Electrification

Beginning in 2023 and through 2025 we electrified our fossil gas burning appliances. This was in part due to passage of the Inflation Reduction Act that offered substantial subsidies for making the switch to electricity. It was also due to programs in California encouraging homeowners to replace fossil gas burning in the home. We also simply wanted to “stop burning stuff” and by doing so demonstrate to others how this could be done.

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Electrification: Fossil Gas is Gone–PG&E Pulled the Meter

By

Paul Gipe

Our home electrification project is complete. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (PG&E) turned off the fossil gas supply and pulled …

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Electrification: Induction Stove

By

Paul Gipe

As part of our elimination of gas burning appliances we installed an induction stove. While induction stoves have been around …

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Electrification: Tracking Down a Mystery Outlet

By

Paul Gipe

Electrification: Tracking Down a Mystery Outlet We have a mystery outlet in the kitchen. It’s an old style outlet and …

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Electrification: Dumping Fossil Fuels

By

Paul Gipe

This is the first in a series of articles on electrifying our house so we can “stop burning stuff.” Yes, we already have electricity, but we use fossil gas for heat, hot water, and cooking. That’s what we plan to electrify, eliminating fossil gas from our home. Our gas is provided by PG&E (Pacific Gas & Electric Co.), our notorious utility company. Notorious because it killed eight people in San Bruno, California in a massive gas explosion in 2010 then they followed that up by killing another 85 people by starting the Camp Fire in 2018. In 2020 the company filed for bankruptcy, and since then been resuscitated. However, to its customers it’s still the same old PG&E.

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Breathe easy: Household electrification as a public health intervention to improve outdoor air quality

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External Source

The study finds that electrifying the nation’s homes would notably improve outdoor air quality, leading to 3,400 fewer premature deaths, 1,300 fewer hospital admissions and ER visits, 220,000 fewer asthma attacks, and 670,000 fewer days of reduced activity or missed work for Americans each year. While electrification is often discussed as a key strategy in addressing the climate crisis and lowering energy bills, this new research helps establish electrification as a public health intervention with wide-reaching potential.