Empire Center fellow says N.Y.’s electric-heat push faces cold reality

ALBANY, N.Y. —  New York State’s plan to steer homeowners and landlords toward electric heat could backfire due to high costs and practical concerns, according to a recent study from the Empire Center for Public Policy.  In the report “Cold Reality: The Cost and Challenge of Compulsory Home Electrification in New York,” Empire Center fellow […]

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ALBANY, N.Y. —  New York State’s plan to steer homeowners and landlords toward electric heat could backfire due to high costs and practical concerns, according to a recent study from the Empire Center for Public Policy. 

In the report “Cold Reality: The Cost and Challenge of Compulsory Home Electrification in New York,” Empire Center fellow James Hanley analyzes the state’s plan to prohibit homeowners from replacing gas and oil furnaces after 2029 and for them to instead install heat pumps. Homeowners face both higher equipment costs and potentially high weatherization costs to accommodate heat pumps, which can operate at lower monthly costs but require better insulation, Hanley stipulates.

Even with extensive state and federal subsidies, he warns, the upfront price-tag of heat pumps and weatherization will likely push homeowners to instead “buy low-cost but energy-hungry electric furnaces that will put considerably greater stress on the electric grid,” further hindering attainment of the state’s overall electrification goals. 

“This is the fundamental problem at the heart of New York’s command-and-control attempt to restructure its economy to make what amount to barely detectable reductions in global emissions,” Hanley wrote. “Albany can ban things, but it can’t control how people replace them.”  

The fellow notes that the impact of this state energy policy will be felt most in rural New York, where the median household income of owner-occupied homes is the lowest, and points out that the state could instead reduce emissions by setting clean-fuel standards that encourage the use of biofuels. 

You can read Hanley’s full analysis on New York’s electrification plans through this link: https://tinyurl.com/mry5uv7r.

The Empire Center, based in Albany, describes itself as an independent, not-for-profit, non-partisan think tank dedicated to promoting policies that can make New York a better place to live, work, and raise a family.

Jornal Staff: