Final Project Report: Building Healthier and More Energy-Efficient Communities in Fresno and the Central Valley

Publication Type

Report

Date Published

11/2023

Authors

Abstract

Residents in Fresno suffer from poor air quality, increasing heat, among the highest utility bills in California, and low ownership of clean energy technologies. This work developed an action plan for Fresno to support California’s goal of enhancing equity by improving access to clean energy technologies and improving public health outcomes.
 
The project approach combined community outreach, policy analysis, and technical modeling. Outreach methods included stakeholder interviews and phone surveys. Technical modeling included integrated modeling of residential buildings and vehicles and modeling the benefits of adding solar PV and battery storage to a community center. The project found that 70% of residents are not comfortable in their homes in hot weather and revealed a lack of awareness of existing clean energy incentives. Used electric vehicles (EV) are within resident budgets with existing high clean car rebates. Integrated electrification packages (heat pump heating and cooling and heat pump water heating, used EVs, and PV) can achieve reasonable payback time of 15-20 years in many single family homes. With the Self-Generation Incentive Program Equity Rebate, resilience hub modeling gives favorable economic results for up to 24 hours of planned outages. The research team estimated about $70 million in public health benefits from transitioning all passenger vehicles in Fresno County to zero-emission vehicles and finds that low cost do-it-yourself air filters are an opportunity for greater deployment. Finally, the project generated a substantive action plan for greater climate equity for disadvantaged communities in Fresno. Finally, the project generated a substantive action plan for greater climate equity for disadvantaged communities in Fresno.
 
Effective interventions and policy development is urgently needed to ensure resident safety at home from extreme heat. Adding used EV and rooftop PV to building electrification measures can reduce overall household energy costs, but more aggressive financing programs are needed to cover high initial costs. Awareness and transactional barriers can be mitigated with more “one-stop shop” incentive programs. More integrated demonstration projects are needed for “learning-by-doing”, data collection, and to scale-up equitable decarbonization.

Year of Publication

2023

Notes

Prepared for: California Energy Commission

Contract Number: EPC-17-035

Organization

Research Areas

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