loader from loading.io

Five years later, looking back at the Berkeley gas ban

Energy Evolution

Release Date: 07/12/2024

In this episode of Energy Evolution, host Taylor Kuykendall is joined by Tom DiChristopher, senior reporter at S&P Global Commodity Insights, to discuss the movement to ban new gas hookups and require all-electric construction for new buildings.

In 2023, a court struck down a gas ban in Berkeley, California, which was the first of its kind in the nation. The decision came as part of a legal settlement with the California Restaurant Association, and Berkeley will no longer enforce the ban while it goes through the process of repealing it.

The court opinion that led to the settlement is expected to set a precedent for other cities and counties in California and West Coast policymakers to reconsider their own gas bans and building electrification policies. Despite the repeal in Berkeley, many cities in California have implemented their own versions of gas bans, and there is still momentum to transition buildings away from natural gas in several states.

Local areas are exploring options to strengthen building codes and encourage electrification without violating federal energy laws. 

Subscribe to Energy Evolution to stay current on the energy transition and its implications. The show is co-hosted by veteran journalists Dan Testa and Taylor Kuykendall.

CORRECTION NOTICE: At one point during the podcast, it was mistakenly said that the gas ban was repealed in April 2024. The ban was repealed in 2023.