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Posted: 2024-04-12T22:28:28Z | Updated: 2024-04-12T22:28:28Z Biden Is Stalling On A Rule That Would Save Americans Nearly $1.5 Billion | HuffPost

Biden Is Stalling On A Rule That Would Save Americans Nearly $1.5 Billion

The regulation would change how much of the United States builds homes.

The Biden administration is racing to finalize regulations to curb planet-heating emissions from lightbulbsautomobiles  and trucks  before a key deadline, after which any new rules could be undone by Donald Trump if he retakes the White House.

With just over six months before the election, at least one major Biden proposal appears to be stalled: an update to the federal housing rules that agency experts estimate would save homeowners nearly three times more money on energy bills than it would add to construction costs, spread out over a 30-year mortgage.

Changing those housing rules would impact about 160,000 new houses and condos built each year in some of the nations fastest-growing and most expensive housing markets. The Biden administration is now looking to the rules as a model for reforming other federal housing programs, which would supercharge the White Houses efforts to curb both emissions and rising utility bills. 

But the final rule is inching through the bureaucratic process at an unusually slow rate, taking weeks or months to advance to technical next steps that regulations can typically reach in a matter of days. Its unclear whats causing the delay. And due to a legal quirk, if President Joe Biden loses reelection, Trump could have final say over any rule enacted after May or June.

Critics of the greener housing rules say the changes would raise the price of new homes when half of Americans already say they cant find affordable housing , home ownership rates are stagnating  and the bulk of inflation stems from the climbing cost of shelter. Republicans tried to block the rule from taking effect last year. 

Requiring new homes to meet stricter energy efficiency standards to qualify for federally-insured loans would add a combined $560 million in building costs, based on a single-year average of construction prices between 2019 and 2021, the Department of Housing and Urban Development found in its preliminary determination last year. 

But over the same period a buyer would pay off a house, the thicker insulation and modern windows mandated under the latest model building codes would save the country as much $1.5 billion in energy costs. Some markets could see new homes that save 24% more energy than models built to the previous years standards. The 90-page national blueprint for decarbonizing the building sector the Energy Department published this month calls HUD and other federal lending agencies to swiftly adopt the latest codes. 

A spokesperson for HUD declined to comment on whats causing the delay.

HUD is in the process of finalizing the determination, recognizing the interest in doing so as promptly as possible, the spokesperson told HuffPost in an emailed statement Friday. 

The U.S. has no official nationwide building code. Instead, states can choose to adopt model standards written and regularly updated by private code-writing organizations such as the International Code Council, a nonprofit that convenes local governments, utilities and construction industry professionals. Compared to previous rounds of codes, the ICCs 2021 homebuilding guidelines delivered double-digit improvements on the energy efficiency of new homes. 

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A map updated on March 31, 2024 from the Energy Department's energycodes.gov information website shows which states are in compliance with the latest building codes.
Energy Department

Yet few states have voluntarily taken up those new, greener benchmarks.

Nearly half the country most of the Southeast, Midwest and Mountain West uses the ICCs energy standards from at least 15 years ago. Eight states Alaska, Colorado, Kansas, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming have no statewide building codes at all, instead allowing counties and towns to decide for themselves how to impose standards on builderss. Just six states California, Connecticut, Illinois, New Jersey, Vermont, and Washington have adopted the standards in line with the latest ICC housing codes, according to Energy Department data updated a week ago.

That number could soon grow. Congress granted Biden $1 billion to give out to states to help them adopt newer and stricter codes. And the U.S. Balkanized housing code system is one reason why stricter federal standards for housing loans are critical for cutting back on emissions. Even though the U.S. cant force states or cities to adopt the latest ICC code, home loans give the federal government another lever to nudge states toward cleaner buildings.   

This has been long overdue, said Lowell Ungar, the director of federal policy at the watchdog American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. Each month of delay means thousands more homes with poor insulation, leaving residents with high energy bills for decades. Getting this done will lower families overall housing costs.

The National Association of Home Builders, the largest trade group representing construction companies and real estate developers, told HuffPost that mandating the use of the 2021 building codes is certainly not the answer.

