• @[email protected]OPM
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    229 days ago

    Three reasons:

    1. Without the use for space heating, very little gas will be distributed, making the distribution system totally uneconomic for small users.
    2. The distribution system leaks methane. It’s ~3% of what goes through it when there is high usage, but the amount of leakage probably doesn’t go down unless you start decommissioning it.
    3. You want to protect the workers who have to breathe the fumes
    • @[email protected]
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      229 days ago

      Heating is irrelevant for commercial kitchen gas usage.

      You’re just trying to yoke this terrible idea to a more sensible one for residential heating.

      • @[email protected]OPM
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        329 days ago

        No, it’s relevant for the cost of distributing the gas. It’s not cost-effective to run a gas distribution system just to commercial kitchens without the much larger distribution going to heating.

        • @[email protected]
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          029 days ago

          If that’s right, you don’t need to ban gas cooking, just ban residential heating and let the market take care of it.

          Y’all just want to tear shit down to pat yourselves on the back.

          • @[email protected]OPM
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            129 days ago

            Definitely could do it that way. But everybody is better off if we do it in a planned way instead of leaving people to deal with that kind of a mess.

              • @[email protected]OPM
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                229 days ago

                Two options right now:

                1. Run new electrical lines to them capable of providing for their actual needs
                2. Propane
                • @D1G17AL
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                  -129 days ago

                  Propane doesn’t offer the benefits you seem to think it does. It’s more expensive and the distribution system for it likely has as many issues as the natural gas does. Going after natural gas distribution while we still have larger and more significant sources of emissions is a minuscule bandage solution at best. At worst it solves a very minor source of emissions problems at a major cost in both money and convenience.

                  • @[email protected]OPM
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                    29 days ago

                    Those commercial and residential emissions - those are largely about the fuels burned in buildings. 14% of the total is enough to matter — and when we’re running out of time to get emissions to zero, we need to cut it all to zero, not pick and choose.

        • @D1G17AL
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          -129 days ago

          What evidence do you have that it would be cost-ineffective to pipe natural gas to only businesses? The only thing they do these days when someone opts out of using natural gas is turn off the valve at the street. The gas still flows to other businesses and neighbors. It doesn’t matter what Berkeley does because Oakland, Richmond, Hayward and every other town or city around Berkeley is not going to ban the use of natural gas. It’s a non-starter. It’s pointless to do.