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California could be coming for your kitchen stove next (plus your water heater, clothes dryer, etc.)


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2019 Apr 8, 11:49am   5,050 views  27 comments

by zzyzzx   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

https://hotair.com/archives/2019/04/08/california-coming-kitchen-stove-next-water-heater-dryer-etc/

One of the things they are apparently thinking about doing now is getting rid of natural gas appliances in homes and businesses. The idea is to replace millions of gas stoves, gas dryers and gas heaters with replacements that run on electricity to help fight climate change.

you’re talking about replacing several major appliances in millions of homes. For instance, I have a gas stove, a gas water heater, a gas home heater, and a gas dryer. Some of those are less than 2 years old. But, depending on how aggressive Democrats in Sacramento get with this plan, I might have to replace all of those. And the cost of the appliance is just part of it. Electric stoves and dryers need 220-volt power supplies to operate. I don’t have 220 lines installed in my kitchen or garage. Who is going to pay to retrofit all of that? Probably me, but also possibly everyone in California:

I’m not convinced about the savings part of this equation. I can use all of my gas appliances routinely and the bill is still very cheap (around $20 a month except in the winter) because the cost of gas is so cheap. But electricity in California is sold in tiers. Those who only use a tiny amount for the month, pay very little. But most homes are going to use enough to push the rates into the upper tiers where the cost per kilowatt hour is significantly higher. The purpose of this is to induce people to save energy. But the practical result is going to be much higher bills if I’m suddenly using electricity to heat water, cook, heat the house, and dry clothes on top of everything else. It’s hard to estimate what the increased price will be but I’m certain it’s going to be a lot more than my current gas bill, probably several times more. So on top of the cost of replacing appliances and adding new electrical wiring to my home, there’s going to be a higher monthly bill as well.

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1   zzyzzx   2019 Apr 8, 11:50am  

This is some seriously faulty logic, since any new electric power plants are likely to burn natural gas to create the electricity.
2   ForcedTQ   2019 Apr 8, 12:13pm  

Don't forget, mandatory TOU rates start October 2020 for PG&E/SCE customers. Your simple tiered rate structure goes away and it gets even MORE crucial to manage your energy use during part peak and peak times of the day. You won't be just trying to keep the total monthly bill below a certain amount to keep from getting grifted.
3   EBGuy   2019 Apr 8, 12:19pm  

ForcedTQ says
Don't forget, mandatory TOU rates start October 2020 for PG&E/SCE customers. Your simple tiered rate structure goes away and it gets even MORE crucial to manage your energy use during part peak and peak times of the day.

Gentlemen... start your batteries. The duck will not be denied.
For those of you playing along at home peak rates will be from 4-9pm or 3-8pm.
4   HeadSet   2019 Apr 8, 12:33pm  

Well, lemme see.

Adaptations to this new normal will be more efficient appliances and local solar. Solar being rooftop or neighborhood arrays with home Tesla style batteries as a buffer. More efficient appliances means tiny Euro style washers, tiny oven/stoves, and maybe even a clothesline.

Well, unless you are rich, what else are you going to do? If you want unfettered immigration population growth, and you believe in AGW, cutting carbon means lots less energy for the common person.
5   RWSGFY   2019 Apr 8, 3:48pm  

#cocksuckers
6   RC2006   2019 Apr 8, 4:14pm  

Sounds like a scam to sell heat pumps and new stoves. Of course dumb asses here will be thinking free upgrades with no regard to who is paying.
7   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2019 Apr 8, 4:30pm  

Wtf, constant attempts to make electricity expensive as fuck.
8   SunnyvaleCA   2019 Apr 8, 5:04pm  

Unless we can get all our electricity from "renewables" I'd rather stick with the most efficient of carbon-based fuels for the heating. Even if California got all its electricity from renewables, the next step would be selling that surplus electricity to other states that are still using carbon-based fuels to generate electricity.

That said, I love my induction cooktop. I wouldn't trade it for a gas one even if it does cost me a whole $2 a month to operate.
9   EBGuy   2019 Apr 8, 6:05pm  

Here is a quick analysis I did last year. I updated to current PGE rates for gas and electricity.
For natural gas, one therm (100,000 Btus) releases 11.7 pounds CO2 and costs $1.31.
For electricity .294 pounds of CO2 are released per kWh (1 kWh = 3,413 Btus) therefore 8.614 lbs CO2 per therm for $6.38. However, if you can hit 300% efficiency with the heat pump, you're down to $2.13 per therm which is getting in the neighborhood of natural gas. You can see why heat pumps are so attractive (at least from an emissions prospective).
EDIT: I forgot this tidbit. If you're heating with electricity, you'll be using nuclear energy (24% of PG&Es electric mix).
10   Booger   2019 Apr 8, 6:25pm  

EBGuy says
EDIT: I forgot this tidbit. If you're heating with electricity, you'll be using nuclear energy (24% of PG&Es electric mix).


The Dems want to shut those down.
11   RWSGFY   2019 Apr 8, 6:40pm  

Booger says
EBGuy says
EDIT: I forgot this tidbit. If you're heating with electricity, you'll be using nuclear energy (24% of PG&Es electric mix).


The Dems want to shut those down.