This move will significantly limit access to federally-backed financing options for many first-time home buyers, rural home buyers, other home buyers with limited financial resources, and also developers of affordable apartments, the NAHB warned. In short, this blatant federal overreach is a counterproductive, short-sighted strategy that will exacerbate the nations housing affordability crisis and hurt the nations most vulnerable house hunters and renters.

The American Gas Association, which successfully struck key climate provisions from the energy codes due out in 2024, said federal housing regulators should reject the 2021 codes. In an emailed statement, the gas-utility lobby criticized an Energy Department analysis showing that the most recent codes cut back on wasted energy, citing an industry study .

HUD and USDA should not accept the revised code or standard provisions that negatively affect the availability or affordability of new construction of single and multifamily housing, the AGA told HuffPost. 

Federal law requires regulatory agencies to routinely ramp up the criteria for housing loans as more efficient codes come out. Yet the only time the codes for federal housing were updated was in 2015, when the Obama administration required that new homes meet the ICCs 2009 codes. The Trump administration briefly gutted the guidelines for adopting new codes, a move Biden promptly reversed.

By the time Biden took office, building codes had quietly become a new battleground in the fight to transition to cleaner energy.

One benefit of greener homes is that they leave homeowners less vulnerable to energy price swings from war or extreme weather disrupting supplies.

The most predictable and common cause of people leaving their homes is the energy burden and cost that can go up in such an unpredictable manner based on geopolitics or weather, said Amy Boyce, senior director of buildings and energy at the Institute for Market Transformation, a think tank focused on decarbonizing buildings.

Utility debt swelled to a record of over $20 billion last year as ratepayers struggled to catch up on electricity and heating bills in arrears. One survey found nearly one-third of Americans in October said they had cut back on or skipped necessary expenses in the past year to cover energy bills. Now states across the country are allowing utilities to jack up rates to help pay for modernizing the grid. 

Its so dangerous to say, OK, were worried about this one aspect of cost, but were just going to leave that much more unpredictable aspect for people to figure out later on their own, Boyce said.

In the wake of the United Nations dire 2018 climate science report, cities and towns across the U.S. enacted laws mandating emissions cuts. But they could only do so much: Local governments have little control over the power plants and automobiles that produce the bulk of carbon pollution. They do, however, control what kinds of houses, offices and storefronts go up. 

The ICC, which was formed in the 1990s as the U.S. sought to consolidate disparate code-writing organizations, provided an opportunity for local leaders to influence how houses are built in the whole country. While industry representatives could weigh in on updates to the ICCs codebook, only officials from elected governments could vote on the final product. 

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In this aerial view, completed and under construction new homes at a site in Trappe, Maryland, on October 28, 2022.
JIM WATSON via Getty Images

For years, the ICC codes became only barely more energy-efficient with each update. But the ICC codes governments voted to enact in 2021 saw gains of as much as 14%. 

Environmentalists, architects and green builders hailed the new codes. Industry groups balked. Trade associations representing gas utilities lobbied the ICC to strip key climate-friendly provisions, like rules that would require new homes to include the circuitry for electric appliances, car chargers and solar panels.

After the backlash, the ICC eliminated governments right to vote on codes altogether, moving instead to a consensus committee system that granted builders and fossil fuel companies more influence over the process. The Biden administration warned that those changes harmed the ICC code-writing processs democratic legitimacy.

Promising to enshrine the wins of the latest code, Kevin Bush, HUDs deputy assistant secretary for grant programs, told advocates in a July 2021 letter that the agency expected to take the first major step toward enshrining the newest codes into regulations later this year.

HUD did not submit its draft to the White Houses Office of Management and Budget until August 2022. It took OMB eight months to complete its review of the determination a process that appeared to have ended only hours after HuffPost contacted the agency about the stalled regulation in March 2023. 

The proposal to update the housing loan standards then went to the White Houses Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. The OIRA completed its review and sent the regulation back to HUD last month.

At other agencies, such as the Energy Department, finalized regulations typically appear on the Federal Register the crucial last step before a regulation goes into force within days of returning to the regulators from OIRA review. 

After nearly four weeks, HUD has yet to publish its final rule on the Federal Register.

