energy efficiency of buildings, our philosophies are aligned. We have served on the advisory committee and contributed to the UGC’s “Going Electric – Retrofitting NYC’s Multifamily Buildings”. Over 70% of New York City’s carbon emissions come from buildings, so it is critical to find a path towards reducing these emissions to limit the effects on climate change from the most populous city in the United States. More than 40% of these emissions come from space and water heating in NYC with fossil fuels. Therefore, electrification of space and hot water heating is a primary objective to reduce the City’s carbon footprint. This guide’s purpose is to inform, educate and prepare a path towards electrification. Our participation was to provide expertise on VRF heat pumps for retrofitting in multifamily buildings, for which we have years of experience in design, installation and implementation throughout the area. A PDF version of the guide can be found here.

#Electrification #Heatpumps #UrbanGreenCouncil #NYC

New York State Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act Pumps Up the Marketplace

In July, 2019, New York State passed the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, which prepares the state to lead the way in conversion from fossil fuels to electrification. This legislation requires New York to reduce economy-wide greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent by 2030 and no less than 85 percent by 2050 from 1990 levels. The law creates a Climate Action Council charged with developing a scoping plan of recommendations to meet these targets and place New York on a path toward carbon neutrality.

Elimination of combustion vehicles is the top component of getting to the emissions goal. The Scoping Plan includes a move to zero-emissions passenger and commercial vehicles. This will be supported by state incentives, rebates and financing for drivers and fleet operators to make the move to electric and hydrogen ZEVs.

Electrification of heating and hot water systems in nearly all buildings is the second key strategy for emissions reductions via building decarbonization and depends upon energy efficiency improvements in all buildings and 100% zero-emissions electrification by 2040 under the Climate Act. Eliminating GHG emissions from New York’s building stock by 2050 will require broad, systemic changes. There are 6.2 million buildings in NY State, including 4.9 single family homes, 250,000 multi-family buildings and 370,000 commercial and institutional buildings. By 2030, more than 200,000 homes every year will need to upgrade to all-electric and energy efficient systems. 370,000 office, retail, restaurant, school, and other commercial and institutional buildings in New York State will need to cut energy use in half and stop using fossil fuels for heating and hot water. Decarbonizing New York’s building stock will deliver significant job growth and economic opportunity throughout New York State. Companies who are positioned and trained to provide technical services to make these conversions will be in high demand. HVAC and hot water upgrades and replacements will account for over half the sectors employment opportunities. HVAC technicians who are already in high demand will need to be recruited, trained and retained in order to keep up with the potential opportunities for sector growth.

In order to accelerate the transition, New York State will provide incentives for single family, multifamily, and commercial and institutional building owners that speed uptake and help to transform the market for building efficiency, electrification, and decarbonization. There will also be a system for public and private financing to make these requirements accessible to all stakeholders. The state is also planning to support workforce education, training, job placement and development that equip the state’s current and future workforce to design, install, inspect, maintain and operate healthy, comfortable, low-carbon buildings while increasing clean energy job placement. All of this adds up to economic and employment growth for the state and the building services industry over the next several decades.

To read more about New York State’s Climate Act, review the draft scoping plan here.

#heatpumps #decarbonization #NewYork #Electrification

Decarbonization for HVAC and Water Heating Systems

The US Dept of Energy has put out a comprehensive guide on considerations for decarbonization and electrification of commercial building HVAC and water heating systems. Retrofits can be difficult and this is a good primer for helping stakeholders to decide if their building is a good candidate for conversion and the important steps that need to be taken. “Decarbonizing HVAC and Water Heating in Commercial Buildings.”

 #heatpumps #decarbonization #electrification

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