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Gas furnace ban moves closer to being overturned
Image: Getty Images
A Ted Cruz-led effort to overturn the Department of Energy’s gas furnace requirement recently received bipartisan support and passed in the Senate.
Background: The Department of Energy (DOE) in September issued a rule requiring indoor gas furnaces to be 95% efficient starting in 2028.
“DOE expects these standards to cumulatively save consumers $24.8 billion on their energy bills over 30 years,” the DOE says.
What’s happening: Gas industry groups initially sued the DOE, claiming the rule “effectively bans the sale of non-condensing natural gas furnaces.”
In February, Senator Ted Cruz authored a resolution — a written proposal — to overturn the rule, noting, “Eliminating all non-condensing natural gas furnaces will only serve to further hurt families who are already struggling to get by.”
On May 21, the Senate voted to pass the resolution.
Later that day, however, The White House issued a statement saying the President would veto the resolution if it reached his desk.
“DOE determined that these standards will result in significant conservation of energy, are technologically feasible, and economically justified,” the statement says.
What’s next: The resolution is heading to the House of Representatives for a vote. “I urge the House to take up this Resolution expeditiously and pass it,” says Cruz.
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