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Workers attach siding to a house at a new home construction site in Trappe, Maryland, on October 28, 2022.
JIM WATSON via Getty Images

Theres no obvious reason for the rule to be stalled. While the final draft is not out, the language on the OIRAs website indicated that the agency returned the proposal to HUD without any major changes. Some advocates privately speculated that HUD could be facing internal upheaval since HUD Secretary Marcia Fudge stepped down and retired last month, leaving her temporary replacement in charge.

Unlike mortgages backed by HUD or the Agriculture Department, loans issued under the Federal Housing Finance Agency dont require homes to follow any specific energy codes, nor do the mortgages purchased by the federally related Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lenders. An activist campaign launched  in November is calling for those agencies to implement similar standards to those HUD uses. The administration told E&E News  it would consider the move in December.

If HUD doesnt move forward, that [effort] faces an almost insurmountable hurdle, Boyce said.

The clock is ticking. Under a little-known statute called the Congressional Review Act, lawmakers can undo federal rules up to 60 days after theyre put in place. House Republicans have already repeatedly held votes against the Biden administrations proposed regulations. But these have so far amounted to nothing but symbolism, since Democrats still control the Senate, and Biden would almost certainly veto any legislation passed in protest of his climate agenda. 

Still, since the 60 working days covered by the law arent necessarily consecutive, the period always stretches out over more than two months and could eclipse the end of Bidens first term in office. If Trump wins the presidency and Republicans win the Senate and keep the House, Biden-era climate rules would likely be rolled back.

Legal experts disagree on when the CRA deadline will actually land. Based on the House of Representatives calendar, the law firm Hunton Andrews Kurth estimated it will be on May 22, while based on the Senate calendar, the deadline would be June 7, according to the law firm Venable .  

The ICC is due out with its 2024 codes in the next few weeks. It had looked poised to put out landmark climate provisions designed to make going electric easier and cheaper for homeowners. Up to 90% of experts involved in writing the code supported the green measures. But gas companies once again appealed. At the last minute, the ICCs board intervened last month, and granted all the fossil fuel firms requests. 

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Before You Go

The 10 Books That Scientists Say Can Make A Difference In The Climate Crisis
"Drawdown The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever to Reverse Global Warming" by Paul Hawken(01 of10)
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Longtime environmentalist and co-founder of Project Drawdown Paul Hawken wrote this graspable and comprehensive plan to reverse global warming and climate change. Understanding that, for many, it isnt a lack of interest or acceptance that climate change is happening; instead, its the overwhelming feeling of where to begin. Drawdown works to address this feeling of hopelessness by cataloging 100 solutions from environmentalists, scientists and policymakers around the world to reverse or slow global warming. From better utilizing existing technology to implementing impactful policies, Hawken has written a practical, optimistic and extremely useful book for everyday people looking to overcome their apathy and make an actual difference in the face of the climate crisis.

100 substantive solutions to address climate change, in one book. Broken down in solutions, it shows that climate change CAN be addressed and the solutions are concrete and achievable. Matt Miller , director of science communication for The Nature Conservancy
(credit:Amazon)
"Losing Earth: A Recent History" by Nathaniel Rich(02 of10)
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Weve known for many decades that climate change is happening. In Nathaniel Richs Losing Earth: A Recent History, he examines a specific period in our not-so-distant past when, according to the publisher, two unlikely heroes, risked their careers in a desperate, escalating campaign to convince the world to act before it was too late. His book grew from an expansive New York Times Magazine article Rich wrote in 2018 in which he fixated on the period between 1979 and 1989 when lobbyist Rafe Pomerance and the climate scientist James Hansen worked tirelessly to sound the alarm on the climate crisis and influence politicians to take action on a global scale. In Losing Earth, Rich continues his important work by pulling from reports and scientific climate research from the late 70s that depict a spike in temperatures and how this increase would lead to catastrophic impacts on the planet. Richs book is as much about the history of the time and how presently we grapple with past choices and what the future holds for our planet.

