Equilibrium & Sustainability

Equilibrium/Sustainability — Toyota used up EV credits on gas-burning hybrid

FILE - In this Monday, Jan. 15, 2015, file photo, the emblem on a new Toyota is shown at a dealership in Brandon, Fla. Toyota's much ballyhooed plug-in hybrid Prius Prime is being pushed back by several months, with the new sales date set for late this year or early next year. Toyota Motor Corp. said Wednesday the launch dates were being delayed for Japan, but not for the U.S. and Europe because they were set to follow Japan from the start. It was unclear what the dates were for any of the regions. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, File)

Automaker Toyota has run through its federal electric vehicle (EV) tax credits just before its new all-electric SUV hits the streets, TechCrunch reported. 

Most of the company’s tax credits — which offer up to $7,500 in rebates to buyers of the first 200,000 plug-in hybrids or EVs a company produces — went to plug-in hybrids like the Prius Prime and RAV4, according to TechCrunch. 

With a lineup of 30 EVs planned for 2030, Toyota joins Tesla and General Motors on the roster of auto companies that must now expect customers to pay the full price for their cars without hope of a tax break on the back end. 

The company is one of several automakers pushing Congress to extend those incentives in advance of an expected Republican takeover in November, Reuters reported.

Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. Send tips and feedback: Saul Elbein. A friend forward this newsletter to you? Subscribe here.

Today we’ll look at a controversial European bill ruling that natural gas is a “green” fuel — which climate campaigners warn will have dangerous impacts on the climate. Then we’ll look at why the U.S. center of gas production isn’t benefiting from low prices.

Europe votes that gas is ‘green’

Gas and nuclear energy can be counted as “green” fuels after a vote on Wednesday in the European Union Parliament.

The vote: Critics of the EU Taxonomy — which aimed to counter “greenwashing,” or misrepresenting environmental benefits, by settling once and for all what was and was not renewable energy — argued that including these fuels was itself a misrepresentation of that kind, The Washington Post reported. 

But a vote in favor of excluding them failed 328 to 278, according to the EU. 

The Taxonomy will now take effect on Jan. 1, 2023. 

Dueling reactions: Responses from environmental campaigners were heated. 

Behind the conflict: As we have reported, the European Union is split between a pro-nuclear and pro-gas camp

These caps map uncannily well onto the European alliance blocs that fought World War II.

The all-of-the-above approach offered by Wednesday’s vote — members had to support excluding both zero-emission nuclear and high-emission gas power from the Taxonomy — may have helped doom it.

SCIENTISTS DENOUNCE ‘BRIDGE FUELS,’ WARN OF FEEDBACKS

German scientists decried a long-held article of faith of the gas industry and its proponents: that the fuel is a “bridge” to cleaner technologies. 

paper published on Tuesday in Nature Energy argued that Europe’s turn toward embracing new gas infrastructure would pay grim dividends for the climate. 

Bridge to nowhere: The expansion of new gas infrastructure — import terminals, export terminals, ships and pipelines — locks the world into a dangerous path of increased fossil fuel emissions, the researchers found.

Once those new gas facilities are built, there will be a powerful incentive to keep using them — regardless of the climate cost — at the risk of “stranding” the investment made in building them, the scientists warned.  

Dangerous feedbacks: As increasing levels of methane heating the atmosphere, increased heating also means more methane in the atmosphere, according to a June study in Nature Communications. 

Rising heat means more methane released by microbial activity in swamps and wetlands — which makes up about 40 percent of global methane emissions, the Guardian reported. 

Climate change also means less methane is removed from the air, as carbon monoxide from climate change fueled-wildfires deactivates atmospheric compounds like hydroxyl radical — which would otherwise break down methane, according to the Guardian. 

“The worry is that climate change may accelerate such risks, feeding back to accelerating atmospheric methane concentrations in a vicious circle,” lead researcher Simon Redfern told the Guardian.

US oil, gas prices rise as supplies go abroad

Sky-high global prices for oil and (particularly) gas mean that Americans are competing with foreign buyers for domestically produced supplies — and losing. 

Price shock in gas heartland: Nation-leading natural gas producer Texas can no longer guarantee cheap energy to its citizens as local prices double, taking utility bills with them, The Texas Tribune reported. 

“I’m just not sure it’s real to people yet. If it’s not, it will be very, very soon when the bills hit this summer,” John Ballenger of Texas utility Champion Energy told the Tribune. 

Sell globally, pay locally: Europe’s gas prices have gone up 700 percent since the lulls of early 2021, and Asia — the site of a massive switch to the fuel over the past decade — has seen prices triple, Bloomberg reported. 

Breaching the wall: But while domestic natural gas prices are rising now, they are still being kept relatively low by bottlenecks in processing, storage, unloading and shipping the fuel — the kind of new infrastructure that both Europe and the U.S. are now investing heavily in, Bloomberg reported.

In the meantime, a June fire at a minor liquified natural gas (LNG) production facility in Freeport, Texas, was enough to spike gas prices in Europe and Asia by 60 percent, Bloomberg reported. 

Oil is leaving too: More than five million barrels of oil released by the Biden administration to tame gasoline prices were exported to Europe and Asia in June, Reuters reported. 

“Crude and fuel prices would likely be higher if [the releases] hadn’t happened, but at the same time, it isn’t really having the effect that was assumed,” Matt Smith, lead oil analyst at Kpler, told Reuters.

New York lays groundwork for heating networks

New York could get its own Icelandic-style geothermal heating networks after Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed three new clean energy development bills on Tuesday, state news site CNY Central reported. 

One of these, the Utility Thermal Energy Network and Jobs Act, would allow energy utilities to own, maintain and supply thermal energy to distributed heating projects — and directs the state Public Service Commission to create a regulatory structure for them to do so. 

What is thermal heating? It involves moving energy in the form of heat — which can be used to heat houses and water, and for industrial uses — rather than transmitting electricity and using that to heat, say, a home water heater. 

Why bother? This avoids the substantial efficiency losses caused when energy changes form — particularly when the energy in question began as heat, as in the subterranean geothermal steam that New York utilities are aiming to tap.  

Catching up: Last month we covered this sort of distributed thermal energy setup in Iceland — a highly volcanic island that is a world leader in creative uses for geothermal energy.

Water Wednesday

A worrying record for the Great Salt Lake, a helpful investment for a new form of renewable power and floods battering Australia’s most populous city. 

Great Salt Lake hits a record low 

Tidal power gets a boost 

Floods force evacuations in Sydney 

Please visit The Hill’s Sustainability section online for the web version of this newsletter and more stories. We’ll see you tomorrow.

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