The Affordable Heat Act aims to bring down the upfront costs of any technology that brings down people's carbon emissions. It identifies multiple technologies that may be useful in that transition, but any technology that accomplishes carbon emissions savings qualifies. In that way, it's "technology agnostic", not trying to steer Vermonters toward any one technology. Having said that, I've gotten a lot of questions about specific technologies. Hopefully this post will be useful in explaining a couple of the commonly asked-about technologies. Heat pumps Older, "standard" heat pump technology was not very useful in Vermont because they were not sufficiently efficient between 0˚F and 32˚F. Thankfully, cold climate heat pumps, which became available around 2010, are useful down to 0˚F. I've even used mine in colder temperatures, it's just that heat pumps have to work harder the colder it gets. For that reason most installers don't recommend removing your existing heating system and use that as a backup for those extremely cold days. For more information check out this site about how heat pumps work. (As a physics teacher, I think they are very cool.) The advantage of heat pumps is that the heat they provide is significantly cheaper than fuel oil, propane, and kerosene per unit of delivered heat. It's worth noting that heat pump technology is significantly different than electric resistance heating (baseboard electric or electric space heaters). Since heat pumps aren't "burning" the electricity, just moving the heat from the outside to the inside, they are significantly more efficient than electric baseboard or electric space heaters. From the graph above, check out the volatility of propane, kerosene, and fuel oil. You can also see how stable and cheap the heat delivered from wood pellets and heat pumps has been.
Pellets For those interested in automating a pellet heating system, it would be good to know about Pellergy, a Vermont-based business which allows homeowners to switch out their oil burner with a pellet burner - no need to change anything else about your heating infrastructure (thermostat, delivery system, etc.) This combines with a hopper to hold pellets, which allows the system to be automated. If you have a technology-related question that's not addressed here, please let me know through the feedback form! As a physics teacher, I used to give an assignment that asked students to do an informal energy assessment of their own homes using resources from Efficiency Vermont. We would have honest conversations about the challenges, solutions, and questions students had about heating their homes. For me, Vermont’s heating challenges are not an abstraction. Families need support to make their heating bills more affordable. For the sake of these families, I am excited to support S.5, the Affordable Heat Act.
Fossil fuels are expensive. Between May 2020 and May 2022, the price of propane increased by 53%, and the price of fuel oil increased over 200%. Meanwhile, the fossil fuel industry has reported record profits. Vermonters who heat with fossil fuels are at the mercy of the fossil fuel industry and global forces beyond our control. For many Vermonters this feels like a terrifying roller coaster of prices, and people are looking for the exit. During the same timeframe, the cost to heat with heat pumps stayed flat and was significantly cheaper than heating with fossil fuels. Through this bill, every heat pump or pellet stove installation, weatherization retrofit, or biofuel gallon that reduces carbon emissions creates a “clean heat credit.” Fuel sellers will be required to subsidize those activities by purchasing credits. Some fuel dealers are already starting to provide that work themselves (ex: installing heat pumps), and this bill will directly encourage that workforce transition. What does that mean for you? Heat pumps will be cheaper. Weatherization will be cheaper. And there will be more workforce to get it done faster. Since the bill creates a “clean heat credit” marketplace that requires “clean heat” installations, it will bring down the price of heat-saving and carbon-saving measures to a level that actually makes it attractive enough for folks to make the jump. It's hard to know what that level is right now, but that is the purpose of creating a market for clean heat credits. The market will find the level that Vermonters think is "affordable." One might wonder how much this will raise prices on fossil fuels. The fact that the program’s precise cost isn’t written into the bill is a feature, not a bug. As designed, the market will do its work so that we can meet our climate requirements at the lowest possible cost to Vermonters. The program doesn’t start until 2026, and regulators will come back with multiple reports on projected costs and benefits well before implementation begins. Ultimately, the program is predicted (by EAN) to save each Vermont household about $7,500 on average over time. Vermonters will need less fuel and heating with less carbon-intense energy is much cheaper than heating with fossil fuels. When a fuel seller doesn’t meet their credit obligation, or if they would just prefer to not do the work themselves, they’ll pay a Designated Delivery Agent to do the work for them. What’s a Designated Delivery Agent? Think Efficiency Vermont, but for heat. You probably know that Efficiency Vermont offers incentives for equipment that can save you money. That is also what the Designated Delivery Agent will do. In part, Efficiency Vermont was created because electric companies were not great at helping people use less electricity. Similarly, fuel sellers have not generally helped their customers use less fuel. We need an organization similar to Efficiency Vermont to protect Vermonters when it comes to heat. Since low- and moderate-income Vermonters are more likely to live in multi-family buildings, more likely to be renters, and more likely to need financial help with the transition off of fossil fuels, they have the toughest homes to transition off of carbon. That’s why this bill requires that low- and moderate-income homes are prioritized for clean heat work. They must be a part of the mix every year, instead of being put at the back of the line. The Affordable Heat Act is based on last year’s Clean Heat Standard, but improves upon it in multiple ways, most notably how the bill treats biofuels. I appreciate that this bill quantifies exactly how much better or worse any particular biofuel is from a carbon pollution perspective relative to fuel oil. All biofuels are not equal, and the program will value each biofuel appropriately based on their total (including embodied) carbon emissions, and the allowable carbon pollution is ratcheted down over time. Let’s not forget, the cost of doing nothing is almost unimaginably high. The cost to local and global ecosystems, the cost to human health, all add up. And who will be paying those costs? Our children. We can no longer shirk our carbon pollution responsibility. Most of us need help to make the transition off of carbon, and this bill will provide that help. Please join me in supporting the Affordable Heat Act. |
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June 2024
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