HENDERSON HEADLINES COMBATTING THE CLIMATE CRISIS THROUGH BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION Authored by: Brian Alessi | October 28, 2021 As I began researching and writing this piece, a small banner on Regeneration.org gently reminded me that there were 2,999 days until 2030. 2,999 days seemed like plenty of time to apply the solutions needed to overcome the climate crisis. However, also open on my desktop was the 1965 report “Restoring the Quality of Our Environment” that was delivered to President Lyndon B. Johnson by his Science Advisory Committee. The report recognized that fossil fuel combustion contributes to climate change. That was more than 20,000 days ago. We’ve had over 55 years to make a course correction. 2,999 days suddenly felt like Thing One and Thing Two are still in the house and mother is pulling into the driveway. With the limited time we have to curb environmental destruction, the biggest question for the building industry is where should we start? What exactly should we first do with our buildings to combat the climate crisis? At the top of many lists is building electrification, which means using electricity for heating, cooling, water heating, and cooking, as well as eliminating the use of fossil fuels for any of these uses. WHY BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION? Building electrification provides a pathway to eliminating fossil fuel use, which is responsible for 92% of total U.S. anthropogenic CO2 emissions. While building electrification by itself is not enough to achieve the needed CO2 emission reduction targets, it is one requirement among many other strategies we must implement if we’re going to reach our climate goals for 2030 and 2040. When combined with utility-scale decarbonization efforts, building electrification will make a big dent in global CO2 emissions. So, how much of a difference do all-electric buildings make in reducing CO2 emissions? A study from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), part of the U.S. Department of Energy, found that “electrification, in the absence of any additional power sector carbon policy, can result in 41% reductions (below 2005 level) in economy-wide fossil fuel combustion emissions.” When we combine all-electric buildings with a decarbonized grid, the reductions can reach up to 75% by 2050. This is a big deal. Municipalities need to rewrite building codes. Clients need to demand all-electric buildings. Design and construction teams need to deliver. And building electrification advocates need to keep advocating!