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A systems approach to electrifying existing buildings

Lessons from a regional multi-stakeholder assessment for electrifying homes in California's San Mateo County. Read More

(Updated on July 24, 2024)

Photo by  Luliia Tarabanova on Shutterstock.

This is surely the decade for real climate action. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that unless we achieve certain targets by 2030, we may pass the point of no return on many climate-related trends.

California has always been a leader in the United States for climate action in wide ranging sectors, including residential energy efficiencies. Building codes have grown more stringent over time, requiring new homes to be energy efficient and ready for renewable energy generation. However, that still leaves millions of existing buildings that fail to meet these new standards. Existing buildings haven’t been ignored, but multiple efforts around the state to encourage retrofitting and electrifying existing homes have been disparate and have made only incremental changes. The efforts have been laudable, but insufficient to the California goal of increasing existing buildings’ energy efficiency by 50 percent by 2030.

An urgent call for systems mapping

Late in 2020, San Mateo County’s Office of Sustainability convened dozens of Bay Area organizations to determine how best to electrify existing single-family homes, as part of the nine-county Bay Area’s transition to an energy system free of greenhouse gas emissions. The county chose Presidio Graduate School’s PGS Consults team to facilitate a systems-thinking approach to the challenge of electrifying single-family homes in the region. PGS Consults, under my direction, championed a systems-mapping methodology deploying a series of workshops and focus groups with key players.

The Bay Area Regional Energy Network (BayREN) sponsored this multi-stakeholder process to understand the context in which electrification efforts are taking place and to identify new strategies that would have the highest impact on progress with the proper coordination and attention. Stakeholder workshops included representatives from public agencies, nonprofits and private companies, and we held focus groups for contractors and homeowners. Sessions examined what is happening in the system that either supports or poses barriers to transitioning from natural gas (methane) to all-electric homes.

As Susan Wright, senior sustainability specialist at the San Mateo County Office of Sustainability, put it: “The topic of electrifying existing homes is getting a lot of attention right now, and great work is being done by a variety of organizations. We were eager to take a step back to look at the whole system to identify areas where coordinating efforts regionally could move things along faster.”

Diagram shows Home Electrification Causal Loop

Systems diagram

This causal loop diagram illustrates the cause and effect relationships among the key variables impacting the goal of electrifying home appliances and heating/cooling systems. Red arrows represent an inverse relationship (when one variable increases, the variable it affects decreases and vice versa) while blue arrows indicate a direct causal relationship (the variables both increase or decrease together). The diagram helps reveal the most impactful points of intervention. The “busiest” nodes suggest that moving the system would involve affecting costs, motivating consumers and preparing contractors. Using these results, our stakeholder group focused on the overcoming challenges in three areas: technical challenges; structural issues; and mental models.

Technical challenges to electrifying homes

We have the technology we need to solve our climate crisis; it’s just that implementing that technology poses technical challenges. While not insurmountable, these barriers are daunting enough to dramatically slow the process of switching from gas to electric in existing homes. Many older homes, for example, are insufficiently wired to handle additional, higher power (think amps and volts) mechanical systems. Even switching from a gas water heater to an electric one can trip the need for expanded electrical panels for homeowners. (Author’s note: I’m in the process of doing so in my home.)

In other cases, the costs of purchasing electric appliances such as heat pump space heaters and the wiring and venting changes needed to install them lead to more extended remodeling than initially anticipated. Homeowners we talked with were also frustrated because few contractors in the area had the combined knowledge of plumbing and electrical systems required and tended to give high bids. 

Structural issues caused by market trends and policy implementation

Addressing only the technical challenges, however, still leaves us in the place of nibbling around the edges of a problem. Systems thinkers know to look at the structure of the system in which the problem exists to understand the larger forces at play that keep the system operating as it is. As participants examined some of these forces, they realized that market forces, public policies and even regulations were presenting larger barriers to the changes they were seeking. Homeowners are rightfully nervous about switching from natural gas to electricity given the price difference in the two energy sources and the decreasing reliability of the electrical grid in California over the last decade. It’s challenging to convince the public to switch from gas to electric when power outages are becoming more frequent.

While California leads the nation in climate policies, we learned that those policies are not always consistently implemented from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, creating confusion among homeowners and contractors. Additionally, the implementation of some policies created ripple effects in terms of more complicated approval processes, additional paperwork and added inspection requirements that discourage the very projects the regulation was intended to foster. The same was found to be true even with the many financial assistance mechanisms created to support the change. While rebates and incentives are available for various home electrification projects, they are inconsistently applied, inadequate to cover the incremental cost of an electric appliance and time-consuming to apply for. Contractors mentioned that the labor required to complete rebate paperwork often outweighs the incentive value itself. Finally, how can equity issues be addressed, so that all homeowners can participate in the climate transition?

Mental models held by homeowners

Systems are also driven by the attitudes and beliefs of the people that create and operate within them. The groups uncovered a host of mental models that discourage the home electrification effort. Foremost among them is the concept of initial cost. Many changes suggested by energy experts require the purchase of equipment that is more expensive than traditional gas appliances, but that return greater value over time when paired with renewable energy sources and storage. 

Many consumers either can’t afford the upfront cost or don’t understand the long-term benefit. The upfront costs also drive consumers to wait until existing appliances have reached their end of life before replacing. While not illogical, if they wait until equipment fails, they usually miss the opportunity to convert to an electric appliance, as the conversion can take several days to implement. When someone suddenly has no hot water, they’re not inclined to wait four days to make the switch. 

Next, the homeowner is easily baffled as to what to do or not to do, because they have no whole-house electrification plan to help them avoid pitfalls as they more affordably electrify their homes one mechanical system at a time. Finally, the real estate market has been slow to value energy efficiency, so investments in energy conservation may not be adequately factored into a home’s valuation, often making granite countertops a better selling point than wall insulation or air sealing.

Reconvening and recommendations

To overcome the cost barrier and the “wait until it breaks” attitude, the group is recommending three financial incentives programs: 

  1. “Cash for clunkers”-style incremental incentive that would reward people for proactively converting to electric appliances, rather than waiting until their old one breaks 
  2. Instant rebates that reduce the cost of electric appliances when they’re purchased, rather than requiring rebate paperwork to be filed after the fact 
  3. Scaling up financing mechanisms through public/private partnerships to enable homeowners to more easily access low-interest loans and avoid upfront payments.

The group also recognized the need to simplify permitting processes and requirements and make them consistent across jurisdictions. That led the group to consider whether a statewide policy would be more effective than a regional strategy implemented unevenly at the city level. Based on these conclusions, this effort identified key stakeholders to convene to discuss how to move the ideas forward.

Applying systems mapping to multi-stakeholder issues for new solutions

As a culture, we rush to converge on actions in which lots of people are busy doing lots of things. But the existential problems require more synergistic efforts. A systems-mapping approach identifies the system’s greatest leverage for change. Often, the technology, the will and great thinking are there, but change — such as transitioning homes from electric and gas to electric only— runs against a system with inertia. 

A systems-mapping approach can reveal recommendations for many sustainability and social justice problems, which are by definition multi-stakeholder. All you need is a convening of insightful participants, skilled facilitation and forward thinkers such as the San Mateo County Office of Sustainability, BayREN and the other collaborators for such projects.

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