Highlighting major events affecting the discourse of climate change since 1979, this book covers our recent history of climate change policy and practice, the birth of climate denialism, how we got here, and how we must move forward to change the narrative. Sean Mobley , senior policy associate for climate in Indiana with The Nature Conservancy
(credit:Amazon)
"Eat, Poop, Die: How Animals Make Our World" by Joe Roman(03 of10)
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Dubbed one of the best books of 2023 by Scientific America, conservation biologist Joe Roman delves into our ecosystem, its relationship with the bodily functions of animals, and their impact on climate solutions. Filled with fascinating and funny facts about the animal world, Eat, Poop, Die: How Animals Make Our World'' explains how all living things and their cycles of existence are vital for sustaining the worlds ecology, from the decomposition of their corpses to the fecal matter they leave behind. Roman also contends that by better understanding the life cycles and ecology of the creatures around us, we have a better chance of combating the climate crisis.

I really like [this] book. I think its a creative way to explore/understand the importance and fragility of ecological connectivity. Alex Wegmann , lead scientist with island resilience at The Nature Conservancy in California
(credit:Amazon)
"Climate Change from the Streets: How Conflict and Collaboration Strengthen the Environmental Justice Movement" by Michael Mndez(04 of10)
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Michael Mndez is an assistant professor of environmental policy and planning at the University of California, Irvine. In his debut book, Mndez offers a platform to those most impacted by extreme climate change and their efforts to effect real climate policy changes. Told through individual stories and experiences, Mndez manages to intimately capture how climate is disproportionately affecting people of color and those living in lower-income communities and even creating a public health crisis. Robin Happel, author of Climate Books for Changemakers, praised Mndezs literary call to action, referring to the book as a powerful introduction to the environmental justice movement, which is increasingly a driving force behind climate action both in America and internationally.

[This book] describes the progression of climate policy making in California through an environmental justice lens, from local to international connections. Mari Rose Taruc, energy justice director for California Environmental Justice Alliance
(credit:Amazon)
Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall Kimmerer(05 of10)
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Author and trained botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer is the director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry and a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. Her New York Times-lauded collection of essays binds together her intimate knowledge of Western science, nature and Indigenous teaching into a meditative gift for any reader. With moving and sly prose, Kimmerer shows how living beings, from the strawberries and squash to the slippery salamanders and even algae, are whispering lessons to us. A surprise bestseller, Braiding Sweetgrass is also a bold call to action to address climate change as Kimmerer compels the reader to revisit and alter their views on the life and environment surrounding them, to challenge our European-centric ecological lenses and see the world instead as she does with the influence of Native American creation stories and views on sustainability.

The subtitle of the book says it all. So many people believe climate change is a technological challenge, and we must find technological solutions. Braiding Sweetgrass reminds us that what got us here is not going to solve the climate crisis. It presents a different way of understanding climate change our relationship to the earth, and the solutions we need, embodied in two-eyed seeing, which Dr. Kimmerer describes learning from both Western science as well as traditional, Indigenous ecological knowledge (using both eyes). Every chapter of Braiding Sweetgrass is a story, with experience and insights on approaches that will help us achieve a livable climate, healthy communities, and thriving nature. I recommend listening to the audio book, which Dr. Kimmerer reads. Listening to her stories in her beautiful voice has a particular power. The stories of Braiding Sweetgrass remind us that tackling climate change is really about culture, meaning its about us and our relationship to the wider natural world, and how we appreciate and understand that, including just being grateful for the many gifts the Earth provides. Bill Ulfelder , executive director of the nature conservancy in New York
(credit:Amazon)
"What We Think About When We Try Not to Think About Global Warming" by Per Espen Stoknes(06 of10)
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Per Espen Stoknes irreverent and honest title may have a dismissive tone, but his book What We Think About When We Try Not to Think About Global Warming is an illuminating read. The psychologist and ecologist writes about how overwhelming climate change can be, especially for those who are most knowledgeable about the crisis. He acknowledges and works to answer the question: If it feels like global warming is impossible to change, how do you act? Stoknes aims to redefine climate change in a way that highlights the actual meaningful steps taken by activists, governments and even private businesses. He avoids wallowing in the despair that can create inaction and identifies psychological barriers with corresponding psychological strategies as solutions. With a deep understanding of the human psyche and contemporary life, Stoknes book can be a guide for readers looking to make positive climate-changing behaviors that are easy to implement.

