Discover sustainability events happening across the Monadnock region.
The Department of Energy is poised to update standards for home furnaces and water heaters, and the new efficiency requirements could dramatically accelerate the use of heat pumps nationally.
New water heater standards could make heat pump water heaters the dominant water heating technology by the end of the decade (up from 2% today). The proposed new gas furnace standards would mean that replacing an old low efficiency furnace with a new high efficiency gas furnace would typically require costly venting upgrades. Switching to a heat pump would avoid those added costs and therefore make heat pumps an even more attractive option for millions of homes with aging gas furnaces.
These increased efficiency standards combined with the continuing phase out of fossil gas combustion through city and state electrification mandates and air quality regulations, are expected to increase fossil gas prices over the coming years. As more homes are electrified and leave the gas system, a new study from ACEEE that will be discussed in this webinar found that average gas utility costs per customer can increase between 21% and 129%.
Join Electrify Now and the Advanced Water Heating Initiative as they explore:
Panelists
Joanna Mauer leads the Appliance Standards and Awareness Project’s technical advocacy in U.S. Department of Energy rulemakings for efficiency standards for residential appliances and commercial and industrial equipment. She joined ASAP in 2010. Prior to joining ASAP, Joanna worked at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Center for Integrative Environmental Research. Joanna earned a Master of Public Policy from the University of Maryland and a Bachelor of Science in civil and environmental engineering from Cornell University.
Steven Nadel has been ACEEE’s executive director since 2001. He has worked in the energy efficiency field for more than 30 years and has over 200 publications. His current research interests include utility-sector energy efficiency programs and policies; state, federal, and local energy and climate change policy; and appliance and equipment efficiency standards. Steve earned a master of science in energy management from the New York Institute of Technology and a master of arts in environmental studies and a bachelor of arts in government from Wesleyan University.
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