Re: Gas Stoves oh my
Originally Posted by
9tubes
You make good points. However, if the stove is leaking natural gas when off then it isn't working properly. Natural gas is poisonous, which is why the utility injects a particular scent so people can detect leaks. The NYT article implies that a stove that leaks poisonous gas is somehow working as it should and "properly" as you say. Further, the NYT makes the important leap that such a defective condition cannot be engineered out of the product. That is simply nonsense.
The NYT also does not state the magnitude of the problem relative to other sources of natural gas leaking into the atmosphere. Or other carbon sources. If the stove doesn't leak when off, the effect of burning gas to make dinner is trivial to the total greenhouse gases. A back-of-the-napkin calc shows that one cross country flight spews more carbon per person than a year of the typical household making dinner. I would agree that in a perfect world everyone would use electric but we live in a world where costs count, and I suggest that society collectively spend its money in an efficient manner to stop the big sources first.
You also make some good point, but I don't think you're getting it. Those stoves are working as designed, and it's because they're not designed properly. Yeah we should make them better, but I can tell you that my experience with the energy efficiency of home appliances (refrigerators, which are often a home's biggest user of electricity) shows that a price difference of even tens of dollars is anathema to retailers and manufacturers. And I think we all know what stricter standards are in today's political climate, a non-starter, and in danger of repeal even if they do make it out of the gate. So hell yeah I think we can and should do better.
75% of emissions occur when the device is "off", that's unacceptable. But it's also reality.
One sentence from the study really gave me pause, "We quantified steady-state-off emissions from stoves because they were not included in most previous cooktop emissions studies and because, previously, we found steady-state-off emissions to be a substantial, sometimes dominant, component of total methane emissions from storage water heaters." So this is not an isolated problem.
And while I certainly won't contest your back-of-the-envelope calc for flying (you get an amen from this congregation), I'd like to share some numbers that show these emissions are not even remotely trivial.
From the study, annual unburned methane emissions from US gas stoves = 28,100 metric tonnes.
Global warming potential (GWP) of methane = 86.
Annual greenhouse gas emissions from that unburned gas = 2.4 millions metric tonnes equivalent carbon dioxide (MT eCO2).
That's the emissions from 525,000 "average" US passenger cars.
So fixing that is like doubling the gas mileage of a million cars. Or replacing two million of them with electric vehicles.
Last edited by thollandpe; 02-18-2022 at 12:25 PM.
Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter
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