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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(114,921 posts)
Mon Mar 11, 2024, 12:48 PM Mar 2024

Judge rejects attempt to delay building code update with new heat pump rules

Washington state building code changes designed to get more electric heat pumps installed in newly built houses, apartments and commercial buildings are still on track to take effect next week after a judge on Friday declined an industry-backed request to put the rules on hold.

Construction trade groups and others are challenging the code rewrite in Thurston County Superior Court, arguing that the State Building Code Council overstepped its authority in adopting it. Those who brought the case and other critics describe the new rules as effectively banning natural gas in new construction and say the revisions will lead to higher costs that will get passed to residents.

Environmental groups and other supporters of the code update say that by incentivizing electric heat pumps over natural gas the rules are an important step to combatting climate change. Fossil fuel emissions tied to buildings, they note, are one of the largest sources of carbon pollution after transportation.

Friday’s ruling was only on a request to pause the rules while litigation continues. An underlying court challenge is still alive.

https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2024/03/08/judge-rejects-attempt-to-delay-building-code-update-that-includes-new-heat-pump-rules/

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Judge rejects attempt to delay building code update with new heat pump rules (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Mar 2024 OP
While it will take years to meaningfully move the needle from gas to electricity, was power plant capacity analyzed? dutch777 Mar 2024 #1

dutch777

(3,443 posts)
1. While it will take years to meaningfully move the needle from gas to electricity, was power plant capacity analyzed?
Mon Mar 11, 2024, 01:37 PM
Mar 2024

I suspect this provision is really in the energy code rather than the building code but the result is the same. And I know WA state gets a significant but also relatively finite amount of its power from hydro electric dams. Some of these have been decommissioned in the last decade to restore salmon and other native species habitat. This concern is added to with push to electric cars. While solar and wind, and maybe geothermal generation given WA's volcanic substrate, can provide some increased power generation, I do hope someone is doing the math and the long range planning that will make all these great ideas workable and affordable and truly green in the total picture.

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