SoCal rejects plan to phase down new gas furnaces and water heaters

After an opposition campaign waged by SoCalGas and others, regulators tanked rules that would’ve encouraged, but not required, a transition to electric heat pumps.

On Friday, air-quality regulators for Southern California rejected a plan to gradually phase down a major source of pollution: new gas-burning space and water heaters in homes. It’s a blow to efforts to clean up harmful, planet-warming emissions from buildings — in Southern California and possibly beyond.

The rules would’ve reduced smog-forming emissions in the South Coast Air Quality Management District, home to more than 17 million residents across Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties — a region with some of the nation’s dirtiest air, according to the American Lung Association.

“We had the opportunity to pass life-saving legislation that would have significantly reduced air pollution from home appliances sold in our region,” Holly J. Mitchell, an LA County supervisor and SCAQMD board member who voted in favor of the measures, said in a statement. The rules were a chance ​“to improve health, reduce medical expenses, and fulfill our job of bringing our region into compliance with the Clean Air Act.”…

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