New Biden water heater ban will drive up energy prices for poor, seniors: expert

Trump needs to issue an executive order about thirty seconds after taking the oath of office to the effect that "All executive orders and new departmental regulations enacted after November 5th, 2024 are immediately suspended pending review by new agency heads."

In fact, that would be a good law, that any such last minute actions by a lame duck be on hold until the new administration validates them.
 
Go! Just go. And stop leaving droppings around that you think will hurt Trump while harming Americans.

Just shows who and what Biden has always been.


A Biden administration ban on certain natural gas water heaters as part of the lame duck president’s climate agenda could send prices soaring for the elderly and the poor.
Under the policy, new non-condensing, natural gas-fired water heaters will be prohibited for sale starting in 2029 due to concerns about carbon-dioxide emissions. The policy comes during President Biden’s twilight days in the White House and was quietly announced without a press release.
If the policy takes effect, as it is slated to on March 11, a little less than 40% of the tankless water heaters currently on the market would be banned, according to an estimate from the Appliance Standards Awareness Project.
The new rules, which were published by the Department of Energy just after Christmas, also stipulate that new tankless gas water heaters must rely on 13% less energy than the least efficient comparable model on the markets today.
While the restrictions don’t outright ban non-condensing models, only condensing models have been able to meet the new ratcheted-up energy efficiency requirements, according to the Washington Free Beacon.
“When the rule goes into effect, all that manufacturing will basically be irrelevant,” Frank Windsor, president of Rinnai America, a water heater manufacturer, told the outlet.
“A lot of the major equipment that we’ve invested in will basically have to be scrapped.”
Rinnai had just finished up a roughly $70 million factory in Georgia to produce non-condensing gas water heaters in the US.
Customers will be pushed towards buying models that are more expensive or lean on non-instantaneous storage tank water heaters, which are generally cheaper but tend to be less efficient than the ones that are facing a ban, per the report.
For example, a Rinnai America tankless non-condensing natural gas water heater goes for roughly $1,000 at Home Depot, while a comparable condensing tank goes for about $1,800.
Tankless technology is frequently used in smaller apartments or housing spaces, which means that a lot of lower-income and elderly people tend to use those types of water heaters.
“Forcing low-income and senior customers to pay far more upfront is particularly concerning. DOE’s decision to go ahead with a flawed final rule is deeply disappointing,” Matthew Agen, the American Gas Association’s chief counsel for energy, told the outlet.
By the Department of Energy’s estimate, the costs saved over the long run by the new rules will be about $112 over a roughly 20-year stretch, Agen emphasized.
“The final rule is a violation of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA), which prohibits DOE from promulgating a standard that renders a product with a distinct performance characteristic unavailable,” he previously said.
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Well the local home Depot just restocked all of its gas water heaters that were missing for the past year. So I guess they're not going to wait for any law to be passed.
 
Non-condensing, storage tank gas water heaters can easily accomplish 17 percent more efficiency with better insulation. It's "standby" and flue heat losses that are the major cause of inefficiencies in such water heaters.
A lot of that can be controlled simply by setting the temperature at a reasonable degree. Heat transfer is a direct product of temperature differential. Keeping the heat down at a reasonable temperature helps to mitigate those losses... There are also water cooled flues available now for certain models of gas water heaters. They can recoup up to 3% of the efficiency.
 
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