Residual Inequity: Assessing the Unintended Consequences of New York City’s Clean Heat Transition
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background and Literature Review
3. Methods
4. Results
4.1. Unequal Implementation—Geographic and Demographic Trends
4.2. Key Informant Interviews and Document Data
4.2.1. Awareness
“…I’m on the top floor. I’d never seen emissions before, and March 2006 were the first emissions that I saw. And there was huge, it was like a volcano of black smoke that came directly into my kitchen window… I realized immediately when it smelled like a city bus, like I was standing behind a city bus that we needed to get the heck out of the apartment… I shut the window but it was too late… I developed asthma in the same year, 2006. And I was 43 years old. I’d never had asthma in my life.”(Resident-advocate)
“…People should know about this [residential boiler fuel type], I doubt they know when they buy, they don’t know when they rent. There’s no way for people to know what they’re stepping into. And once you’re there, like I said, almost like blackmail. If you make noise you might lose your apartment…”(Resident-advocate)
4.2.2. Process
“I had one [natural gas hookup] that was more than twelve months late.”(Building owner)
“I would never recommend any building sticking with one fuel, because no one ever has been right. The cost of fuel, the cost of gas is going to [fluctuate] over the next 20 years, so I always advocate for full convertibility.”(Green lender)
“So if those interruptibles come on, and those 4000 accounts cost me 2 million gallons, which I did not know I was going to have to use…the [oil] price spikes.”(Heating oil supplier)
“…ultra-low Sulfur #2 has close to zero soot emissions, the lowest of all conventional heating fuels.”(Heating oil supplier)
“Not everybody is a fan of natural gas, ultra-low Sulfur diesel #2 is certainly even a cleaner source of energy than natural gas, without the implications that bother people about fracking.”(Green lender)
“…as we increase our biodiesel level we will in fact be cleaner than natural gas at all levels.”(City subcontractor supporting the Clean Heat Program)
“Going from 6 to 4 is relatively inexpensive, I can say around $5000. Going from 6 to 2, more expensive, could be as much as 15 to 20 thousand depending on the equipment.”(Building owner)
“…last year at this time you were paying maybe $3.50 a gallon of oil, converting to gas you’re paying $2, you know, $1.70, $1.80.”(Heating oil supplier)
“When we do a loan we try to put energy efficiency or retrofits into every loan. We’re not a government program so we can’t force it, but we benchmark the building before we loan them the money…so we approach owners with common sense money saving approaches.”(Green lender)
“…the majority of our buildings were in conjunction with weatherizing the building with [weatherization organizations]… replacing windows, boilers, [etc.] can get very expensive, so having the help of [nonprofits] enabled us to do all of the work we wanted to do…”[Traditional lender]
“There are very few building owners of multifamily buildings that are environmentalists. They are capitalists, they want to make money.”(Building owner)
4.2.3. Problems
“…one of the biggest challenges is that buildings [owners] just didn’t quite understand, they understood that they needed to convert but they didn’t understand what their options were.”(City subcontractor supporting the Clean Heat Program)
“…one of the things that we’ve also discovered is that nobody knows how a boiler works, and nobody knows what it actually takes to convert your boiler, if it even takes anything.”(Representative from elected official’s office)
“So the good news is I think at this point, hopefully nobody doesn’t know about the local law 43, because their boiler maintenance group, that service the boilers and the oil services groups who deliver the fuel have certainly, I think, been keeping people abreast of what they need to do… They generally will talk to a contractor about what their options are, [such as] is there gas availability?”(Community-based non-profit outreach staffer)
“And one [property management] company, the guy told me that he gets confused by all of the different companies that are contacting him with services that are supposedly gonna help them meet or comply with these local laws, and at the same time save them money on their energy bills. So that was one of the things, he’s like ‘I got all these people sending me messages via email, via regular mail, and I don’t know which ones are actually trying to scam me, which ones are the real deal. I wish they could provide us a list of which companies are actually worth my time and energy as opposed to having to figure it out by trial and error.’”(Community-based non-profit outreach staffer)
