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Notes -
Consider:
Induction requires magnetic cookware which may be more costly and may be bad for the environment
Electric requires more electrical components which are sourced from somewhere, how does the trade of these materials compare to gas
If the poor can only afford electric foil ovens, the longer time to boil might add up over time
Estimated days per year of power outage. When the power is out, the stove is the only way many people can still cook a meal. I imagine power outages in some parts of the country will be more frequent over the next decade.
At least when I was outfitting my first apartment years ago, cast iron was the cheapest cookware option on the shelf, which was nice because I was making minimum wage then, especially considering the expected life (beyond the owner's).
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Not to mention cost. I got into this with the heat pump article, but "It's 95% vs 80% efficient!" is an incredibly misleading thing to say when one form of energy costs three times as much per watt.
Which is the whole point behind this forced all-electric thing anyway. Realized when I did the heat pump research that there's a huge amount of industry and public money pouring into orgs like the "Rocky Mountain Institute," to launder all these all-electric mandate policies. Once the price of electricity skyrockets as it did in germany, they don't want people to be able to substitute.
I don't think they've thought it through that much. It's climate makework, they just want to do something to do something, whether it makes sense or not. Like recycling. More of a religious ritual. The greater the cost, the greater the penance.
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Specifically because of switching everything to electric while shifting the grid to less constant / reliable sources of electricity. If every state had a fission plant feeding its major cities, I wouldn’t see as much of a problem with de-gassification, especially here in the Southwest US, but fossil is still the best way to heat cold climate regions.
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