Dedicated to Empowering and Informing the Burlingame Community

We had another big power outage Monday in B’game. At the start, the PG&E app said about 5,000 “users”, meaning service addresses, were out including long-suffering Broadway. Figure as many as 8-10,000 people lost power for some period of time. The area around City Hall was still out more than an hour after it was first reported. At this point it appears such outages don’t even merit a mention in the news–except here at the Voice.

Therefore, now is the perfect time to recap the long SF Comicle article from Sunday titled “What to know about water heater changes“. Writer Brooke Park might be out of a job–or in line for a Pulitzer–because her piece actually got it right on about 80% of the problems with the impending gas water heater ban. It’s almost a full page long and hits on:

Adding both a heat pump water heater and a heat pump furnace system could push more homeowners toward costly electrical panel upgrades. Older homes often have 100-amp panels, while newer or upgraded homes may have 200-amp panels or higher. Homes with multiple new electric appliances — such as two heat pumps and an electric vehicle charger — may be more likely to need electrical upgrades, especially if they have lower-capacity panels.

While Park captured the basics, the time and delay to find an electrician, get them scheduled and get the work done along with the permitting isn’t captured in the estimate. Nor is any sort of removal costs for the “obsolete” gas plumbing, vents, roof repair, etc, etc.

The Bay Are Air District said that an average natural gas water heater installation would be around $3,500 while a heat pump installation would cost about $7,000. At the high end, if for example significant electrical work is needed, the costs of a heat pump installation could rise to $38,800, the air district said.

(One guy in Foster City), Mark Allen was expecting at least a $2,500 rebate from his electricity provider but is still navigating the reimbursement process. “No kidding, 16 emails back-and-forth, we still did not have a permit and almost 2½, 3 months had gone by,” Allen said. When he got the necessary paperwork and submitted the rebate, the electricity provider said he was past the deadline.

Beyond the higher expense, heat pump water heaters can be larger, louder and slower to heat water than their natural gas counterparts.  “If you have the right setup for it, yes, it could be good. But I personally would never want to put one in my house,” said Chris Guslani, the owner of Bay Area Water Heaters, which installs natural gas water heaters as well as the occasional heat pump. “They don’t heat up as fast, they’re loud, they’re huge.”

Both (120V and 240V) models will produce noise comparable to a refrigerator, which is similar to the noise of a natural gas water heater. But the heat pump will often run for twice as long, Guslani said. Homes typically have 50- or 65-gallon tanks to hold hot water. Once that is exhausted, 120-volt models can typically heat from seven to 15 gallons of water per hour, while 240-volt water heaters can warm approximately 18 gallons to 23 gallons if its hybrid mode, which uses traditional electric water heater elements to warm water faster, is unlocked, installers said.  A gas-powered water heater can heat about 30 gallons of water per hour.

Guslani said that in about 60% of cases he’s seen, gas water heaters operate in spaces without any wall sockets. And manufacturers warn against using extension cords for water heaters. Heat pump water heater tanks might need to be up to 15 gallons larger than those used with natural gas water heaters to account for slower heating times, according to the air district. Heat pumps, which are often a foot taller than natural gas models, also typically need to be installed in rooms with more than 700 cubic feet to allow for adequate airflow.

There’s more that I will add as a comment, but it all reminds me of “Besides that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?” The bureaucrats are expected to vote on who gets exemptions in October, so let the virtue signaling begin. One of our County Supes, Ray Mueller, is tapping the brakes on the idea or at least the Jan. 1, 2027 start date.  

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4 responses to “Electric reality sets in? Not yet”

  1. Joe

    Here’s a bit more from the Comicle:

    Heat pumps, which are often a foot taller than natural gas models, also typically need to be installed in rooms with more than 700 cubic feet to allow for adequate airflow.

    “That’s our biggest challenge,” Master Plumber Eric Aune said in a YouTube video explaining heat pump technology. “If these are going to operate successfully, people are going to be happy with their performance, we need to put them in a space where we’re giving them a chance.”

    An optimal placement is in a basement or garage (Ed. not a lot of basements in B’game and plenty of detached garages), even better if the conditions are hot, since heat pumps — which extract heat from the air — operate most efficiently in warmer spaces, according to the Department of Energy. If a homeowner doesn’t have access to a larger space, contractors can attach ducts to funnel cold air outside or into another room, with an added cost.

    Who is exempt?
    Air district staff are proposing exemptions for several categories of property owners.

    These include low-income homeowners, along with those whose annual mortgage and property taxes are 28% or more of their gross income. (Ed. paperwork on top of paperwork) Exemptions could also be offered to homes with electrical constraints or if the heat pump is too big for the room available in a house.

    If a water heater abruptly breaks, the rules would allow a licensed contractor to buy and use a gas-fired water heater as a temporary replacement while the home is prepared for a heat pump.
    —————————
    You just have to laugh/cry. Contractors are going to install a temporary gas heater, then come back, de-install it and install an electric one? Yeah, right. Another article I read noted that a regular gas heater replacement took about 2 hours while the electric ones take 4+ hours. So, contractors are immediately 50% less efficient with their time and, of course, time is money. Kaching.

  2. Joe

    And one more hit of news from the 5/5/26 Merc on dates:

    On Wednesday, the board of the Bay Area Air District, a government agency based in San Francisco, will discuss softening the first-in-the-nation rules, which are set to take effect Jan. 1, to allow exemptions for low-income residents and for people who would need significant, expensive upgrades to their electrical breaker panels or structural changes in their homes to comply.

    The board, made up of 24 city council members and county supervisors from around the Bay Area, is scheduled to make a final decision in October. But this week’s meeting to discuss options is expected to draw passionate testimony from people on both sides of the issue.

    The rule to ban the sale and installation of all gas-burning furnaces would start Jan. 1, 2029, followed by a ban on gas-powered tankless water heaters Jan. 1, 2031. Combined, the new regulations would prevent between 37 and 85 deaths a year and avoid 15,000 asthma attacks a year in the Bay Area, the staff has calculated.
    ————————–
    Note: Those last claims are completely pulled out of thin, pretty clean air.

  3. Paloma Ave

    The unelected, environmental zealots, have there own agenda. They will make up statistics to try and tell you what you need to do. No freedom of choice as to how you power your home. Do we really need the expense (thousands of dollars to upgrade your home appliances and electric service) to save 37 to 85 people a year. This makes no sense at all.

  4. Peter Garrison

    Electric leaf blowers are to be used in Burlingame. Enforced? No.

    Let’s do the easy things correctly first and then get stupidly complicated.

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