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Feb 2, 2022

ACEEE Scorecard Update: Electrification Revs Up as States Advance Climate Action

According to a report by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE), states in the US have accelerated clean energy efforts last year, partially with new laws to decarbonize their economies with a growing emphasis on electrification to help aid the recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and meet climate goals. These new state laws encourage electrification that can curb energy use and emissions in buildings and transportation, and some of them promote energy equity and affordability. The report also shows that several states have adopted or implemented the 2018 International Energy Conservation Code and other stricter efficiency standards for appliances, cars, and buildings.

A field of seven windmills.

To aid recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and meet climate goals, states accelerated clean energy efforts last year, partly with ambitious new laws to decarbonize their economies with an increasing emphasis on electrification, according to a report today by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).

The State Energy Efficiency Scorecard: 2021 Progress Report shows that several states passed laws in 2021 that incentivize fuel switching, which includes switching from fossil-fueled heating to efficient electric heat pumps. Such state laws—in Illinois, Colorado, Massachusetts, and Minnesota—encourage electrification that can curb energy use and emissions.

“As states emerged from the early months of the pandemic, they turned to electrification and energy-saving standards to help address the growing urgency of the climate crisis,” says Weston Berg, senior researcher at ACEEE and lead author of the report, which is an interim update to ACEEE’s annual State Scorecard. He says the crisis was underscored by extreme weather disasters last year—a February storm in Texas and an unprecedented Pacific Northwest heat wave in June—that caused large-scale power outages and casualties. 

“States such as Massachusetts are adopting promising new laws that can reduce harmful pollution and create thousands of clean energy jobs, but they need to vigilantly implement them,” says Berg. He notes unfortunate recent decisions in Arizona and New Hampshire have put energy-saving efforts at risk. The good news: a 2021 federal infrastructure bill will offer states robust funding for efficiency and other clean energy measures.

Electrification efforts increased not only in the buildings sector but also in transportation, which accounts for the largest share (about 29%) of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. California and New York moved to require that all new passenger cars and light-duty trucks sold be zero-emission by 2035. Many states coordinated efforts to improve electric vehicle (EV) charging options by joining collaboratives, including the Regional Electric Vehicle West (REV West) and the Southeast Regional Electric Vehicle Information Exchange. In September, the governors of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin agreed to create a REV Midwest.

States pushed to promote electric trucks as well. Last year, Oregon, Washington, New York, and New Jersey followed California by adopting the Advanced Clean Trucks rule, which sets targets to increase sales of zero-emission trucks, and other states took steps to adopt the rule in the future. These actions build on commitments by 15 states and the District of Columbia in a 2020 memorandum of understanding to achieve 100% ZEV sales by 2050, with an interim target of 30% by 2030. Also critical for slashing transportation emissions are pairing electrification with smart growth land use to reduce vehicle miles traveled and promoting energy-efficient public transit.

As with electrification, new state laws sought to advance energy equity and affordability, which became more pressing issues as the virus-driven downturn exacerbated racial and economic inequalities.  

These laws include Minnesota’s Energy Conservation and Optimization Act, which increases funding for low-income energy efficiency programs, and Illinois’s Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which creates a health and safety fund for needed repairs to buildings occupied by low-income households. In addition: Massachusetts includes provisions to expand outreach to environmental justice populations; Nevada doubles energy efficiency funding for low-income customers and public schools in underserved communities; Oregon enables utilities to consider equity-related factors in determining customer energy rates; and Washington carves out funding for programs to help overburdened populations, including EV opportunities for low-income residents.


Efficiency Standards for Appliances, Cars, and Buildings

As the above map shows, some states included new or more stringent energy-saving standards for appliances and equipment in their clean energy laws. Other states adopted these standards as stand-alone measures. States also pushed to reduce energy waste with stricter efficiency standards for vehicles and buildings.

  • Appliance standards: States were particularly active in setting efficiency standards for products. New state laws in DC, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon, and Rhode Island will require minimum energy and water use efficiency levels for more than 15 types of products, including air purifiers, computers, and restaurant equipment. In January, New Jersey signed into law new standards for 17 types of products. Massachusetts passed the first standards for EV chargers, and Nevada became the first state to adopt standards for gas fireplaces and air purifiers.
  • Fuel economy: While the federal government dragged its feet, states took action to improve the fuel economy standards for passenger cars and light trucks. Virginia, Washington, Nevada, New Mexico, and Minnesota moved to adopt California’s clean car rules, including its low-emission vehicle regulations and zero-emission vehicle (ZEV) program. Virginia passed HB 1965, making it the 15th state to adopt California’s ZEV program.
  • Building codes: States advanced more-efficient building energy codes, many coinciding with long-term goals to establish “net-zero-energy” codes and strengthen incentives for all-electric construction. Many states across the South, though, have sought to stymie these efforts by adopting prohibitions on gas bans and electrification codes. 

    States adopting or implementing the 2018 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) in 2021 included Hawaii and Virginia. The new 2021 IECC, which the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has determined provides a 9.4% improvement in energy savings relative to the previous code, is also under review in many states, including Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin, as well as the District of Columbia.  

    In addition, Illinois and Massachusetts passed legislation calling for new high-performance stretch codes, which require stricter efficiency than base codes, and Colorado became the second state, after Washington, to adopt a building energy performance standard for large buildings. Such a standard, a critical step for addressing energy waste in existing construction, requires buildings to meet performance targets by improving over time.


Pandemic’s Impact and Federal Funding

The COVID-19 pandemic had lingering disruptions to the energy efficiency industry, especially during the first half of 2020, that slowed overall progress. As a result, the amount of power saved by ratepayer-funded electric efficiency programs dipped 1.1% nationwide in 2020, from 26.9 million megawatt-hours (MWh) in 2019 to 26.6 million MWh. Of course, the impact varied across states, which took different approaches to addressing the pandemic.

Despite COVID’s overall impact, states can now tap new and unprecedented federal funding to advance their efforts. Last year, after months of negotiations, Congress reached an agreement on a $1 trillion infrastructure bill signed by President Biden in mid-November. The bill includes $3.5 billion for weatherizing homes of low-income households; more than $1 billion for building energy codes, new revolving loan funds supporting commercial building and home upgrades, public school and federal building upgrades, and worker training; $7.5 billion for installation of EV chargers; and millions more for industrial energy efficiency.

These investments—together with other federal funds via the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act, Weatherization Assistance Program, and State Energy Program—offer states a historic opportunity to support a strong and equitable economic recovery and clean energy transition.

ACEEE will track how states take advantage of federal opportunities and move forward in multiple areas in its next edition later this year of the annual State Energy Efficiency Scorecard, which has analyzed states for more than 15 years.


This press release was originally published here and is reprinted with permission.

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