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Re: What Stops Millions of Americans From Going Green: Their Landlords (Need more subsidies)

By: Zimbler0 in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (0)
Sun, 04 Jun 23 10:30 PM | 28 view(s)
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Msg. 43143 of 60008
(This msg. is a reply to 43127 by Fiz)

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But current attempts to green America's homes, including billions of dollars in tax credits for energy efficient appliances and retrofits, seem aimed at the affluent owners of detached, single-family homes
>>>


You ain't figured it out yet?
'It' ain't about helping America nor is it actually to solve 'man-made global warming'. It is all about subsidizing the wealthy.

How many folks can afford a Tesla? Yet biden is spending a gazillion dollars to put Tesla charging stations all over America so's his rich buddies can recharge at other peoples expense.

'They' do NOT want to solve the man made global warming thing . . . it is a cash cow they can just keep milking till the cows come home. (Which they won't cause biden gonna shoot them first.)

Zim.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
What Stops Millions of Americans From Going Green: Their Landlords (Need more subsidies)
By: Fiz
in 6TH POPE
Sun, 04 Jun 23 2:38 PM
Msg. 43127 of 60008

http://news.slashdot.org/story/23/06/03/165204/what-stops-millions-of-americans-from-going-green-their-landlords

What Stops Millions of Americans From Going Green: Their Landlords (msn.com) 10
Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday June 04, 2023 @07:34AM from the not-easy-being-green dept.
The Washington Post looks at "Americans who want to lower their carbon footprints — but are stymied by their landlords."
Homes and apartments burn oil and gas, suck up electricity, and account for about one-fifth of the United States' total greenhouse gas emissions. But current attempts to green America's homes, including billions of dollars in tax credits for energy efficient appliances and retrofits, seem aimed at the affluent owners of detached, single-family homes
— in short, Mad-Men-style suburbias. In reality, about one-third of the country's households live in rented apartments or houses... And they generally do not have the spare cash — or the permission from their landlords — to make environmental upgrades. Part of the issue is what's known in economics as the "split-incentive problem," or the "landlord-tenant problem." Roughly 75% of tenants in the United States pay their own utility bills; that means they have a strong incentive to try to conserve electricity, water, or gas to save cash. But their landlords, who have to pay for installing and replacing those appliances and heating systems, don't. They benefit from renting out their properties as quickly and cheaply as possible...

Renters, therefore, are often stuck with leaky housing, inefficient appliances and ancient heating systems. According to one study from 2018, renters use almost 3 percent more energy than homeowners thanks to the split incentive problem... President Biden's signature climate bill includes an estimated $37 billion in tax credits to help households switch to efficient heat pumps, water heaters, or to seal up and insulate their homes. Those credits are applicable to individual homeowners or renters — but not landlords. According to IRS guidance, "the credits are never available for a home that you don't use as a residence." And few renters are going to want to spend thousands of dollars on a heat pump that they'll have to leave behind when they move...

If the landlord problem isn't solved, millions of less wealthy Americans could be left out of the green transition — and will be stuck with higher energy bills. For example, even in the same income bracket, homeowners are almost three times more likely than renters to own electric vehicles — largely because renters lack home charging. There are programs, including some in America's giant climate bill, that could change this... Still, those programs haven't launched yet and aren't expected until at least late this year. And even though renters make up one-third of American households, they're still getting less investment; the tax credits for homeowners are uncapped. The federal government could end up spending well over $50 billion on homeowners, and about $8 billion on renters.

Most renters remain at the mercy of their apartment managers and landlords.


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