“…a lot of buildings that didn’t have the resources, or didn’t somehow get the message that they had to do something, or have realized that #4 is a short term solution that is not ideal.”(City subcontractor supporting the Clean Heat Program)
“…property managers really appreciate it when we go to co-op and condo boards since they have to vote on everything and it can be really difficult to get them to move. … they said they will not do it [transition heating fuel], it costs too much money… It’s difficult to get people to realize that it costs less to use grade 2 oil than to maintain a boiler using grade 6.”(City subcontractor supporting the Clean Heat Program)
“…there were about 10 panelists from various non-profits and government agencies that do provide services for buildings. And that’s when a lot of property management companies and also coop shareholders came out…”(Community-based non-profit outreach staffer)
“…we’ve been tracking the data and seeing that buildings were converting and we saw that particularly rent stabilized buildings were converting more slowly.”(City subcontractor supporting the Clean Heat Program)
“Clean Heat resources that the city put together has been fantastic. I mean they’ve done a really good job just getting out there with outreach and education and targeting building owners…”(Representative from elected official’s office)
5. Discussion
5.1. Policy Implications and Future Directions
5.2. Strengths and Limitations
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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2007 | 2017 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
County (Borough) | Ozone Grade (A–F) | 24-h Particle Grade (A–F) | Annual Particle Grade (Pass/Fail) | Ozone Grade (A–F) | 24-h Particle Grade (A–F) | Annual Particle Grade (Pass/Fail) |
Bronx | C | F | F | F | A | P |
Kings (Brooklyn) | Data Not Available | F | P | Data Not Available | A | P |
New York (Manhattan) | Data Not Available | F | F | D | A | P |
Queens | D | F | P | F | A | P |
Richmond (Staten Island) | F | F | P | F | A | Data Not Available |
Name | Year | Government Level | Policy Type | Intent |
---|---|---|---|---|
New York State S.1145-C | 2010 | State | Law | Reduction #2 diesel oil sulfur limits: 2000 to 15 ppm |
NYC Local Law 43-2010 | 2010 | City | Law | Requirement of ≥2% biodiesel in home heating oils and reduction of #4 diesel oil sulfur limits: 3000 to 1500 ppm |
Amendments to Title 15, Chapter 12 of the Rules of the City of New York | 2011 | City | Regulation | Ban of #6 diesel oil by 2015 and #4 by 2030 |
Year | Uptown | Rest of NYC | Total |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | 47.9% | 52.1% | 7170 |
(N = 3434) | (N = 3736) | ||
2015 | 53.2% | 46.8% | 3242 |
(N = 1724) | (N = 1518) |
Process | Problems | Successes |
---|---|---|
Compliance triggered by boiler permit renewals | Unsuccessful outreach efforts to building owners | Public-private partnerships were effectively executed |
Public surveillance via “spot the soot” | High cost and delays with transition to cleanest fuels | Near universal compliance with the #6 ban |
Financial support for building owners often coupled with weatherization efforts | Perception of a volatile energy market for clean fuels |
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Share and Cite
Carrión, D.; Lee, W.V.; Hernández, D. Residual Inequity: Assessing the Unintended Consequences of New York City’s Clean Heat Transition. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 117. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15010117
Carrión D, Lee WV, Hernández D. Residual Inequity: Assessing the Unintended Consequences of New York City’s Clean Heat Transition. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(1):117. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15010117
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarrión, Daniel, W. Victoria Lee, and Diana Hernández. 2018. "Residual Inequity: Assessing the Unintended Consequences of New York City’s Clean Heat Transition" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 1: 117. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15010117
APA StyleCarrión, D., Lee, W. V., & Hernández, D. (2018). Residual Inequity: Assessing the Unintended Consequences of New York City’s Clean Heat Transition. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(1), 117. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15010117