It gets at the root causes of human beings natural tendencies to avoid talking about and taking action on climate change. Nikki Rovner , associate state director, The Nature Conservancy Virginia Chapter
(credit:Amazon)
"On Indigenuity: Learning the Lessons of Mother Earth" by Daniel Wildcat(07 of10)
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Called a leading Indigenous thinker by his publisher, author and professor Daniel Wildcat is a Yuchi member of the Muscogee Nation of Oklahoma. In his essay-style book, Wildcat calls upon his robust experience and knowledge of Indigenous ideas to illuminate the climate crisis and hopefully find our way to harmonious climate solutions. He explains the ways a Western-influenced worldview has played a role in the current state of our environment and allowed many to live in a comfortable state of ignorance. Wildcat goes on to urge climate activists and anyone else concerned about our planet to listen and engage with Indigenous peoples, their collective knowledge, and ancient practices to better co-exist with the natural world and its resources.

Daniel Wildcats new book, On Indigenuity: Learning the Lessons of Mother Earth, applies indigenous worldview and environmental relationships to deal with modern environmental problems. Sam 'Ohu Gon , senior scientist and cultural advisor at The Nature Conservancy in Hawaii and Palmyra
(credit:Amazon)
"Ignition: Lighting Fires in a Burning World" by M.R. O'Connor(08 of10)
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This journalistic work from M.R. OConnor covers conservation efforts, our history with wildfires and natural disaster policies and culminates into an honest but optimistic vision. Ignition: Lighting Fires in a Burning World is a fascinating and detailed exploration of how humans have interacted with fire in the past and how our modern use of flame can impact the world and climate today. She points to Indigenous cultures and their understanding of natural symbiosis, proving that humans have used fires for thousands of years to control ecosystems, clear unwanted debris and nourish the soil. OConnors investigative research for the book included speaking with firefighters, ecologists, trained pyrotechnicians and others to help readers better understand our relationship with nature and the risk that the inevitable increase of uncontrolled wildfires will have on our survival.

One of the best features of those who are (literally) lighting the way in the use of beneficial fire and leading the movement. Marek Smith , North American fire director for The Nature Conservancy
(credit:Amazon)
"The Soil Will Save Us: How Scientists, Farmers and Foodies Are Healing the Soil to Save the Planet" by Kristin Ohlson(09 of10)
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Is it possible to reverse global warming? In bestselling author and journalist Kristin Ohlsons book, shes optimistic that we can begin to create a reversal and it begins with dirt. Looking at the history of industrial agriculture and its rampant increase to meet consumption demands, Ohlson reveals that we have caused an 80% loss of carbon from our earths soils, which is released into the atmosphere, warming the planet. Her answer to combat this lies in the production of our food. Calling upon the history and present science of farming, along with the expert opinion of ranchers and climate researchers, she contends that what makes a vibrant and healthy soil, can also help in mitigating the modern problems of extreme climate and producing healthy consumable food.

A fantastic analysis of how we can feed the world sustainably and use natural systems to mitigate and adapt to a changing climate. Mobley
(credit:Amazon)
"Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter" by Ben Goldfarb(10 of10)
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Environmental journalist Ben Goldfarb's beloved Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter is a humorous and engrossing science book about those buck-toothed, busybody rodents and the natural world around them. Goldfarb, along with fellow Beaver Believers, explains how these intelligent and resourceful animals could be the solution to so many ecological issues, specifically in the wetlands, if they were just allowed to live their lives without the fear of being hunted for the fur-trade. According to his research, Goldfarb believes the adorable beaver is an animal that doubles as an ecosystem and that without them, the ecological impacts would manifest themselves in the form of eroded streams, dried-up wetlands, and depleted populations of fish and other wildlife.

It's about the history of overharvesting beavers, the ecological ramifications, and success stories of beaver rewilding with positive outcomes for humans and beavers. It is well-written and a good read for the general public not a niche read for trained scientists. Gregor Hamilton, conservation practitioner with The Nature Conservancy, New Mexico chapter
(credit:Amazon)