Practically done deal in CA.
12   ForcedTQ   2019 Apr 8, 7:07pm  

San Onofre (SONGS) already said bye bye. Diablo says bye bye in 2023 or so. And these fucking retards have NO RELIABLE OPTIONS for replacing that lost 24% of base supply..... Rolling blackouts coming soon, better get your generator/storage system lined up!
13   Bd6r   2019 Apr 8, 7:12pm  

ForcedTQ says
nd these fucking retards have NO RELIABLE OPTIONS for replacing that lost 24% of base supply

Enron, here we come the second time
14   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2019 Apr 8, 8:40pm  

d6rB says
ForcedTQ says
nd these fucking retards have NO RELIABLE OPTIONS for replacing that lost 24% of base supply

Enron, here we come the second time


Dude I was thinking exactly the same thing. Those mother fuckers at Enron were pulling strings last time to create those.

I swear if we get those, some assholes in government should be publicly executed for this shit.
15   Fuckyouasshole   2019 Oct 12, 11:35am  

They should outlaw eating to curb greenhouse gasses
16   Ceffer   2019 Oct 12, 11:44am  

ForcedTQ says
You won't be just trying to keep the total monthly bill below a certain amount to keep from getting grifted.


Won't matter. They have Great Socialist Paradise Grifting Panels devoted to 'fake altruism and social benignity' offenses that are nothing more than further graft enabling taxes, surcharges, fines, fees, licenses, etc. etc. to draw attention away from their waste, corruption, and failure to support reasonable infrastructure while directing more money to their salaries, benefits, and pensions.
17   Hircus   2019 Oct 12, 2:17pm  

The article said

They point out that the electricity supply is getting cleaner — California got more than half its power from climate-friendly sources such as solar and wind in 2017, and is aiming for 100% by 2045 — while gas continues to emit carbon dioxide when burned.


I'm not sure if more than half is accurate. CA loves to play tricks with their energy stats and charts. CA imports a lot of electricity from other states, and so they play this game where they always talk about the % of green energy that the state produces, but cleverly avoid the % of green energy the state actually consumes. The imported energy was mostly fossil sources and "unspecified sources" last I looked.

Basically, they shift the dirty electric generation out of the state, then import it. This probably helps them virtue signal, and also helps to meet some of their political promises about reaching X% green energy by year Y. It probably also made some ppl in the energy industry very rich by being able to benefit from this energy change.
18   SunnyvaleCA   2019 Oct 12, 3:52pm  

EBGuy says
... For natural gas, one therm (100,000 Btus) releases 11.7 pounds CO2 and costs $1.31.
For electricity .294 pounds of CO2 are released per kWh (1 kWh = 3,413 Btus) therefore 8.614 lbs CO2 per therm for $6.38. ...

I assume that is overall average CO2 release per kWh delivered to customers throughout the state. There's a major problem with using that figure in your calculation. Instead, you need to consider the last unit of electricity generated. PG&E always uses all of its "good" generation (solar, wind, nuclear) all the time that brings the CO2 average down; the extra needed electricity is generated by natural gas (or possibly even coal burned in other states). So, if government requirements induce extra electrical generation, then all of that extra generation is from natural gas.

Here's how my natural gas hot water works:
• burn natural gas at optimum rate to directly heat the water in the tank

Here's how an electric hot water heater works:
• burn natural gas at optimum rate to directly heat water to turn to steam (this is actually more efficient than my personal heater)
• use that steam to run a turbine and convert the high pressure into rotational energy (taking losses)
• use the rotation energy in the turbine to convert to electrical energy (taking more losses, of course)
• step up that electrical voltage to very high levels (more losses)
• transmit the high voltage many miles (more losses)
• step the electricity down to residential voltages (more losses)
• transmit the residential voltage the last mile to my home (more losses)
• use the electricity to heat water (basically 100% efficient at this stage— woo hoo!)

I'm sure everyone realizes exactly which process is going to use more natural gas for my hot shower.

That said, I absolutely love my induction cooktop. Very easy to clean, instant heating response, and unbelievably powerful. A cooktop uses such little energy in a home setting that the lack of efficiency is a roundoff error in my overall carbon footprint.
21   Booger   2023 Jan 30, 3:38pm  

Every single time:


23   Patrick   2023 Feb 25, 3:37pm  

Nice, some resistance in the local paper here:


24   RayAmerica   2023 Feb 28, 9:31am  

Biden Admin Proposes To Block Half Of Current Gas Range Models

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/biden-admin-proposes-block-half-current-gas-range-models

PS: It's all about control. The obtrusive Government wants to have the final say in every aspect of our lives, and they are doing this incrementally so that the vast majority of people aren't even aware.
26   Patrick   2023 Mar 30, 7:46pm  

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/democrats-republicans-gas-stove-ban


More than two dozen Democrats join GOP in opposing Biden gas stove ban
The House of Representatives passed the amendment to the GOP's big energy bill on Wednesday
27   RC2006   2023 Mar 30, 8:16pm  

With how much NG has gone up in CA I don't see how people can keep them. Two of my friends told me their gas bill is now around 500. I think their bill use to be around 60.

https://republicans.senate.ca.gov/content/what-they-told-us-californians-weigh-high-natural-gas-bills

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